Search for: Jesuits
541 The Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, vol. 61 April 8, 1884, page 226 paragraph 4
… , the Jesuit who could show his face nowhere else, who in Britain was still subject to penal laws, who was proscribed by France, Spain, Portugal, and Naples, who …
542 The Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, vol. 61 April 8, 1884, page 227 paragraph 2
… the Jesuits. And if that party does not yet fairly out-Jesuit the Jesuits themselves, I shall be willing to learn that I have mistaken them. The fact of the matter …
543 The Advent Review and Sabbath Herald, vol. 75 December 13, 1898, page 799 paragraph 4
… a Jesuit, it is not because he never went to a Jesuit school.
544 The American Sentinel 1 March 1886, page 19 paragraph 7
… of Jesuitical casuistry by which they would hide their real intention.
545 The American Sentinel 1 March 1886, page 20 paragraph 6
… veriest Jesuit. However, we do not see how we can expect anything else of that party. Its cause is worthy only of Jesuitism and the Inquisition, and can only be …
546 The American Sentinel 2 March 1887, page 20 paragraph 7
… the Jesuits, whom Leo XI II. has lately restored to all their rights and privileges, and has thus prepared this strong support to National Reform.
547 The American Sentinel 2 November 1887, page 81 paragraph 12
… the Jesuitical system whose alliance they so deeply crave. Yet, although we should be as glad as anybody to see the Roman Catholics putting the Bible into …
548 The American Sentinel 3 July 1888, page 53 paragraph 7
… the Jesuits. He was a Spaniard. Spain has seen more of Jesuitism than has any other nation. Jesuitism may fairly be said to be a Spanish institution. Doctor Field …
549 The American Sentinel 3 July 1888, page 53 paragraph 8
… renovation; Jesuitism a sect of relapse. The sixteenth century founded the liberty of thought; Jesuitism founded intellectual slavery. The one tended to …
550 The American Sentinel 3 July 1888, page 53 paragraph 10
… the Jesuits.”— Eugene Lawrence, Historical Studies, p. 99 .
551 The American Sentinel 3 August 1888, page 59 paragraph 2
… the Jesuit College at Georgetown, than to all the other institutions of learning at Washington. This proves, either that a large number of Senators and Representatives …
552 The American Sentinel 3 November 1888, page 83 paragraph 16
… . A Jesuit historian, quoted by D’Aubigne, speaking of the associates of Tetzel, the chief indulgence peddler, says:—
553 The American Sentinel 4 January 30, 1889, page 11 paragraph 5
… , the Jesuit who could show his face nowhere else, who in Britain was still subject to penal laws, who was proscribed by France, Spain, Portugal, and Naples, who …
554 The American Sentinel 4 January 30, 1889, page 12 paragraph 6
… the Jesuits. And if that party does not yet fairly out-Jesuit the Jesuits themselves, we shall be willing to learn that we have mistaken them. The fact of the …
555 The American Sentinel 4 July 17, 1889, page 195 paragraph 3
… at “Jesuit attempts to misrepresent and blacken the schools.” “Jesuit attempts to drive the Bible from the schools,” and “the hostility of Jesuits to American …
556 The American Sentinel 4 July 17, 1889, page 195 paragraph 4
“The testimony of statesmen, political economists, and historians ... warns us as a people to beware of the Jesuits and Ultramontanes.”
557 The American Sentinel 5 February 13, 1890, page 52 paragraph 2
… of Jesuitism and falsehood, by bare-faced misrepresentation and by the deepest intrigue.” This he explained was “only prophetic fury,” and regretted that the …
558 The American Sentinel 5 March 27, 1890, page 98 paragraph 3
… a “Jesuit.” On page 1542 of the Congressional Record of the Fifty-first Congress (page 91 of Mr. Blair’s published speech), we find these words under the sub-head …
559 The American Sentinel 5 March 27, 1890, page 98 paragraph 7
The Jesuits who have undertaken the overthrow of the public-school system of this country are already far advanced in their work. And I desire to say that …
560 The American Sentinel 5 March 27, 1890, page 98 paragraph 8
… the Jesuit is, as I understand it, the representative order of education in the Catholic Church. To it more than to any other is committed the charge of education …