The English Church from Accession of Charles I. to the Death of Anne (1625-1714)Macmillan, 1903 - 368 من الصفحات |
من داخل الكتاب
النتائج 6-10 من 48
الصفحة 53
... suffered to lie so nastily , as in some places they have done , were the true worship of God observed in them , or did the people think that such it were . It is true , the inward worship of the heart is the true service of God , and no ...
... suffered to lie so nastily , as in some places they have done , were the true worship of God observed in them , or did the people think that such it were . It is true , the inward worship of the heart is the true service of God , and no ...
الصفحة 63
... suffer him to resign ; but at the last , he going on shipboard for New England , wrote his letter to me , acknowledged that I had given him good counsel but in vain , and prayed me to accept his resignation , for gone he was for New ...
... suffer him to resign ; but at the last , he going on shipboard for New England , wrote his letter to me , acknowledged that I had given him good counsel but in vain , and prayed me to accept his resignation , for gone he was for New ...
الصفحة 69
... suffer . Then , as in past ages , clergy could not act prominently in secular affairs without great risk of scandal and danger . And the scandal and danger were not mitigated by the work of the Court of High Commission . This court was ...
... suffer . Then , as in past ages , clergy could not act prominently in secular affairs without great risk of scandal and danger . And the scandal and danger were not mitigated by the work of the Court of High Commission . This court was ...
الصفحة 73
... suffered from the fanatics who would always put religion into the first place in every attack upon the government . But none the less the rulers of the Church were gravely un- popular . The country gentry resented the attack upon what ...
... suffered from the fanatics who would always put religion into the first place in every attack upon the government . But none the less the rulers of the Church were gravely un- popular . The country gentry resented the attack upon what ...
الصفحة 78
... suffered for his Histriomastix and 1633-1639 . Bastwick for his Elenchus Papismi . 1634 and 1635 were the years of shipmoney , 1636 that of Juxon's appointment as Treasurer , 1637 and 1638 showed how strong was the movement against ...
... suffered for his Histriomastix and 1633-1639 . Bastwick for his Elenchus Papismi . 1634 and 1635 were the years of shipmoney , 1636 that of Juxon's appointment as Treasurer , 1637 and 1638 showed how strong was the movement against ...
طبعات أخرى - عرض جميع المقتطفات
عبارات ومصطلحات مألوفة
altar Anabaptists archbishop Archbishop of Canterbury Articles Bishop of London Burnet canons Canterbury cathedral church Catholic chapel chaplain Charles Christ Christian Church of England churchmen Clarendon clergy Common Prayer communion table conscience consecrated controversy Convocation court Cromwell Dean death declared diocese dissenters Divine doctrine ecclesiastical endeavour English Church Episcopacy Episcopal Erastian established favour hath High Commission holy holy table House of Commons House of Lords James Juxon king king's Laud Laud's letter liberty liturgy lived Long Parliament Majesty matters ment ministers Mountague never non-jurors oath opinion ordination Oxford pamphlet papists parish Parlia Parliament party persons petition political Popery Popish Prayer-book preached preacher Presbyterian priest Protestant Puritan Queen rebellion Reformation religion religious Restoration Roman Romanists Rome royal S. R. Gardiner Sacrament Sancroft says seemed sermon Sheldon spiritual Star Chamber tion toleration visitation William worship wrote