| John Henry Overton - England - 1897 - 518 pages
...study of the question, since his final break with the Papacy : ' I. The consecrated Host which we see upon the altar is neither Christ nor any part of Him, but an efficacious sign of Him. ' 2. No passer-by can see Christ with his bodily eye in the consecrated Host,... | |
| Darwell Stone - Lord's Supper - 1909 - 432 pages
...contradictions of the current explanations ; that his phrase " The consecrated host which we see on the altar is neither Christ nor any part of Him but an effectual sign of Him " was intended to apply to the outward part ; and that in like manner the statement... | |
| Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. Board of Publication - 1844 - 572 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 liim." On these conclusions Wickliff offered to dispute publicly. In his Trialogus,... | |
| Charles Bullock - 1884 - 298 pages
...Lord's Supper, tke two first of which were as follows : — (1) " The consecrated host which we see upon the altar is neither Christ nor any part of Him, but an efficacious sign of Him. (2) No passer-by can see Christ with his bodily eye in the consecrated host,... | |
| 1884 - 402 pages
...with him. 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." WYCLIF AT BLACKFRIARS. The Archbishopof Canterbury, Ludbury, was killed by... | |
| 1851 - 344 pages
...bread, and was only sacramentally the body of Christ. " The consecrated host," said he, " that we see upon the altar, is neither Christ, nor any part of him, but an effectual sign of Him."— That the Church of Rome was no more the head of the Universal Church than... | |
| Criticism - 1852 - 684 pages
...and rose from the sepulchre. The reformer taught, on the contrary, 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 rests upon no scriptural ground." Berton, the Vice... | |
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