| Patrick Fraser Tytler - Theologians - 1826 - 224 pages
...principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places. Full, therefore, of this high and...latter being only his ghostly body gathered to many cornes, without blood and bone, without limb, without soule ; and therefore nothing is to be understood... | |
| Thomas Murray - 1829 - 198 pages
...: the opinion then prevalent was that, which now obtains in orthodox, protestant churches, namely, that the elements of bread and wine, used in the sacrament...figuratively meant to represent the body and blood of Christ. But though the doctrine of transubstantiation had been but recently introduced as an article of papal... | |
| Church history - 1839 - 868 pages
...Roman Catholic Church ; one of these was the doctrine of transubstantiation, or the belief that the bread and wine used in the sacrament of the Lord's Supper were really the body and blood of our Lord, and not merely symbols ofthat body and blood. But about the... | |
| Robert Richardson - 1870 - 702 pages
...doubt not with all due sincerity. Nor did it appear less strange to hear such a one contending that the bread and wine used in the sacrament of the Lord's Supper were converted into the actual and bona fide flesh and blood of the Saviour. u So far as Mr. Campbell was... | |
| Sheldon J. Godfrey, Judy Godfrey - History - 1995 - 460 pages
...declaration against transubstantiation was to be made and subscribed, thus denying the belief that the bread and wine used in the sacrament of the Lord's Supper were actually changed into the body and blood of Christ. Noncompliance with these requirements of the Test... | |
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