A Treatise on the Episcopate of the Ante-Nicene Church: (with Especial Reference to the Early Position of the Roman See) |
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Page 48
... Carthage . Fabianus was no more , and the Archbishop of Carthage had retired before the storm of persecution which broke over his Church - retired not in pusillanimity , but at the earnest instance of his clergy . Here then , if ever ...
... Carthage . Fabianus was no more , and the Archbishop of Carthage had retired before the storm of persecution which broke over his Church - retired not in pusillanimity , but at the earnest instance of his clergy . Here then , if ever ...
Page 121
... Carthage , he fearlessly maintained ; nor could the rage of the Bishop of Rome alarm him , or affect the judgment of other portions of the Western Church in that age2 . 1 S. Cyprian de Unit . , as quoted in Allies ' Church of England ...
... Carthage , he fearlessly maintained ; nor could the rage of the Bishop of Rome alarm him , or affect the judgment of other portions of the Western Church in that age2 . 1 S. Cyprian de Unit . , as quoted in Allies ' Church of England ...
Page 138
... Carthage : " Know now my brother , " says Dionysius of Alexandria , to Pope Ste- phen . Moreover , the titles which have in later ages been claimed exclusively by the head of the Roman were , in the first three 1 " Latebrosa et ...
... Carthage : " Know now my brother , " says Dionysius of Alexandria , to Pope Ste- phen . Moreover , the titles which have in later ages been claimed exclusively by the head of the Roman were , in the first three 1 " Latebrosa et ...
Page 143
... , to take precedence of Carthage " . " And the 1 c . 21 . 2 Cypr . Ep . LIX . 3 " Quoniam pro magnitudine sud debeat Carthaginem Roma præcedere . " - Cypr . Ep . LII . p . 97 . like reason induced a Pagan1 historian to ob- serve , 143.
... , to take precedence of Carthage " . " And the 1 c . 21 . 2 Cypr . Ep . LIX . 3 " Quoniam pro magnitudine sud debeat Carthaginem Roma præcedere . " - Cypr . Ep . LII . p . 97 . like reason induced a Pagan1 historian to ob- serve , 143.
Page 150
... Carthage and Numidia . They attended to the number of seventy - one , and decided that heretics should be re - baptized . S. Cyprian informs the Pope 1. Allies , p . 41 . of the decision of himself and his Colleagues . " 150.
... Carthage and Numidia . They attended to the number of seventy - one , and decided that heretics should be re - baptized . S. Cyprian informs the Pope 1. Allies , p . 41 . of the decision of himself and his Colleagues . " 150.
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Alexandria ancient antiquity Apostolic Apostolic Fathers appear authority Basilides Bingham Bishop of Rome Callistus Canon Carthage Catholic CHAPTER chief pastor Christ Christendom Christian Bishops Christian Church Church history Church of Rome Church system circumstances claims clergy Communion conceded conduct considered constitution controversy Council of Nicæa Cyprian Cyprianic age Deacons developement discipline distinction divine doctrine early Church Ecclesia Ecclesiastical element entirely Episcopacy Epistles epoch Euseb external Faith flock functions Heraclas heresy heretics Hippolytus Holy Ignatius independent internal Irenæus Marcian matter method Metropolitan Bishops necessary Nicene Novatian ordination Papal peculiar Philosophumena Polycarp Pope position Preached presbyters President Priests primacy PRIMITIVE BISHOPS principle province question regard relations reverence Roman Church says Scripture second century shew shewn spirit Stephen successors Supremacy Synod tained Tertullian testimony thou three centuries tion treatise Truth unity University of Cambridge visible whole writings ἐν καὶ τῆς τοῦ τῷ τῶν ὑμῶν
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Page 135 - I know thy works, and thy labour, and thy patience, and how thou canst not bear them which are evil: and thou hast tried them which say they are apostles, and are not, and hast found them liars: 3 And hast borne, and hast patience, and for my name's sake hast laboured, and hast not fainted.
Page viii - MA, who composed the best Dissertation in the English Language, on the Evidences in general, or on the Prophecies or Miracles in particular, or on any other particular argument, whether the same be direct or collateral proofs of the Christian religion, in order to evince its truth and excellence.
Page 160 - Be it known and without doubt unto you, that we all are, and every one of us, obedient and subject to the Church of God, and to the Pope of Rome, and to every godly Christian...
Page vii - CLAUSES from the WILL of the Rev. JOHN HULSE, late of Elworth, in the County of Chester, clerk, deceased : dated the twenty-first day of July, in the year of our Lord one thousand seven hundred and seventy-seven ; expressed in the words of the Testator, as he, in order to prevent mistakes, thought proper to draw and write the same himself, and directed that such clauses should every year be printed, to the intent...