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Page "History of Scotland" ¶ 45
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clergymen and on
Upon receiving the news, Northern writers, editors, and clergymen heaped accusations of murder on the Southern states, particularly Virginia.
Catholic priests have frequently appeared on television programs, sometimes discussing the Christian faith on an equal footing with Protestant clergymen.
While Naum of Preslav stayed in Pliska working on the foundation of the Pliska Literary School, Clement was commissioned by Boris I to organise the teaching of theology to future clergymen in Old Church Slavonic in Ohrid Literary School.
These acts, known collectively as the Elizabethan Religious Settlement, made it compulsory to attend church services every Sunday ; and imposed an oath on clergymen and statesmen to recognise the Church of England, the independence of the Church of England from the Catholic Church, and the authority of Elizabeth as Supreme Governor.
* Emperor Diocletian issues four edicts aimed at destroying Christianity ; churches are to be dismantled, clergymen arrested, and their followers forced to sacrifice to pagan gods on pain of death.
Peel felt compelled to resign his seat as MP representing the graduates of Oxford University ( many of whom were Anglican clergymen ), as he had stood on a platform of opposition to Catholic Emancipation ( in 1815 he had, in fact, challenged to a duel the man most associated with emancipation, Daniel O ' Connell ).
Exceptions are sometimes admitted for ordination to transitional diaconate and priesthood on a case-by-case basis for married clergymen of other churches or communities who become Catholics, but ordination of married men to the episcopacy is excluded ( see Personal ordinariate ).
On 20 November, when German Cardinal Adolf Bertram announced a papal ban on all political activities of clergymen, calls for Ratti's expulsion climaxed in Warsaw.
Nationalistic Germans objected to a Polish nuncio supervising elections, and Poles were upset because he curtailed agitating clergy 20 November, when German Cardinal Adolf Bertram announced a papal ban on all political activities of clergymen, calls for Ratti's expulsion climaxed in Warsaw.
In the post-war years, Annie took on The Bomb, communism, teenage rebellion and a host of other social and political concerns, often provoking the enmity of clergymen, union leaders and others.
Marsh writes that the use of clergymen as Lord Chancellors had a tremendous influence on the Court's actions, tracing the idea of following natural law in the Court back to the Chancellors ' Christian roots.
In 1969, the American Civil Liberties Union ( representing three clergymen, an atheist, and a leader of the American Ethical Society ), tried to block the construction of a nativity scene on the Ellipse in Washington, D. C.
Henry VII decreed that non-clergymen should be allowed to plead the benefit of clergy only once: those taking the benefit of clergy, but not able to prove through documentation of their holy orders that they actually were clergymen, were branded on the thumb, and the brand disqualified them from pleading the benefit of clergy in the future.
Recipients were once chosen for their poverty and were entitled to remain as Maundy recipients for life ; today new recipients are chosen every year for service to their churches or communities, on the recommendation of clergymen of various Christian denominations.
Majorstuen Church ( Majorstuen kirke ) was consecrated on 26 March 1926 as Priest's Church ( Prestenes kirke ) when it was built for the funds collected among Norwegian clergymen.
Founded in 1783 under the administration of secular clergymen, Siquijor became the first municipality as well as the first parish to be established on the island.
The campaign attracted the attention of governments and on February 12, 1918 the book was banned by the Canadian government for what a Winnipeg newspaper described as " seditious and antiwar statements " On February 24 in Los Angeles Rutherford gave a talk entitled " The World Has Ended — Millions Now Living May Never Die " ( subsequent talks in the series were renamed, " Millions Now Living Will Never Die ") in which he attacked the clergy, declaring: " As a class, according to the Scriptures, the clergymen are the most reprehensible men on earth for the great war that is now afflicting mankind.
His attacks on clergymen, particularly those of the Catholic Church, from the late 1920s were strong enough to attract a ban on his broadcasts by the NBC radio network, which condemned his " rabid attack upon organized religion and the clergy ".
On October 29, 44 leading clergymen, including Dean Francis B. Sayre, Jr. of Washington National Cathedral, United Presbyterian Church Leader Eugene Carson Blake, Methodist Bishop John Wesley Lord, American Hebrew Congregations President Maurice Eisendrauth, and theologians Paul Tillich and Reinhold Niebuhr, issued a letter commenting on the Jenkins affair: "" We see the Jenkins episode as a case of human weakness.
For many years the majority of the college's graduates went on to be clergymen.
He was also one of the twenty clergymen who on 20 March 1565 petitioned to be allowed to choose not to wear vestments ; but unlike many of the others, Foxe did not have a London benefice to lose when Archbishop Parker enforced conformity.

