... a conspirator against its rights and privileges"; — a religion which they consider the champion and instrument of darkness, and a pollution calling down upon the land the anger of heaven; — a religion which they associate with intrigue and conspiracy,... Savonarola, Erasmus, and Other Essays - Page 324by Henry Hart Milman - 1870 - 500 pagesFull view - About this book
| John Henry Newman - Dogma, Development of - 1878 - 476 pages
...empire, the enemy of human nature, and a " conspirator against its rights and privileges •" 8 — a religion which they consider the champion and instrument...viewed it, when first it came forth from its Divine Author.9 8 Proph. Office, p. 132 [Via Media, vol. ip 109.] 9 [Since the publication of this Volume... | |
| John Henry Newman - Catholic Church - 1890 - 476 pages
...detect by anticipation in whatever goes wrong, and to which they impute whatf)evcr is unaccountable ;H- a religion, the very name of which they cast out as'...viewed it, when first it came forth from its Divine Author.9 • Proph. Office, p. 132 [Via Media, vol. ip 10D]. • [Since tlie publication of this volume... | |
| Richard Holt Hutton - Cardinals - 1891 - 306 pages
...religion which they consider the champion and instrument of darkness, and a pollution calling down upou the land the anger of heaven; — a religion which...when first it came forth from its Divine Author." 1 It is worth notice, perhaps, that in this passage 1 Essay on Development, pp. 240-2, 1st edition.... | |
| Charles Francis Horne - Great events by famous historians - 1905 - 440 pages
...with a feeling which no other denomination raises except Judaism, socialism, or Mormonism — namely, with curiosity, suspicion, fear, disgust, as the case...it when first it came forth from its divine Author. BURNING OF ROME UNDER NERO AD 64 SIENKIEWICZ TACITUS Nero when a youth was placed under charge of the... | |
| Wilfrid Philip Ward - 1912 - 742 pages
...communion with dreadful influences, as if he were now one of 'a confederacy which claimed him, attested him, stripped him of his personality, reduced him...when first it came forth from its Divine Author.' ' And the Nicene period, with its parallel, is given as follows : ' On the whole, then, we have reason... | |
| Wilfrid Ward - 1912 - 708 pages
...communion with dreadful influences, as if he were now one of a confederacy which claimed him, attested him, stripped him of his personality, reduced him...when first it came forth from its Divine Author.' l And the Nicene period, with its parallel, is given as follows: 'On the whole, then, we have reason... | |
| Wilfrid Ward - Cardinals - 1912 - 688 pages
...attested him, stripped him of his personality, reduced him to a mere organ or instrument of a whole;—a religion which men hate as proselytizing, antisocial,...viewed it when first it came forth from its Divine Author.'1 And the Nicene period, with its parallel, is given as follows: ' On the whole, then, we have... | |
| Wilfrid Ward - 1912 - 704 pages
...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...when first it came forth from its Divine Author.' l And the Nicene period, with its parallel, is given as follows: 'On the whole, then, we have reason... | |
| 1917 - 876 pages
...is accused of superstition, insane asceticism, secret profligacy and so on, " then it is not so very unlike Christianity as that same world viewed it when first it came forth from its Divine Founder." How triumphantly Newman used the method here described is best shown in his famous controversy... | |
| 1917 - 926 pages
...is accused of superstition, insane asceticism, secret profligacy and so on, " then it is not so very unlike Christianity as that same world viewed it when first it came forth from its Divine Founder." How triumphantly Newman used the method here described is best shown in his famous controversy... | |
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