Hansard's Parliamentary Debates

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T.C. Hansard, 1851
 

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Beliebte Passagen

Seite 911 - General Councils may not be gathered together without the commandment and will of princes. And when they be gathered together, (forasmuch as they be an assembly of men, whereof all be not governed with the Spirit and Word of God,) they may err, and sometimes have erred, even in things pertaining unto God. Wherefore things ordained by them as necessary to salvation, have neither strength nor authority, unless it may be declared that they be taken out of Holy Scripture.
Seite 939 - Neither shalt thou take a wife to her sister, to vex her, to uncover her nakedness, beside the other in her life time.
Seite 331 - Your beloved country has received a place among the fair Churches, which, normally constituted, form the splendid aggregate of Catholic Communion; Catholic England has been restored to its orbit in the ecclesiastical firmament, from which its light had long vanished, and begins now anew its course of regularly adjusted action round the centre of unity, the source of jurisdiction, of light, and of vigour.
Seite 909 - No Person shall Marry within the degrees prohibited by the Laws of God, and expressed in a Table set forth by Authority in the year of our Lord God 1563, and all Marriages so made and contracted, shall be adjudged incestuous and unlawful, and consequently shall be dissolved as void from the beginning, and the parties so Married shall by course of Law be separated. And the aforesaid Table shall be in every Church publicly set up and fixed at the charge of the Parish.
Seite 25 - There is an assumption of power in all the documents which have come from Rome— a pretension to supremacy over the realm of England, and a claim to sole and undivided sway, which is inconsistent with the Queen's supremacy, with the rights of our bishops and clergy, and with the spiritual independence of the nation, as asserted even in Roman Catholic times.
Seite 317 - They left their native land in search of freedom, and found it in a desert. Divided as they are into a thousand forms of policy and religion, there is one point in which they all agree : they equally detest the pageantry of a king, and the supercilious hypocrisy of a bishop.
Seite 211 - God, in all things touching the regality of the same crown, and to none other, should be submitted to the pope, and the laws, and statutes of the realm by him defeated, and avoided at his will, in perpetual destruction of the sovereignty of the king, our lord, his crown, his regality, and of all his realm ; which God defend.
Seite 615 - That I do from my heart abhor, detest, and abjure as impious and heretical, that damnable doctrine and position, that Princes excommunicated or deprived by the Pope, or any authority of the See of Rome, may be deposed or murdered by their subjects, or any other whatsoever. And I do declare, that no foreign prince, person, prelate, state, or potentate hath, or ought to have, any jurisdiction, power, superiority, preeminence, or authority ecclesiastical or spiritual, within this realm: So help me God.
Seite 647 - It is remarkable that the two greatest and most salutary social revolutions which have taken place in England, that revolution which, in the thirteenth century, put an end to the tyranny of nation over nation, and that revolution which, a few generations later, put an end to the property of man in . man, were*'silently and imperceptibly effected.
Seite 937 - Thou shalt not uncover the nakedness of thy father's sister: she is thy father's near kinswoman.

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