clergymen and support
Traditionalist Roman Catholic groups, congregations and clergymen, however, continue to support missionizing Jews according to traditional patterns, sometimes with success ( e. g., the Society of St. Pius X which has notable Jewish converts among its faithful, many of whom have become traditionalist priests ).
The also helped attract popular and international support by organizing a group of prominent Nicaraguan professionals, business leaders, and clergymen ( known as " the Twelve "), who called for Somoza's removal and sought to organize a provisional government from Costa Rica.
This curbed further growth, though liberation theology retains significant support both among clergymen and the general population today.
Part of the reason for convening Dáil Éireann was therefore to satisfy the requirements of Jus Ad Bellum and to make it easier to win the support of both clergymen and the general public.
The means by which Dallas advanced the work of what became known as the ' Second Reformation ' was through the provision of Scripture Readers, missionary clergymen and the support of the Bishops and Clergy of the Church of Ireland.
They received the support from the mayor of Houston, several congressmen, clergymen, such as Joseph Fiorenza, the Roman Catholic archbishop.

clergymen and so
Pecuniary means he valued no further than they enabled him to promote his researches ; and to the poor, to non-beneficed clergymen, professional authors and artists his services were rendered without remuneration .< p > His nature was kindly and generous, though outwardly rude and repelling .... Later in life, for some private or personal reason, he picked a quarrel with the brother who had formed him and made a man of him, basing the dissension upon a quibble about priority unworthy of so great an investigator.
The college continued to grow throughout the 18th Century and did produce several distinguished scholars and clergymen including the so-called Benedictine Antiquaries, a dozen or so men all well known for antiquarian research including such figures as Richard Gough, Brock Rand and William Stukeley.

clergymen and they
Finally, it did seem clear as day to these clergymen, as Gannett's son explained in the biography of his father, they had always contended for the propriety of their claim to the title of Christians.
Of course, Asturian and Galician minor nobles and clergymen sent their own expeditions with the peasants they maintained.
The Corporation Act 1661 required municipal officeholders to swear allegiance ; the Act of Uniformity 1662 made the use of the Anglican Book of Common Prayer compulsory ; the Conventicle Act 1664 prohibited religious assemblies of more than five people, except under the auspices of the Church of England ; and the Five Mile Act 1665 prohibited clergymen from coming within five miles ( 8 km ) of a parish from which they had been banished.
The family appropriated most of the revenues of the bishopric for private use ; they were, however, challenged by clergymen, who desired the funds for ecclesiastical purposes.
Indeed, whoever will compare what he says in of the heresy which he describes but forbears to name, with Prosper's account of the charges brought against Augustine by certain Semipelagian clergymen of Marseille, will have little doubt that Vincentius and they had the same teacher in view, and were of the same mind with regard to his teaching.
At the 1628 parliament, Pym led the charge against Roger Maynwaring and Robert Sibthorpe, two clergymen who had published sermons at the behest of Charles I in which they argued in favor of the divine right of kings and passive obedience.
It forbade clergymen from living within five miles ( 8 km ) of a parish from which they had been expelled, unless they swore an oath never to resist the king, or attempt to alter the government of Church or State.
In English law, the benefit of clergy ( Law Latin Privilegium clericale ) was originally a provision by which clergymen could claim that they were outside the jurisdiction of the secular courts and be tried instead in an ecclesiastical court under canon law.
Ration boards grew in size as they began evaluating automobile sales in February ( only certain professions, such as doctors and clergymen, qualified to purchase the remaining inventory of new automobiles ), typewriters in March, and bicycles in May.
Leading nobles and clergymen governed on Henry's behalf until he came of age, giving them a taste of power that they were not going to relinquish.
Students, faculty, and clergymen sustained themselves with food produced on the Abbey Farm, which they maintained until the 1970s.
As many early geologists were clergymen, they naturally sought to link the geological history of the world with that set out in the Bible.
According to Eugene Tisserant, the future Dean of the College of Cardinals, " we have the list of all clergymen who participated in these atrocities and we shall punish them at the right time to cleanse our conscience of the stain with which they spotted us ".
Professional details were not usually mentioned unless they conferred some social status, such as those of clergymen, UK and colonial officials, judges and barristers.
Tennent was one of the clergymen who was sent as an emissary by John Penn to the Paxton Boys in February, 1764 as they marched on Philadelphia, threatening the lives of about 200 Moravian Indians.
McNOOT stands for ' My Church Needs One of Those ' and was judged by a panel of clergymen and church elders as the item in the show they would most like to take back to their parishes.
Anglican clergymen were usually quick to publish pamphlets on any theological controversy, but tended to excuse themselves from responding to Vestiges as they lacked expertise: men of science were expected to lead the counterattack.
With nowhere else left to retreat, they decided to make their stand and prepare for the upcoming battle: Catholicos Gevorg V ordered that church bells peal for six days as Armenians from all walks of life – peasants, poets, blacksmith, and even the clergymen – rallied to form organized military units.
In the mid 1970s, several prominent evangelical-leaning Episcopal clergymen and lay leaders became disillusioned with what they considered the liberal theology and " theological relativism " of the existing Episcopal seminaries.
Until the accession of Woodrow Wilson, a political scientist, in 1902, they were all clergymen, as well as professors.
In June, Brewster recommended Adamson to David Octavius Hill ( 1802 – 1870 ), a painter of romantic Scottish landscapes, who hired him ; and they were commissioned in 1843 to make a group portrait of the 470 clergymen who founded the Free Church of Scotland.

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