Manchester College, Its Origin and Principles: An Address Delivered ... on the Opening of the New Building at Oxford October 19, 1893H.Rawson and Company, 1893 - 26 頁 |
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第 頁
... Christian estrangement to a higher spiritual unity . At the time of the Reformation a large proportion of the English Church would gladly have kept within the Roman Communion , and was drawn into its separate position by political ...
... Christian estrangement to a higher spiritual unity . At the time of the Reformation a large proportion of the English Church would gladly have kept within the Roman Communion , and was drawn into its separate position by political ...
第 頁
... Christ , to have destroyed the sincerity of faith by substituting a number of frivolous forms , and even money payments , for the devotion and contrition of the heart , and to have interposed a corrupt and worldly priesthood between the ...
... Christ , to have destroyed the sincerity of faith by substituting a number of frivolous forms , and even money payments , for the devotion and contrition of the heart , and to have interposed a corrupt and worldly priesthood between the ...
第 頁
... Christ , to have destroyed the sincerity of faith by substituting a number of frivolous forms , and even money payments , for the devotion and contrition of the heart , and to have interposed a corrupt and worldly priesthood between the ...
... Christ , to have destroyed the sincerity of faith by substituting a number of frivolous forms , and even money payments , for the devotion and contrition of the heart , and to have interposed a corrupt and worldly priesthood between the ...
第 7 頁
... Christianity . It thus became clear to them that religion was an affair between a man's own conscience and his God , and that the authority of the State could not relieve its citizens of their individual responsibility in the highest ...
... Christianity . It thus became clear to them that religion was an affair between a man's own conscience and his God , and that the authority of the State could not relieve its citizens of their individual responsibility in the highest ...
第 8 頁
... Christianity of the country . But if this was to be accomplished , the Church would have to limit its requirements to what was fundamental , and allow a considerable latitude of choice in things indifferent . According to this principle ...
... Christianity of the country . But if this was to be accomplished , the Church would have to limit its requirements to what was fundamental , and allow a considerable latitude of choice in things indifferent . According to this principle ...
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常見字詞
Academy was open Accordingly Act of Uniformity amid ancient awakened Bible bigotry Bolton Catholic century Chorlton Christ Christian Reformer Church of England College ¹ communion comprehension concerning the Education conscience conscientious Conventicle Act divine doctrine ecclesiastical enemies enmity enquiries faith Five-Mile Act freedom heart heresy History human impartial intolerance judgment King Kippis laymen letter liberty limit Manchester Academy MANCHESTER COLLEGE Manchester New College Memoirs ministry narrow natural philosophy never noble Nonconformist oath opinion ORIGIN AND PRINCIPLES Owens College Papal Parliament party persecution Presbyterians Priestley principle or sentiment Private Academies Professor pupils Puritans Quoted in Neal Rathmell religion removal to York requirements Schoolmaster seats of learning single church Socinian soul spirit Street Chapel subscription taught or advanced Test Act things indifferent thought toleration truth tutorial staff tutors unity University College University of Oxford violent Warrington Academy wider worship
熱門章節
第 3 頁 - I will make them conform, or I will harry them out of the land, or else worse,"
第 7 頁 - That such as profess faith in God by Jesus Christ (though differing in judgment from the doctrine, worship or discipline publicly held forth) shall not be restrained from, but shall be protected in, the profession of...
第 7 頁 - I shall think that land happy that hath but bare liberty to be as good as they are willing to be; and if countenance and maintenance be but added to liberty, and tolerated errors and sects be but forced to keep the peace, and not to oppose the substantials of Christianity, I shall not hereafter much fear such toleration, nor despair that truth will bear down adversaries.
第 11 頁 - I will conform to the Liturgy of the Church of England, as it is now by law established.
第 11 頁 - ... other person in holy orders, and every schoolmaster keeping any public or private school, and every person instructing or teaching any youth in any house or private family as a tutor or schoolmaster...
第 15 頁 - ... embraced, shall, upon impartial and faithful examination, appear to you to be dubious or false, you either suspect or totally reject such principle or sentiment. ' IV. That you keep your mind always open to evidence ; that you labour to banish from your breast all prejudice, prepossession, and...
第 15 頁 - That if at any time hereafter any principle or sentiment by me taught or advanced, or by you admitted and embraced, shall, upon impartial .and faithful examination, appear to you to be dubious or false, you either suspect or totally reject such principle or sentiment.
第 12 頁 - Oxford, was unusually well equipped, having annext a fine garden, bowling green, fish-pond and within a laboratory and some not inconsiderable rarities with air-pumps, thermometers and all sorts of mathematical instruments.
第 15 頁 - II. That you admit, embrace, or assent to no principle, or sentiment, by me taught or advanced, but only so far as it shall appear to you to be supported and justified by proper evidence from revelation, or the reason of things. III. That, if at any time hereafter, any principle or sentiment, by me taught or advanced, or by you admitted...
第 15 頁 - Life, and before whose judgment seat you must in no long time appear, that in all your studies and inquiries of a religious nature, present or future, you do constantly, carefully, impartially and conscientiously attend to evidence as it lies in the Holy Scriptures, or in the nature of things and the dictates of reason ; cautiously guarding against the sallies of imagination and the fallacy of ill-grounded conjecture.