Search for: home church

3601 History of the Reformation, vol. 3, p. 453.5 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… return home, in the doctrines they had heard, and erelong an evangelical church was formed in this district, which is one of the oldest churches in the kingdom …

3602 History of the Reformation, vol. 3, p. 462.4 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… the Church. One of his uncles, his father’s brother, was dean of Metz; it was the highest dignity in the chapter. The Cardinal John of Lorraine, son of Duke Rene …

3603 History of the Reformation, vol. 4, p. 545.4 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… , inns, churches, and palaces. All that was most magnificent in Germany was there about to be collected. The critical circumstances in which the empire and Christendom …

3604 History of the Reformation, vol. 4, p. 612.2 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… returned home, when the citizens, with the authority of the magistrates, removed the images from the church of St. Magnus, carried to the mint a hand of the patron …

3605 History of the Reformation, vol. 4, p. 619.2 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… any church whatever in the earldom. The poor priest thought to reconcile everything by permitting Farel to mount on a stone in the cemetery, and thus preach …

3606 History of the Reformation, vol. 4, p. 661.4 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… the Church who desired to live and die with the Reform—the boldest of the townspeople and a certain number of peasants, especially those from the neighborhood …

3607 History of the Reformation, vol. 5, p. 707.5 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… -Saxon church had not professed this doctrine. “The host is the body of Christ, not bodily but spiritually,” said Elfric in the tenth century, in a letter addressed …

3608 History of the Reformation, vol. 5, p. 709.3 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… his church, which would have been better directed towards the word of God, visited Oxford in November 1382, and having gathered round him a number of bishops …

3609 History of the Reformation, vol. 5, p. 723.4 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… in church and state. He filled his coffers with money procured both at home and from abroad, and yielded without restraint to his dominant vices, ostentation …

3610 History of the Reformation, vol. 5, p. 726.2 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… reached home. Three days later, his wife, Elizabeth, who had just left her chamber, went to church, dressed all in white, to return thanks to God for delivering …

3611 History of the Reformation, vol. 5, p. 732.3 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… the church—and these are the forces that must regenerate it.—No (replied the partisans of Rome), it was the teaching of the apostles at first, and it is the teaching …

3612 History of the Reformation, vol. 5, p. 763.2 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… Romish church in England; and that body which, under the influence of the archbishop, had long since forgotten the rights of liberty, forbade the printer to …

3613 History of the Reformation, vol. 5, p. 765.3 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)

… the church. But as Latimer spoke, a marvelous transformation was worked in them; by degrees their angry features relaxed, their fierce looks grew softer; and …

3614 The History of the Waldenses, p. 15.2 (James Aitken Wylie)

… evangelical Church. It was an old law among them that all who took orders in their Church should, before being eligible to a home charge, serve three years in …

3616 The History of the Waldenses

… their Homes—Partial Famine—Contributions of Foreign Churches—Castrocaro, Governor of the Valleys—His Treacheries and Oppressions—Letter of Elector …

3617 The History of the Waldenses, p. 130.2 (James Aitken Wylie)

… the homes of the stricken, and at the bedsides of the dying, he himself was spared to compile the monuments of his ancient Church, and narrate among other woes …

3618 The History of the Waldenses, p. 132.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… ruined churches, raising up the fallen habitations, and creating anew family and home.

3619 The History of the Waldenses, p. 200.2 (James Aitken Wylie)

… ; their churches were reopened for Protestant worship; their brethren still in prison at Turin were liberated, and the colonists of their countrymen in Germany …

3620 The Life and Times of Jesus the Messiah—Book II, p. 101.1 (Alfred Edersheim)

… the Church often seemed to hang; on what feeble throbbing that of every child of God—with no visible outward means to ward off danger, no home of comfort, no rest …