| Charles Buck - 1824 - 628 pagina’s
...the interest of the order as the capital object to which every consideration was to be sacrificed. w D # K[ WdU t Vt 3 6 interest of their society, have been the most zealous patrons of those doctrines which JES 238 tend... | |
| Witness - 1827 - 130 pagina’s
...matters of "fact or points of doctrine." — (Mosheim's Eccl. Hist. xvi. Century. Sect. iii. Part 1.) " As the prosperity of the Order was intimately " connected with the preservation of the papal au" thority, the Jesuits, influenced by the same spirit " of attachment to the interests of their society,... | |
| Thomas Curtis (of Grove house sch, Islington) - 396 pagina’s
...authorises almost every action that the most audacious or crafty politician would wish to perpetrate. As the prosperity of the order was intimately connected...zealous patrons of those doctrines which tend to exalt ecclesiasical power on the ruin of civil government. They attributed to the court of Rome a jurisdiction... | |
| Charles Buck - 1830 - 996 pagina’s
...regard the interest of tbf unler as the capital object to which every iHHoderelion was to be sacrificed. As the prosperity of the order was intimately connected...preservation of the papal authority, the Jesuits, influenced liy the same principle of attachment to the interest of their society, have been the most 'along patrons... | |
| Charles Buck - 1831 - 644 pagina’s
...the interest of the order as the capital object to which every consideration was to be sacrificed. As the prosperity of the order was intimately connected...influenced by the same principle of attachment to the interest of their society, have been the most zeal-, ous patrons of those doctrines which; JES 838... | |
| Charles Buck - 1831 - 1158 pagina’s
...the inte| rest of the order as the capital object to which every consideration was to be sacrificed. As the prosperity of the order was intimately connected...papal authority, the Jesuits, influenced by the same prinmankind, the genius and spirit "of their II ciple of attachment to the interest of order was discernible... | |
| Charles Buck - 1833 - 980 pagina’s
...the interest of the order as the capital object to which every consideration was to be sacrificed. As the prosperity of the order was intimately connected...influenced by the same principle of attachment to the interest of their society, have been the most zealous patrons of those doctrines which tend to exalt... | |
| William Russell - 1837 - 680 pagina’s
...attachment to the interests of their society, which may serve as a key to the genius of their policy, were the most zealous patrons of those doctrines which...ecclesiastical power on the ruins of civil government. They attributed to the court of Rome a jurisdiction as extensive and absolute as was claimed by the most... | |
| William Russell - 1839 - 620 pagina’s
...every action that the most audacious or crafty politician could wish to commit.(3) In like manner, as the prosperity of the order was intimately connected...influenced by the same principle of attachment to the interatt of their society, which may serve (1) Complr. Krndti, par M. de Munclar. D' Alt mbert, nr... | |
| T. H. Usborne - 1851 - 160 pagina’s
...and at different times were the directors of the most considerable courts in Europe. They have always been the most zealous patrons of those doctrines which...ecclesiastical power on the ruins of civil government ; and even in these times have claimed for papal Rome a jurisdiction as extensive and as absolute as... | |
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