History of Latin Christianity: Including that of the Popes to the Pontificate of Nicolas V. |
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Page xii
... degraded - Vigilius Pope The three Chapters . Vigilius summoned to Constantinople Tergiversation of Vigilius Banishment - Death Pope Pelagius I. 333-5 335 336 337 ib . 338-9 340 ib . 341 344 ib . Totila • 345 The eunuch Narses . 347 ...
... degraded - Vigilius Pope The three Chapters . Vigilius summoned to Constantinople Tergiversation of Vigilius Banishment - Death Pope Pelagius I. 333-5 335 336 337 ib . 338-9 340 ib . 341 344 ib . Totila • 345 The eunuch Narses . 347 ...
Page 4
... degrade to intrigue ; not enough to command the public mind for any great salutary purpose , to repress the inveterate immorality of an effete age ; to reconcile jarring interests , to mould together hostile races : in general they ...
... degrade to intrigue ; not enough to command the public mind for any great salutary purpose , to repress the inveterate immorality of an effete age ; to reconcile jarring interests , to mould together hostile races : in general they ...
Page 21
... degradation of the Popes into slaves of the lawless Barons of the Romagna . A.D. 996- 1061 . VI . The line of German Pontiffs . The Transalpine powers interpose , rescue the Papacy from its threatened dissolution , from the hatred and ...
... degradation of the Popes into slaves of the lawless Barons of the Romagna . A.D. 996- 1061 . VI . The line of German Pontiffs . The Transalpine powers interpose , rescue the Papacy from its threatened dissolution , from the hatred and ...
Page 55
... degrade himself . The legend , that his successor , Marcellus , was reduced to the servile office of a groom , rests on no better Marcellus , authority . Had it any claim to truth , the suc- AD . 394 . cessors of Marcellus had full and ...
... degrade himself . The legend , that his successor , Marcellus , was reduced to the servile office of a groom , rests on no better Marcellus , authority . Had it any claim to truth , the suc- AD . 394 . cessors of Marcellus had full and ...
Page 65
... degradation , when , by a seasonable miracle , his body was dis- covered with an ancient inscription , " Pope and Martyr . " Baronius wrote a book about it , which was never pub- lished . scoffing spectators , " because we have two ...
... degradation , when , by a seasonable miracle , his body was dis- covered with an ancient inscription , " Pope and Martyr . " Baronius wrote a book about it , which was never pub- lished . scoffing spectators , " because we have two ...
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Common terms and phrases
Acacius Africa Alexandria Anastasius anathema Apostles appear apud Arian asserted Augustine authority barbarian Bishop of Constantinople Bishop of Rome Candidianus Carthage Catholic Celestine character Chris Christ Christendom Church civil clergy Clovis commanded condemned Constanti Constantinople controversy Council of Chalcedon Cyprian Cyril death declared decrees degradation deposed dignity Dioscorus divine doctrine doubt East Eastern ecclesiastical edict Emperor Empire Ephesus episcopal Epist Eutyches exile factions faith favour Felix Flavianus Gaul Gothic Goths Greek heathen Henoticon heresy heretics Hilarius holy honour Imperial Italy Jerome John of Antioch Justinian King Labbe Latin Christianity letter Macedonius monks Nestorian Nestorius nople Novatian opinions orthodox pagan party Patriarch peace Pelagius persecution Peter Peter the Fuller Pontiff Pope prelates Presbyter province Pulcheria quæ quod Ravenna religion religious rival Roman slave sovereign strife sub ann successor supremacy Symmachus Synod Teutonic Theodoric Theodosius throne tion Vandal Vigilius Virgin West Western whole Zosimus καὶ
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Page 286 - Christianity all its ferocity, with none of its generosity or magnanimity ; its energy shows itself in atrocity of cruelty and even of sensuality. Christianity has given to barbarism hardly more than its superstition and its hatred of heretics and unbelievers. Throughout, assassinations, parricides, and fratricides intermingle with adulteries and rapes.
Page 10 - Christianity seems the inevitable consequence of man's progress in knowledSe> and in the more general dissemination of "y- that knowledge. Human thought is almost compelled to assert, and cannot help asserting, its original freedom. And as that progress is manifestly a law of human nature, proceeding from the divine Author of our being, this self-adaptation of the one true religion to that progress must have the divine sanction, and may be supposed, without presumption, to have been contemplated...
Page 249 - Monks in Alexandria, monks in Antioch, monks in Jerusalem, monks in Constantinople, decide peremptorily on orthodoxy and heterodoxy. The bishops themselves cower before them. Macedonius in Constantinople, Flavianus in Antioch, Elias in Jerusalem, condemn themselves, and abdicate or are driven from their sees. Persecution is universal ; persecution by every means of violence and cruelty; the only question is in whose hands is the power to persecute.
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