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Church and banned
Parliament also banned the bearing of arms and the wearing of tartans, and limited the activities of the Episcopalian Church.
As their numbers increased, Rapp ’ s group officially split with the Lutheran Church in 1785 and was banned from meeting.
This gave recognition to the Hungarian Methodist Church and to two other Methodist-derived denominations – the Salvation Army, which was banned in Hungary in 1949 but returned in 1990, and currently has four congregations, and the Church of the Nazarene, which entered Hungary in 1996 – but not to the Hungarian Evangelical Fellowship.
Notwithstanding some mitigating themes, the Catholic Church banned The Prince, registering it to the Index Librorum Prohibitorum, and humanists also viewed the book negatively.
Consequently, in May 1074 he did penance at Nuremberg – in the presence of the papal legates – to atone for his continued friendship with the members of his council who had been banned by Gregory, took an oath of obedience, and promised his support in the work of reforming the Church.
The genre was again banned, following the Reformation and the establishment of the Church of England in 1534.
Pope's education was affected by the recently enacted Test Acts, which upheld the status of the established Church of England and banned Catholics from teaching, attending a university, voting, or holding public office on pain of perpetual imprisonment.
When Indonesia occupied East Timor between 1975 and 1999, declaring it " the Republic's 27th Province ", the use of Portuguese was banned, and Indonesian was declared the sole official language, but the Roman Catholic Church adopted Tetum as its liturgical language, making it a focus for cultural and national identity.
The book was soon banned by the Church in 1490, and Kramer and Sprenger censured, but it was nevertheless reprinted in 14 editions by 1520 and became unduly influential in the secular courts.
The Roman Catholic Church denounced these actions, ordered the rededication of the cathedral and banned future performances on church property.
In the Catholic Church during the Renaissance, St Paul's admonition " mulieres in ecclesiis taceant " (" let the women keep silence in the churches " – ) still prevailed, and so women were banned from singing in church services.
At a later date Roman Catholic Church officials even banned public bathing in an unsuccessful effort to halt syphilis epidemics from sweeping Europe.
Albert also found himself reliant on support from his Jagiellonian uncle Sigismund I of Catholic Poland, as the Holy Roman Empire and the Roman Catholic Church had banned him for his Protestantism.
Their first project, the tragédie en musique Samson, was abandoned because an opera on a religious theme by Voltaire — a notorious critic of the Church — was likely to be banned by the authorities.
The work was not put on the Index of works banned by the Roman Catholic Church, although his Cosmopoeia which expressed similar ideas was.
He found new interpretations in positivist and evolutionist theories, but because of this in 1905 the Roman Catholic Church banned the novels Il santo and Leila.
Certain large fireworks have been banned by the city and the Catholic Church because they cause serious vibrations in the pyramid ’ s tunnels.
The prosecution had asked for the Church to be banned, but a recent change in legislation made this impossible.
* In 1770, Oberammergau was informed that all passion plays in Bavaria had been banned by order of the Ecclesiastical Council of the Elector, Maximilian Joseph at the behest of the Roman Catholic Church.
* Index Librorum Prohibitorum The list of publications banned by the Catholic Church between 1559 and 1966.
His government also continued to attempt to prevent circulation of books banned by the Catholic Church, combatted communism and even tried to shut down other Christian religions like the Jehovah's Witnesses who evangelized in French Canada.
In the Roman Catholic Church, unwittingly marrying a closely consanguineous blood relative is grounds for an annulment, but dispensations were granted, actually almost routinely ( the Canon law of the Catholic Church banned marriages within the fourth degree of relationship cousins from at least the year 1215 ).

Church and participation
The first thirty to sixty days after individuals make their decision will determine their interest and participation in the life of the Church.
They are known historically as the peace churches, and have incorporated Christ's teachings on nonviolence into their theology so as to apply it to participation in the use of violent force ; those denominations are the Quakers, Mennonites, Amish, and the Church of the Brethren.
The African Methodist Episcopal Church resumed its participation by the February 2010 plenary meeting, where CUIC moved to refocus on its eight marks of commitment and a shared concern for racial justice as a major dividing factor facing ecumenism.
The Roman Catholic Church recognizes as ecumenical various councils held later than the First Council of Ephesus ( after which churches out of communion with the Holy See because of the Nestorian Schism did not participate ), later than the Council of Chalcedon ( after which there was no participation by churches that rejected Dyophysitism ), later than the Second Council of Nicaea ( after which there was no participation by the Eastern Orthodox Church ), and later than the Fifth Council of the Lateran ( after which groups that adhered to Protestantism did not participate ).
Thus, for Christians, Christ himself is the only high priest, and Christians have no priesthood independent or distinct from participation in the priesthood of Christ, the head of the Church.
Mediator Dei clarified membership and participation in the Church.
They requested security guarantees both for the displacement of their negotiators and that of the guerrillas that would be freed, which are specifically stated to number as many as 500 or more, and ask the Catholic Church to coordinate the participation of the United Nations and other countries in the process.
* He allows her in church, as well as State, but a subordinate position, claiming Apostolic authority for her exclusion from the ministry, and, with some exceptions, from any public participation in the affairs of the Church.
" In fact, the United Methodist Church uses unfermented grape juice in the sacrament of Holy Communion, thus " expressing pastoral concern for recovering alcoholics, enabling the participation of children and youth, and supporting the church's witness of abstinence.
In 1775, Patrick Henry delivered his famous, " Give me Liberty or Give me Death ", speech in St. John's Church in Richmond, crucial for deciding Virginia's participation in the First Continental Congress and setting the course for revolution and independence.
While undergoing epitemia, the person remains a Eastern Orthodox Christian, even though his or her participation in the mystical life of the church is limited ; but those given over to anathema are considered to be completely torn away from the Church until repentance.
In the Catholic tradition, liturgy is considered to mean the participation of the people in the work of God and in the liturgy Jesus Christ is considered to continue the work of redemption in union with his Church.
Pius XI took strong interests in fostering the participation of lay people throughout the Church, especially in the Catholic Action movement.
), having been sanctified and transfigured by Baptism, Holy Communion and the participation in the mystical life of the Church.
Since World War II, a number of structural changes have taken place within the Church of Norway, mostly to institutionalize lay participation in the life of the church.
Richard Mather and Kathrine Holt Mather following their participation in the Great Migration from England due to nonconformity with the Church of England.
It works to promote and enhance the participation of the laity in the governance and general affairs of the Church.
:- To adopt such measures as will enhance the participation of the laity in Church affairs.
Because commission of these offenses is so serious, the Church forbids the excommunicated from receiving any sacrament ( not just the Eucharist ) and also severely restricts the person's participation in other Church liturgical acts and offices.
Many have argued that even the calendar is a matter of dogma since it has historically manifested the unity and catholicity of the Church and that the reformation of the Church Calendar in 1924 was unilaterally adopted and was connected with the beginning of Orthodox participation in the modern ecumenical movement.

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