| Benjamin Brook - 1813 - 494 pagina’s
...style, to examine all manner of ministers, and to be executed ex officio nuro. I think the Inquisition of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and to trap their priests. Surely this judicial and canonical sifting of poor ministers, is not to edify or reform. This... | |
| Benjamin Brook - 1813 - 498 pagina’s
...style, to examine all manner of ministers, and to be executed ex officio nuro. I think the Inquisition of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and to trap their priests. Surely this judicial and canonical sifting of poor ministers, is not to edify or reform. This... | |
| Daniel Neal - 1816 - 586 pagina’s
...find them so curiously penned, so full of * branches and circumstances, that I think the inquisition * of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and ' to trap their priests. I know your canonists can defend ' these with all their particles ; but surely, under correc*... | |
| Daniel Neal - 1816 - 586 pagina’s
...find them so curiously penned, so full of * branches and circumstances, that I think the inquisition ' of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and * to trap their priests. I know your canonists can defend ' these with all their particles ; but surely, under correc'... | |
| 1817 - 552 pagina’s
...proceedings, concludes with saying that the articles were branched out into- so many circumstances, that he thought the inquisitors of Spain used not so many questions to trap others ; and that this critical sifting of ministers was not to reform, but to insnare : but,... | |
| Alexander Chalmers - 1817 - 556 pagina’s
...proceedings, concludes with saying that the articles were branched out into so many circumstances, that he thought the inquisitors of Spain used not so many questions to trap others ; and that this critical sifting of ministers was not to reform, but to insnare : but,... | |
| Lucy Aikin - 1818 - 544 pagina’s
...in some earnestness to the archbishop, and in his letter he told him, that he found these articles so curiously penned, so full of branches and circumstances,...many questions to comprehend and to trap their preys. And that this juridical and canonical sifting of poor ministers was not to edify and reform. And that... | |
| Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - 1826 - 370 pagina’s
...the lord treasurer declared to him by letter, in express terms, that he found his interrogatories " so curiously penned, so full of branches and circumstances,...questions to comprehend, and to trap their preys." By this interposition, however, Whitgift was not daunted. In an elaborate reply to the lord treasurer,... | |
| John Macdiarmid - 1820 - 412 pagina’s
...find them so curiously penned, so full of branches and circumstances, that I think the inquisition of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and to trap their priests. I know your canonists can defend these with all their particles ; but surely, under correction,... | |
| John Strype - 1822 - 662 pagina’s
...in some earnestness to .the Archbishop ; and in his letter he told him, that he found these articles so curiously penned, so full of branches and circumstances,...many questions to comprehend and to trap their preys. And that this juridical and canonical sifting of CHAP, poor Ministers was not to edify and reform.... | |
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