The Quarterly Review, Volume 72J. Murray, 1843 |
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Page 279
... practice , and as we ac- knowledge that it would be a weighty one , we shall be forgiven for stating our somewhat different interpretation of it . First , let us give Stillingfleet's own words . He is examining the opinions of the ...
... practice , and as we ac- knowledge that it would be a weighty one , we shall be forgiven for stating our somewhat different interpretation of it . First , let us give Stillingfleet's own words . He is examining the opinions of the ...
Page 280
... practice in his own cathedral , it would have been more natural to have stated it as a custom which had continued rather from the time than to the time of the early fathers . But giving the utmost extent to the Bishop of London's ...
... practice in his own cathedral , it would have been more natural to have stated it as a custom which had continued rather from the time than to the time of the early fathers . But giving the utmost extent to the Bishop of London's ...
Page 389
... practice was not to be lightly blamed , since we read that John , the beloved disciple , in all his churches used the same . But for the authority of his own practice he rested on St. Columba and his successors- ' Quos ipse sanctos esse ...
... practice was not to be lightly blamed , since we read that John , the beloved disciple , in all his churches used the same . But for the authority of his own practice he rested on St. Columba and his successors- ' Quos ipse sanctos esse ...
Contents
The Lady of the Manor Being a Series of Conversations | 25 |
Peregrine Bunce By the Author of Sayings | 53 |
25 | 72 |
Copyright | |
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