| Charles Butler - 1821 - 636 pages
...apostles ; " but in a mean, as pious opinions, fitted for the «' preservation of unity ; neither do we oblige any " man to believe them, but only not to contradict " them." The latitudinarians were friendly to liturgies, and preferred that of the church of England to all... | |
| Charles Butler - 1822 - 544 pages
...apostles ; " but in a mean, as pious opinions, fitted for the " preservation of unity ; neither do we oblige any " man to believe them, but only not to contradict '.'them." The latitudinarians were friendly to liturgies, and preferred that of the church of England to all... | |
| Charles Butler - 1822 - 538 pages
...apostles; " but in a mean, as pious opinions, fitted for the " preservation of unity ; neither do we oblige any " man to believe them, but only not to contradict " them." The latitudinarians were friendly to liturgies, and preferred that of the church of England to all... | |
| Edward Reynolds (bp. of Norwich.) - 1826 - 980 pages
...apostles ; but in • menu, as pious opinions, fitted for the preservation of unity. Neither i!o we oblige any man to believe them, but only not to contradict them." In the Treatise called, ' Schism guarded and beaten back upon the right owners,' Ac. sect. 1. cap.... | |
| Edward Reynolds, Alexander Chalmers - 1826 - 574 pages
...his apostles ; but in a mean, as pious opinions, fitted for the preservation of unity. Neither do we oblige any man to believe them, but only not to contradict them." In the Treatise called, ' Schism guarded and beaten back upon the right owners,' &c. sect. 1. cap.... | |
| George Bull - 1827 - 338 pages
...but in a " mean, as pious opinions, fitted for the preservation " of peace and unity; neither do we oblige any man " to believe them, but only not to contradict them*." So the excellent bishop Hall, in his Catholic Propositions, (truly so called,) denieth, in general,... | |
| Edmund Henry Barker - 1829 - 798 pages
...Apostles ; but in a mean, as pious opinions, ' fitted for the preservation of unity. Neither do we oblige ' any man to believe them, but only not to contradict them.' See Stillingfleet's Grounds of Protestant Religion 4, 53." 4. " Hooker is of opinion ' that civil government... | |
| Edmund Henry Barker - 1829 - 804 pages
...Apostles ; but in a mean, as pious opinions, ' fitted for the preservation of unity. Neither do we oblige ' any man to believe them, but only not to contradict them.' See Stillingfleet's Grounds of Protestant Religion 4, 53." 4. " Hooker is of opinion ' that civil government... | |
| Nicholas Patrick Wiseman - 1836 - 590 pages
...articles, that they are " only pious opinions fitted for the preservation of unity ; neither do we oblige any man to believe them, but only not to contradict them."* Dr. Hey, when actually Norrisian professor of theology in the sister university, asserted in his Lectures,... | |
| Renn Dickson Hampden - 1837 - 652 pages
...Apostles ; " but in a mean, as pious Opinions fitted for the preservation " of unity; neither do we oblige any man to believe them, " but only not to contradict them." k Stillingfleet, citing these expressions of Bramhall with approbation, prefaces them with the remark,... | |
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