| John Henry Hobart - 1844 - 288 páginas
...evidence that the Church of England admits what all her public offices and her general practice disclaim! laid aside as particular conceits of his own ; and it seems that afterwards he changed his own opinion. For he subscribed the book which was soon after set out, which was directly contrary to... | |
| John Henry Hobart (bp. of New York.) - 1846 - 276 páginas
...public offices and her general practice disclaim ! * Collier's Ecclesiastical History, vol. ii. p. 571. laid aside as particular conceits of his own ; and it seems that afterwards he changed his own opinion. For he subscribed the book which was soon after set out, which was directly contrary to... | |
| Edward Charles Harington - 1850 - 118 páginas
...Ecclesiastical offices will be found ; but as they are delivered by him with all possible modesty, so they were not established as the doctrine of the Church, but...own : and it seems that afterwards he changed his own opinion ; for he subscribed the book which was soon after set out, which was directly contrary... | |
| Thomas Lathbury - 1858 - 466 páginas
...ecclesiastical offices will be found ; but as they are delivered by him with all possible modesty, so they were not established as the doctrine of the Church, but...is directly contrary to those opinions set down in these papers." — Burnet's Reformation, i. 276. In two other works Burnet repeats the fact that Cranmer's... | |
| 1866 - 532 páginas
...ecclesiastical offices * * but as they were delivered by him with all possible modesty, so they were not established as the doctrine of the Church, but laid aside as particular conceits of his own, as it seems that afterwards he changed his opinion." But as such change would not favor the theory... | |
| 1896 - 216 páginas
...ecclesiastical offices will be found ; but as they are delivered by him with all possible modesty, so they were not established as the doctrine of the Church, but laid aside as particular conceits of his own. But it seems that afterwards he changed his opinion : for he subscribed the book that was soon after... | |
| Charles Chapman Grafton - 1909 - 280 páginas
...some singular opinions of his about the nature of ecclesiastical offices will be found, but they were not established as the doctrine of the Church, but laid aside as peculiar conceits of his own, and it seems that afterward he changed his opinion" (His. Ref., BookS,... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1849 - 658 páginas
...ordination and the nature of ecclesiastical offices, but in regard to the number of the sacraments, " were not established as the doctrine of the church, but laid aside as particular conceits of his own." [Bnrnet, I, 465.] Burnet indeed considers Cranmer's subscription to that book as showing that he had... | |
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