... but the Briton did nothing. He not only did nothing; he refused to do anything; he would have nothing to say to Augustine's invitation to join in preaching the gospel to the heathen English. Theologians may dispute over the inferences which may be... The Downside Review - Página 1181904Vista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Joseph Butterworth Owen - 1840 - 144 páginas
...saying among the sectaries — perhaps to cover the obscurity and recency of their own original — that "the Church of England is the daughter of the Church of Rome." If she were so, she would be like Rachel who brought away her father's Gods, or rather she would resemble... | |
| George W. Hunter - 1879 - 178 páginas
...love by Gregory the Great, founded in the year 597 at St. Martin's, Canterbury. -• The historical fact cannot be altered to please any man. The Church...perhaps, more directly than any other church in Europe."* Her connection with the Catholic Church was not broken at the Reformation. "The Reformers secured the... | |
| George Washington Hunter - 1879 - 218 páginas
...of love by Gregory the Great, founded in the year 597 at St. Martin's, Canterbury. " The historical fact cannot be altered to please any man. The Church...perhaps, more directly than any other church in Europe."* Her connection with the Catholic Church was not broken at the Reformation. " The Reformers secured... | |
| 1883 - 298 páginas
...English. Theologians may dispute over the inferences which may be drawn from the fact ; but the historical fact cannot be altered to please any man. The Church...the special conquest of the Roman Church, the first laud which looked up with reverence to the Roman pontiff, while it owed not even a nominal allegiance;... | |
| 1888 - 966 páginas
...English. Theologians may dispute over the inferences which may be drawn from the fact ; but the historical fact cannot be altered to please any man. The Church...looked up with reverence to the Roman pontiff, while it owed not even a nominal allegiance to the Roman Caesar. The conversion of the English was gradual,... | |
| Thomas Spencer Baynes, William Robertson Smith - 1890 - 938 páginas
...English. Theologians may dispute over the inferences which may be drawn from the fact ; but the historical fact cannot be altered to please any man. The Church...looked up with reverence to the Roman pontiff, while it owed not even a nominal allegiance to the Roman Ccesar. The conversion of the English was gradual,... | |
| Benjamin Gregory - 1898 - 616 páginas
..."Yes, he is, by his own showing. Mr. Bromley ought not to have descended to such an irregularity. If the Church of England is the daughter of the Church of Rome, then we are the grand-daughter. These are ridiculous attempts at wit. We must condemn them. " Mr. Hudson... | |
| 1907 - 798 páginas
...English. Theologians may dispute over the inferences which may be drawn from the fact; but the historical fact cannot be altered to please any man. The Church...looked up with reverence to the Roman pontiff, while it owed not even a nominal allegiance to the Roman Caesar. The conversion of the English was gradual,... | |
| Henry Jones Ford - 1924 - 336 páginas
...England which was founded by Augustine has nothing whatever to do with the early British Church. . . . The Church of England is the daughter of the Church of Rome." Notwithstanding the prestige of the Oxford school, the Teutonic theory of constitutional origins did... | |
| 1902 - 1096 páginas
...may dispute over the inferences which may be drawn from the fact : but the historical fact cannot bu altered to please any man. The Church of England is...perhaps, more directly than any other Church in Europe." le siwr, yn ol b.trn ysgolhaig a wnaeth hanes boreuol y wlad hon yn bwnc efrydiaeth oe?, (I) nid oes... | |
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