History of the Society of Jesus: From Its Foundation to the Present Time, Volume 1J.P. Walsh, 1865 |
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Page 3
... Arms . In imitation of their le , he , too , will pass the night in prayer , clad in his rmor , at the feet of Jesus and Mary , whose true and ul knight henceforth he is pledged to be . And it h these intentions that he has betaken ...
... Arms . In imitation of their le , he , too , will pass the night in prayer , clad in his rmor , at the feet of Jesus and Mary , whose true and ul knight henceforth he is pledged to be . And it h these intentions that he has betaken ...
Page 46
... arms ! " and recollecting an and against the establishment of new religious or the civil authorities to issue a decree for the e the Jesuits . The Fathers , thus chased from t as before . Struck by their patience and the magistrates.
... arms ! " and recollecting an and against the establishment of new religious or the civil authorities to issue a decree for the e the Jesuits . The Fathers , thus chased from t as before . Struck by their patience and the magistrates.
Page 48
... arms o Ignatius , August 1 , 1546. He had obey happy , and left his brothers deeply afflicte mature loss of the eldest of their large fami short a time , had rendered such important and ices to the Church . Their fear was that h be ...
... arms o Ignatius , August 1 , 1546. He had obey happy , and left his brothers deeply afflicte mature loss of the eldest of their large fami short a time , had rendered such important and ices to the Church . Their fear was that h be ...
Page 57
... arms . The insurgents took posses- he ducal palace , and the whole of Italy was with civil war . Under these circumstances it pensably necessary to adjourn the council , and e advent of more peaceful times before again ling it . Father ...
... arms . The insurgents took posses- he ducal palace , and the whole of Italy was with civil war . Under these circumstances it pensably necessary to adjourn the council , and e advent of more peaceful times before again ling it . Father ...
Page 75
... arms , and gave them full au- ntinue their labors , from which had resulted d since their arrival in Paris . Cardinal de o had been sent to Rome by the King , had the Eternal City , accompanied by René de Despence , Jerome de Sauchieres ...
... arms , and gave them full au- ntinue their labors , from which had resulted d since their arrival in Paris . Cardinal de o had been sent to Rome by the King , had the Eternal City , accompanied by René de Despence , Jerome de Sauchieres ...
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accused admiration Almighty ambassador apostle Archbishop arrived attacked Bishop blessed Bobadilla Bonzes Brother calumnies Calvinists Campian Canisius Cardinal Catholic caused charity Christians Church compelled condemned confidence consolation Coton council court death declared decree desired diocese doctrines Duke Emperor enemies Everard Mercurian faith FATHER CLAUDIO AQUAVIVA Father Coton Father Laynez FATHER MUTIO VITTELLESCHI Father-General favor Francis Borgia Francis Xavier Franciscans GENERALSHIP OF FATHER Gospel hastened heaven heresy heretics HISTORY holy founder honor Ignatius Ignatius of Loyola Jansenists Japan Jesuits Juan King King of Spain labors learned Lefèvre Legate Loyola Lutherans martyrdom martyrs mission missionaries Monita Secreta Nangasaki neophytes Paris Parliament persecution Pope possession Possevin preached priests princes prison Protestants province Queen received religion religious replied Rome Saint-Cyran sent Society of Jesus soon sought souls Sovereign Pontiff Spain Spaniards spiritual succeeded tion torture town uits University wrote young zeal
Popular passages
Page 329 - Blessed are they that suffer persecution for justice' sake: for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Blessed are ye when they shall revile you, and persecute you, and speak all that is evil against you, untruly, for my sake : Be glad and rejoice, for your reward is very great in heaven.
Page v - ... careful examination is preposterous ; which is felt to be so simply bad, that it may be calumniated at hazard and at pleasure, it being nothing but absurdity to stand upon the accurate distribution of its guilt among its particular acts, or painfully to determine how far this or that story...
Page v - A disciple is not above his teacher, nor a servant above his lord. 25 It is enough for the disciple that he be as his teacher, and the servant as his lord. If they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more them of his household...
Page vi - ... anti-social, revolutionary, as dividing families, separating chief friends, corrupting the maxims of government, making a mock at law, dissolving the empire, the enemy of human nature, and a " conspirator against its rights and privileges...
Page vi - ... heaven; — a religion which they associate with intrigue and conspiracy, which they speak about in whispers, which they detect by anticipation in whatever goes wrong, and to which they impute whatever is unaccountable; — a religion the very name of which they cast out as evil, and use simply as a bad epithet, and which from the impulse of self-preservation they would persecute if they could; — if there be such a religion now in the world, it is not unlike Christianity as that same world...
Page vi - ... proved, or what may be plausibly defended; — a religion such that men look at a convert to it with a feeling which no other sect raises except Judaism, Socialism, or Mormonism, with curiosity, suspicion, fear, disgust, as the case may be, as if something strange had befallen him, as if he had had an initiation into a mystery, and had come into communion with dreadful influences, as if he were now one of a confederacy which claimed him, attested him, stripped him of his personality, reduced...
Page 278 - ... is passed as soon as yowe have burnt the letter and i hope god will give yowe the grace to mak good use of it to whose holy proteccion i comend yowe."* The following evening (Oct.
Page 278 - ... some exscuse to shift of youer attendance at this parleament for god and man hath concurred to punishe the wickednes of this tyme and thinke not slightlye of this...
Page 278 - ... my lord out of the love i beare to some of youer frends i have a caer of youer preservacion therefor i would advyse yowe as yowe tender youer lyf to devyse some exscuse to shift of youer attendance at this parleament for god and man...
Page 336 - Europeans had been scandalized by this method of appearing all things to all men, in order to win all to Christ.