Search for: legalism
1161 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 479.4 (James Aitken Wylie)
The blow did not descend all at once; a series of lesser attacks heralded the great and consummating stroke. Machinations, chicaneries, and legal robberies paved the way for an extermination that was meant to be complete and final.
1162 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 511.3 (James Aitken Wylie)
… demanded legal recognition, otherwise they would remain outside the constitution. The Vaudois alone had fought the battle, but all their countrymen shared …
1163 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 556.1 (James Aitken Wylie)
… under legal sanction.Lava1, volume 1, p. 604. Davila, lib. 2, p. 78.
1164 History of Protestantism, vol. 2, p. 620.2 (James Aitken Wylie)
… no legal security for their civil and religious liberties. The laws denouncing confiscation and death for the profession of the Protestant religion, re …
1165 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 270.1 (James Aitken Wylie)
… a legal ratification at the Pacification of Augsburg in 1555, when a proposed clause enjoining restitution had been rejected. They might farther plead …
1166 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 422.3 (James Aitken Wylie)
… it legal. Nor had they long to wait for a formal authorization. This same month, a Parliament was assembled, the elections being so managed that only those should …
1167 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 439.1 (James Aitken Wylie)
… its legal enactment; but the queen, thinking that it trenched upon her supremacy, would not hear of it. Thus left without a discipline, the Church of England …
1168 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 511.1 (James Aitken Wylie)
… . Valid legal securities were thus for the first time reared around the Protestant Church of Scotland. It was further enacted, “That no prince should afterwards …
1169 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 511.2 (James Aitken Wylie)
… , received legal guarantees from the State that the abolished jurisdiction would not be restored, and that the Protestant Church would have liberty and …
1170 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 523.1 (James Aitken Wylie)
… a legal pledge that the jurisdiction of the Romish Church would not be restored, and by consequence, that of the Reformed Church not overthrown. This Act gave …
1171 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 563.2 (James Aitken Wylie)
… by legal securities: a single edict laid them all in the dust, and confiscated that whole liberty which they guarded, and the country went sheer down at a plunge …
1172 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 563.4 (James Aitken Wylie)
… every legal security, had imposed upon the Scots a virtual abjuration of Presbyterianism, and left the Protestant Church of the northern country little …
1173 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 566.3 (James Aitken Wylie)
… and legal government of the Church by archbishops and bishops, as it was exercised in the year 1637.” The only reason assigned for so vast a change was the king’s …
1174 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 597.1 (James Aitken Wylie)
… this legal robbery, that one eschewed the conventicle; he must be in his place in the parish church on Sunday; for every day’s absence he was liable to a fine …
1175 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 604.3 (James Aitken Wylie)
… without legal pledge that he would govern according to law. And though he and the queen had resolved to have all the services conducted in the Protestant …
1176 History of Protestantism, vol. 3, p. 616.1 (James Aitken Wylie)
… no legal commission, came and forcibly turned men out of their profession and freehold.” The more tyrannical his measures, the louder James protested that …
1177 History of Protestantism, vol. 3
… the legal existence of Protestants. Luther marries Catherine von Bora. Calvin at college in Montaigne, Paris, France. Treaty between France and Spain. Francis …
1178 History of the Reformation, vol. 1, p. 14.6 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)
… actions, legal observances, and penitential words. The more these practices were observed, the more righteous man became: by them heaven was gained; and soon …
1179 History of the Reformation, vol. 1, p. 153.4 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)
… . By legalizing crying abuses, it irritated all wise men, and rendered Luther’s reconciliation impossible. “It was thought,” says a Roman-catholic historian …
1180 History of the Reformation, vol. 2, p. 189.3 (Jean-Henri Merle D'aubigné)
… ? to legalize their ill-gotten gains, to absolve from all oaths, to teach us to be wanting in fidelity, to instruct us how to sin, and to lead us direct to hell. Hearest …