Search for: calvin

681 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 526.3 (James Aitken Wylie)

… which Calvin gathered together, and to whom he dispensed, for the first time in France, the Sacrament of the Lord’s Supper, a congregation was regularly organized …

682 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 531.6 (James Aitken Wylie)

… of Calvin’s advice was simply to be able to see that plan more clearly, and to follow it more closely. Adopting as their motto the words of the apostle — “One is …

683 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 542.3 (James Aitken Wylie)

… . Bungener, Calvin’s Life, etc., p. 304; Calvin’s Letters, 4. 107.

684 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 544.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… to Calvin’s doctrine.” The same year that witnessed the bloody tragedy we have just recorded, witnessed also the establishment of the public celebration …

685 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 550.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… that Calvin, then in the zenith of his fame, should have taken part in the discussions. The occasion was not unworthy of him, and Catherine de Medici had invited …

686 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 564.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… of Calvin, and were favorable to the Reformed doctrine, although, for obvious reasons, they had to be careful in avowing their convictions and preferences.Gaberel …

687 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 565.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… France. Calvin was sufficiently distant from his native land to be undisturbed by its convulsions, and yet sufficiently near to send daily assistance and …

688 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 579.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… of Calvin. The expression has been recorded by all historians with slight verbal differences, but substantial identity. The idea was embodied by the duke …

689 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 587.2 (James Aitken Wylie)

… Beza. Calvin was dead, having gone to the grave just as these troubles were darkening over France; but his place was not unworthily filled by his great successor …

690 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 32.3 (James Aitken Wylie)

… to Calvinism; although we cannot help saying that a very general misapprehension prevails upon this point. With the one exception stated above, the difference …

691 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 34.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… of Calvin in his celebrated letter to the King of France, which accompanied his Institutes, the Reformed in the Netherlands prefaced their Confession of …

692 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 34.3 (James Aitken Wylie)

… act; Calvin, ten years before the time of which we write, began to formulate it, when he took heresy, strictly so called, out of the jurisdiction of the magistrate …

693 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 48.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… of Calvin, and if the stream of his eloquence was not so rapid, it was richer and deeper than that of the Provencal; and what the multitudes which thronged to …

694 History of Protestantism, vol. 3

… John Calvin and William the Silent

695 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 116.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… and Calvin belonged-men not merely of prodigious talents, but what is infinitely more rare, of heroic faith and magnanimous souls; and so “King of Holland” appeared …

696 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 118.4 (James Aitken Wylie)

… master Calvin had defined it. To these two great men-John Calvin and William the Silent-we owe, above most, this great advance on the road of progress and human …

697 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 141.2 (James Aitken Wylie)

… France. Calvin aimed, as we have seen, at a complete separation of the civil and the spiritual domain; he sought to exclude entirely the power of the magistrate …

698 History of Protestantism, vol. 3

… Church—Calvinism the Common Theology of the Reformation—Arminius—His Teaching—His Party—Renewal of the Controversy touching Grace and Free-will—The Five …

699 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 148.4 (James Aitken Wylie)

… than Calvin ever employed. Calvin looked at both sides of the tremendous subject. He maintained the free agency of man not less strenuously than he did God’s …

700 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 165.1 (James Aitken Wylie)

… , by Calvin in Geneva, and by men not dissimilarly endowed in other countries, is vacant in the Reformation of Poland. Here it is a Waldensian missionary or refugee …