... as equivocal, from the uncertainty of their effects on the life and conduct of those who embrace them; or as unintelligible, being totally beyond the limits and comprehension of human reason; but all parties must unite in admiring and venerating the... The Life and Pontificate of Leo the Tenth - Page 84by William Roscoe - 1806Full view - About this book
| 1806 - 502 pages
...equivocal from the uncertainty of their effects on the life and conduct of those who embrace them j or as unintelligible, being totally beyond the limits...of any reproaches, but those of his own conscience, of of any disapprobation, but that of his God. "Ibis transaction may, indeed, be considered as the... | |
| John Mason Good - 1826 - 462 pages
...ripened into mature age; while, whatever may have been the occasional violence of Martin Luther, " all parties must unite in admiring and venerating...conscience, or of any disapprobation but that of his God." * Such is a brief glance at the wonderful periods that anticipated and have introduced our own unrivalled... | |
| John Mason Good - 1834 - 480 pages
...ripened into mature age ; while, whatever may have been the occasional violence of Martin Luther, " all parties must unite in admiring and venerating...of any reproaches but those of his own conscience, orofany disapprobation but that of his God."* Such is a brief glance at the wonderful periods that... | |
| John Mason Good - 1834 - 492 pages
...ripened into mature age ; while, whatever may have been the occasional violence of Martin Luther, " all parties must unite in admiring and venerating...the man who, undaunted and alone, could stand before euch an assembly, and vindicate, with unshaken courage, what he conceived to be the cause of religion,... | |
| William Roscoe - 1846 - 654 pages
...consider many of them as unimportant, and founded merely on scholastic and artificial distinctions ;<5 as equivocal, from the uncertainty of their effects...and alone, could stand before such an assembly, and vindi« I/utheri Op. vol. ii. p. 412, <t teq. <l '• It U certain," says Bossi, " that at least nine-tenths... | |
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