The Works of the Most Reverend Father in God, John Bramhall ...: With a Life of the Author, and a Collection of His Letters, Volume 3J.H. Parker, 1844 - Sermons, English |
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... subject , it is true , admitting of so little doubt , that it might seem superfluous to add a word to the treatise itself , and to those of Courayer1 and others upon the same subject , did it not The Rehearsal Transprosed , or ...
... subject , it is true , admitting of so little doubt , that it might seem superfluous to add a word to the treatise itself , and to those of Courayer1 and others upon the same subject , did it not The Rehearsal Transprosed , or ...
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... subject , is in few words this : -that if any one is disposed to question the truth of the account given in the Lambeth ... subjects " , - but of the Registers also of the several Sees and Chapters throughout the kingdom for the period ...
... subject , is in few words this : -that if any one is disposed to question the truth of the account given in the Lambeth ... subjects " , - but of the Registers also of the several Sees and Chapters throughout the kingdom for the period ...
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... subject , was supplied very imperfectly with the evidence relating to it , having little more than what Barwick , and Mason's book , est act is dated April 24 , the last May 15 , 1551 ; and that in the similar entry upon Scory's ...
... subject , was supplied very imperfectly with the evidence relating to it , having little more than what Barwick , and Mason's book , est act is dated April 24 , the last May 15 , 1551 ; and that in the similar entry upon Scory's ...
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... subject were unacquainted . It is trusted , that the addition of this information will not be con- sidered unseasonable , or incompatible with the rules under which the present publication is conducted . I cannot conclude without ...
... subject were unacquainted . It is trusted , that the addition of this information will not be con- sidered unseasonable , or incompatible with the rules under which the present publication is conducted . I cannot conclude without ...
Page 89
... subjects to records which are forged ? You see the contrary , that it mentioneth them as authentic , undoubted , undeniable proofs of what was really done . • To this unanswerable reason , these Fathers pretend to give two answers : but ...
... subjects to records which are forged ? You see the contrary , that it mentioneth them as authentic , undoubted , undeniable proofs of what was really done . • To this unanswerable reason , these Fathers pretend to give two answers : but ...
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Common terms and phrases
acts anno answer Archbishop Parker authority Barlow Bishop Bonner Bishop of Llandaff Bramhall Bramhall's Canterbury Cantuar Cantuarien Cap't'lm Christ Church of England commission confirm and consecrate Congé d'Eslire conse consecraters Couray d'ne d'ni dated David's Dean and Chapter decani Déf DISCOURSE Divine doth Eccl eccl'ie cath'is ecclesiastical edition eiusdem election electionis Eliz Episcopacy Episcopal fable Fathers hath Hist holy orders ibid Ioh'es John John Stow king king's kingdom Lambeth Le Quien letters patents Lond London Lord magistrate Majesty Mason Matthew Parker ment Metropolitice Xpi Nag's Head Ordination nobis oath oath of supremacy Observer ordination Park Parliament persons printed Queen records Register religion Royal Assent Rymer saith Scory Scotland secration sect shew statute Strype suffragan synods temporalties thing tion VIII words writ
Popular passages
Page 117 - One witness shall not rise up against a man for any iniquity, or for any sin, in any sin that he sinneth: at the mouth of two witnesses, or at the mouth of three witnesses, shall the matter be established.
Page 324 - Jesus answered, Thou couldest have no power at all against me, except it were given thee from above: therefore he that delivered me unto thee hath the greater sin.
Page 10 - Receive the Holy Ghost for the office and work of a Bishop in the Church of God, now committed unto thee by the imposition of our hands; In the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.
Page 170 - Ceremonies are advancements of order, decency, modesty, and gravity in the service of God, expressions of those heavenly desires and dispositions which we ought to bring along with us to God's House, adjuments of attention and devotion, furtherances of edification, visible instructors, helps of memory, exercises of faith, the shell that preserves the kernel of religion from contempt, the leaves that defend the blossoms and the fruit...
Page 376 - ... the right of the crown of England, and the law of the said realm is such, that upon the mischiefs and damages which happen to his realm, he ought, and is bound by his oath, with the accord of his people in his parliament, thereof to make remedy and law, and in removing the mischiefs and damages which thereof ensue, that it may please him thereupon to ordain remedy.
Page 80 - An Act for [the] Uniformity of Common Prayer and Service in the Church and Administration of the Sacraments...
Page 513 - I cannot assent to his minor proposition, that either all or any considerable part of the Episcopal divines in England, do unchurch either all or most part of the Protestant Churches. No man is hurt but by himself. They unchurch none at all, but leave them to stand or fall to their own Master.
Page 259 - A few days after, a minister, preaching in the principal church of that capital, said, that the king was possessed with a devil...
Page 424 - Archb. Sir, will you grant to hold and keep the rightful customs which the commonalty of this your kingdom have ? and will you defend and uphold them to the honour of God, so much as in you lieth ? King. I grant, and promise so to do.
Page 519 - I was baptized, or to a National English Synod. To the determination of all which, and each of them respectively, according to the distinct degrees of their authority, I yield a conformity and compliance, or at the least, and to the lowest of them, an acquiescence.