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" Corduba, whom the emperor loved and trusted much, and employed in the delivery of the letters) : for, first, he calls it " a certain vain piece of a question ill begun, and more unadvisedly published ; a question which no law or ecclesiastical canon defineth... "
The Anglican Establishment Contrasted, in Every Principle of Its ... - Page 47
by William George Ward - 1850 - 143 pages
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History of the Tractarian Movement

Edward George Kirwan Browne - 1856 - 572 pages
...necessity of Episcopacy, or Jeremy Taylor who was' heterodox on the subject of Original Sin, and who much lamented the Nicene Council itself, and calls...and a toy in respect of the excellent blessings of charity ;' or lastly, Bramhall,who vindicates as orthodox, the Nestorian and Eutyehian Heresies of...
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History of the Tractarian Movement

Edward George Kirwan Browne - 1856 - 424 pages
...necessity of Episcopacy, or Jeremy Taylor who was heterodox on the subject of Original Sin, and who much lamented the Nicene Council itself, and calls...not the worship of God, nor any chief commandment of Scripture,but was vain and a toy in respectof the excellent blessings of charity ;' or lastly, Bramhall,who...
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The Baptist Reporter

Joseph Foulkes Winks - 1843 - 410 pages
...moreover, whose virtue to its little subjects is " a matter so nice, so obscure, so intricate, that it is neither to be explicated by the clergy, nor understood by the people." The first duty of those who urge that baptism is a non-essential, is to give up a practice by the continuance...
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An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent

John Henry Newman - 1870 - 514 pages
...published, — a question which no law or ecclesiastical canon defineth ; a fruitless contention ; the product of idle brains ; a matter so nice, so...nor understood by the people ; a dispute of words a doctrine inexplicable, but most dangerous when taught, lest it introduce discord or blasphemy; and,...
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Essays on the Rise and Progress of the Christian Religion in the West of ...

Earl John Russell Russell - 1873 - 398 pages
...unadvisedly published ; a question which no law or ecclesiastical canon defineth ; a fruitless contention; the product of idle brains; a matter so nice, so obscure,...nor understood by the people; a dispute of words, a doctrine inexplicable, but most dangerous when taught, lest it introduce discord or blasphemy, and...
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Twelve lectures addressed in 1850 to the party of the religious movement of 1833

John Henry Newman - 1891 - 424 pages
...1828. » Jeremy Taylor, ibid. p. 485. 3 Ibid. « Ibid. to the Apostolicity of the Church. 391 enat it was neither to be explicated by the clergy, nor understood by the people; a dispute of words It concerned not the substance of faith, or the vorship of God, nor any chief commandment of Scripture...
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The Dublin Review, Volume 58

Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1860 - 644 pages
...a matter so nice, so obscure, * Anglican Difficulties," pp. 271-2. t Ibid, p. 419. J Ibid, p. 422. so intricate, that it was neither to be explicated...nor understood by the people ; a dispute of words It concerned not the lubslnncc of faith, or the worship of God, nor any chief commandment of Scripture...
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