Search for: Jesuits

41 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. CONFRATERNITY.1 (Noah Webster)

CONFRATERNITY, n. [L., fraternity, brother.] A brotherhood; a society or body of men, united for some purpose or in some profession; as the confraternity of Jesuits.

42 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. EMBARKATION.2 (Noah Webster)

1. That which is embarked; as an embarkation of Jesuits.

43 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. JESUIT.1 (Noah Webster)

JESUIT, n. s as z. One of the society of Jesus, so called, founded by Ignatius Loyola; a society remarkable for their cunning in propagating their principles.

44 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. JESUITED.1 (Noah Webster)

JESUITED, a. Conforming to the principles of the Jesuits.

45 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. JESUITESS.1 (Noah Webster)

JESUITESS, n. A female Jesuit in principle.

46 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. JESUITIC.1 (Noah Webster)

JESUITIC, JESUITICAL, a. Pertaining to the Jesuits or their principles and arts.

48 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. JESUITISM.1 (Noah Webster)

JESUITISM, n. The arts, principles and practices of the Jesuits.

49 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. JESUITS-BARK.1 (Noah Webster)

JESUITS’-BARK, n. Peruvian bark; the bark of the Cinchona, a tree of Peru.

50 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. MOLINIST.1 (Noah Webster)

MOLINIST, n. A follower of the opinions of Molina, a Spanish Jesuit, in respect to grace; an opposer of the Jansenists.

51 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. P.6 (Noah Webster)

Among physicians, P. Stands for pugil, or the eighth part of a handful; P.AE. For partes aequales, equal parts of the ingredients; P.P. for pulvis patrum, or the Jesuits bark in powder; and ppt. For praeparatus, prepared.

52 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. PERUVIAN.2 (Noah Webster)

Peruvian bark, the bark of the Cinchona, a tree of Peru; called also Jesuits’ bark. The taste is bitter and pungent, and it is used as an astringent and tonic, in cases of debility, and particularly as a febrifuge in intermittents.

53 Noah Webster’s 1828 Dictionary, p. RECTOR.7 (Noah Webster)

4. The superior officer or chief of a convent or religious house; and among the Jesuits, the superior of a house that is a seminary or college.

54 A Prophet Among You, p. 176.1 (T. Housel Jemison)

… the Jesuit order in 1747, at the age of sixteen. In 1766 he took the four vows of the Jesuits; but in the autumn of 1767, with all other members of the Jesuit order …

55 The Abiding Gift of Prophecy

… the Jesuits and Rome; and here a Christian church, founded perhaps in the apostolic age, has survived the persecutions of a thousand years.” “Historical Studies …

56 The World of Ellen G. White, p. 214.2 (Gary Land)

… , the Jesuits, and the Catholic hierarchy to subvert democracy by promoting Catholic immigration to America.

57 The Gift of Prophecy, p. 216.1 (Dr. Alberto Timm & Dwain Esmond)

… Jesus (Jesuits) had founders who claimed to have had visions from God and a desire to reform the church through a more personal connection with the Spirit …

58 The 1911 Edition of “The Great Controversy”

Page 234. (Referring to the Jesuits) Old Edition: “Cut off from every earthly tie and human interest, etc.”

59 W. W. Prescott and the 1911 Edition of The Great Controversy, p. 17.4 (Arthur Lacey White)

The statement at the bottom of the page concerning the nature of Jesuitism is very broad and very strong. According to this statement, Satan himself could not possibly be any worse. The same is true of the further description on page 235.

60 The Wedding Band, Ellen G. White, and the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, p. 10.1 (Roger W. Coon)

… the Jesuit-inspired dictum that “the end justifies the means,” and thereby be tempted to use a bad argument to support a worthy cause, Ellen White added this …