Search for: Jesuits
601 The Signs of the Times, vol. 4 December 19, 1878, page 379 paragraph 18
… the Jesuits of Turin, when the voice of Christian prayer and praise was no longer heard in the valleys. The wonderful people had survived for six centuries …
602 The Signs of the Times, vol. 12 August 12, 1886, page 487 paragraph 4
… the Jesuits was the strength of the Inquisition. On this point we could present a volume of evidence, but we have space for hardly more than a word. Here is one …
603 The Signs of the Times, vol. 12 August 12, 1886, page 487 paragraph 5
… . The Jesuits were charged with being constantly on the watch to assassinate William of Orange, and Henry of Hanover. Anthony Passevin, a Jesuit, is stated by …
604 The Signs of the Times, vol. 12 August 12, 1886, page 487 paragraph 7
… the Jesuits share between them the guilt of the ‘Invincible Armada,’ which instead of inflicting the measureless ruin and havoc which its authors intended …
605 The Signs of the Times, vol. 12 August 12, 1886, page 487 paragraph 9
… of Jesuits] services to Roman Catholicism have been incalculable. The Jesuits alone rolled back the tide of Protestant advance when that half of Europe …
606 The Signs of the Times, vol. 12 August 12, 1886, page 487 paragraph 10
… the Jesuits was the strength of the Inquisition, therefore we believe that the abolition of the Order of the Jesuits is the event that marks the end of the …
607 The Signs of the Times, vol. 12 August 12, 1886, page 487 paragraph 11
… the Jesuits had been lighting the battles of Rome. To exalt the supremacy of the Pope, they had died by thousands in English jails and Indian solitudes, had …
608 The Signs of the Times, vol. 12 August 12, 1886, page 487 paragraph 12
For these reasons we believe that the abolition of the Order of Jesuits is the event, and July 21, 1773, is the date, when “the tribulation of those days” ended.
609 The Signs of the Times, vol. 12 August 12, 1886, page 487 paragraph 13
… .—The Jesuits were restored in 1814, by Pope Pius VII.; but not to their persecuting power. In the different countries of Europe since that time the Order has been …
610 The Signs of the Times, vol. 12 August 26, 1886, page 520 paragraph 6
… the Jesuits for the “Propagation of the Faith.” The object as stated is, “To stop the scandal of the profanation of Sunday, and the four feasts of obligation.” The …
611 The Signs of the Times, vol. 13 May 26, 1887, page 312 paragraph 6
… the Jesuits, whom Leo XIII. has lately restored to all their rights and privileges, and has thus prepared this strong support to National Reform.
612 The Signs of the Times, vol. 13 June 16, 1887, page 360 paragraph 6
… the Jesuits. Bossuet, with rare eloquence and singular inhumanity, triumphed in the horrors of persecution; Massillon repeated the praises of the pitiless …
613 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 May 4, 1888, page 265 paragraph 13
… 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 …
614 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 May 4, 1888, page 265 paragraph 14
… renovation; Jesuitism a sect of relapse. The sixteenth century founded the liberty of thought; Jesuitism founded intellectual slavery. The one tended to …
615 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 May 4, 1888, page 265 paragraph 16
… the Jesuits.— Eugene Lawrence, Historical Studies, p. 99 .
616 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 July 6, 1888, page 407 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 …
617 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 July 6, 1888, page 407 paragraph 7
… the Jesuit” disturbing our liberties, says:—
618 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 July 6, 1888, page 407 paragraph 9
… to Jesuit discipline, was pending in the New York Legislature the ‘Catholic Union,’ with a Jesuit as an adviser, reproduced in a tract intended for the Legislature …
619 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 July 6, 1888, page 407 paragraph 10
… a Jesuit priest. In this letter he begged a member of Congress to oppose the bill and kill it, saying that they had organized all over the country for its destruction …
620 The Signs of the Times, vol. 14 September 21, 1888, page 583 paragraph 4
… . A Jesuit historian, quoted by D’Aubigne, speaking of the associates of Tetzel, the chief indulgence peddler, says:—