We further will and authorize the wise and learned of our ecclesiastics, expert in divine service, to labour, endeavour, and devise all manner of devices to be devised, to abate, assuage, and confound those heresies repugnant to our sacred laws, that... The Jesuits: their moral maxims and plots - Page 45by James Aitken Wylie - 1881Full view - About this book
| Joseph Mendham - 1832 - 382 pages
...assuage, and confound those Heresies, repugnant to ' our sacred Laws, that thereby these Heretics may be either recalled to ' confess their errors, and...a total infamy may be brought upon them and their pos' terities by a perpetual discord and contention among themselves, by ' which means they may either... | |
| Letter - 1832 - 32 pages
...confess their errors, and acknowledge the jurisdiction of the See of Rome ; or, that a total infamy be brought upon them and their posterities, by a perpetual...and contention among themselves. By which means they might either speedily perish by God's wrath, or continue in eternal difference." Upon this Bull many... | |
| 1838 - 504 pages
...labour, endeavour, and devise all manner of devices to be devised, to abate, assuage, and confound those heresies repugnant to our sacred laws, that thereby...a total infamy may be brought upon them and their posterity, by a perpetual discord and contention amongst themselves ; hy which means they may either... | |
| 1838 - 474 pages
...labour, endeavour, and devise all manner of devices to be devised, to abate, assuage, and confound those heresies repugnant to our sacred laws, that thereby...a total infamy may be brought upon them and their posterity, by a perpetual discord and contention amongst themselves ; by which means they may either... | |
| George Punchard - 1856 - 538 pages
...to confess their errors, and acknowledge the jurisdiction of the see of Rome, or that a total infamy be brought upon them and their posterities, by a perpetual...and contention among themselves. By which means they might either speedily perish by God's wrath, or continue in eternal difference." * This bull quickened... | |
| George Punchard - Church history - 1865 - 546 pages
...to confess their errors, and acknowledge the jurisdiction of the see of Rome, or that a total infamy be brought upon them and their posterities, by a perpetual...and contention among themselves. By which means they might either speedily perish by God's wrath, or continue in eternal difference." * This bull quickened... | |
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