| George Punchard - Congregationalism - 1841 - 404 pages
...(1381) advanced by Wickliffe respecting the sacramental symbols, viz. that " the consecrated host we see upon the altar, is neither Christ nor any part of him, but an effectual sign of him ; and that transubstantiation, indentification, or impanation, rest upon no scriptural... | |
| William Simpson - 1851 - 268 pages
...attacked the great doctrine of transubstantiation, affirming that " the consecrated host which we see upon the altar is neither Christ nor any part of Him, but an effectual sign of Him." Upon this his supporters deserted * In order to guard against that whether... | |
| Theology - 1855 - 748 pages
...addicted. In his later treatises, Wycliffe boldly maintains, that "the consecrated host which we see upon the altar is neither Christ nor any part of him, but only an effectual sign of him." He plainly declares the sacrifice of Christ on the cross to be sufficient,... | |
| Joseph Sylvester Clark, Henry Martyn Dexter, Alonzo Hall Quint, Isaac Pendleton Langworthy, Christopher Cushing, Samuel Burnham - Congregational churches - 1859 - 476 pages
...advanced by Wicklifl'e respecting the sacramental symbols, viz., that " the consecrated host we see upon the altar, is neither Christ nor any part of him, but an effectual sign of him ; and that transubstantiation, identification, or impanation, rest upon no scriptural... | |
| Joseph Sylvester Clark, Henry Martyn Dexter, Alonzo Hall Quint, Christopher Cushing, Samuel Burnham - Congregationalism - 1859 - 460 pages
...advanced by Wicklifie respecting the sacramental symbols, viz., that " the consecrated host we see upon the altar, is neither Christ nor any part of him, but an effectual sign of him ; and that transubstantiation, identification, or impanation, rest upon no scriptural... | |
| George Punchard - Church history - 1865 - 618 pages
...advanced by Wickliffe respecting the sacramental symbols, viz : that " the consecrated host we see upon the altar is neither Christ nor any part of him, but an effectual sign of him ; and that transubstantiation, identification, or impanation, rest upon no scriptural... | |
| James Aitken Wylie - Protestantism - 1899 - 754 pages
...with him.1 The first of these propositions was as follows : — " The consecrated Host, which we see upon the altar, is neither Christ nor any part of him, but an efficacious sign of him." He admitted that the words of consecration invest the elements with a mysterious... | |
| English periodicals - 1902 - 550 pages
...see Harnack, History of Dogma, vi. 165 (English translation). 1 The consecrated Host, which we see on the altar, is neither Christ nor any part of Him, but an effectual sign (efficax signum) of Him.' ' The Eucharist has, by virtue of the sacramental words, both... | |
| Thomas Burr Sikes - 1885 - 336 pages
...the Lord's Supper, the first of which he expressed thus : — " The consecrated host, which we see upon the altar, is neither Christ, nor any part of Him, but an effectual sign of Him." And he also stated that "though the oread in the eucharist begins to be the... | |
| George Stokes - Religion - 1834 - 504 pages
...members of the university to the subject. In these he stated that " the consecrated host, which we see upon the altar, is neither Christ nor any part of him, but an effectual sign of him." On these conclusions Wickliff offered to dispute publicly. In his Trialogus,... | |
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