The Protestant's companion; a collection of preservatives against popery |
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Page i
... priesthood , he found himself constrained to assist in the many well - meant endeavours to guard his Protestant brethren against * If , however , it be thought , by the praises here bestowed on certain meritorious Catholic families ...
... priesthood , he found himself constrained to assist in the many well - meant endeavours to guard his Protestant brethren against * If , however , it be thought , by the praises here bestowed on certain meritorious Catholic families ...
Page v
... priesthood , he found himself constrained to assist in the many well - meant endeavours to guard his Protestant brethren against * If , however , it be thought , by the praises here bestowed on certain meritorious Catholic families ...
... priesthood , he found himself constrained to assist in the many well - meant endeavours to guard his Protestant brethren against * If , however , it be thought , by the praises here bestowed on certain meritorious Catholic families ...
Page vi
... of monks , and humanity misapplied in donaticas to enrich priests , for imaginary assistance afforded to the dead . Such are the blessings of Catholicism ! against stubborn facts ; and the following pages , alas vi PREFACE .
... of monks , and humanity misapplied in donaticas to enrich priests , for imaginary assistance afforded to the dead . Such are the blessings of Catholicism ! against stubborn facts ; and the following pages , alas vi PREFACE .
Page viii
... priests embark on board French ships which visit the coasts of South America . On their arrival they study to insinuate themselves into the confidence of the principal native families ; and when they succeed , which but too often ...
... priests embark on board French ships which visit the coasts of South America . On their arrival they study to insinuate themselves into the confidence of the principal native families ; and when they succeed , which but too often ...
Page ix
... priesthood to its very head , to dictate measures equally opposite to the spirit of our laws , and the mild and ... priests , hostile to intercourse with this country , the United States , and every quarter whence ideas of civil and ...
... priesthood to its very head , to dictate measures equally opposite to the spirit of our laws , and the mild and ... priests , hostile to intercourse with this country , the United States , and every quarter whence ideas of civil and ...
Other editions - View all
The Protestant's Companion: A Collection of Preservatives Against Popery Protestant No preview available - 2016 |
The Protestant's Companion: A Collection of Preservatives Against Popery Protestant No preview available - 2023 |
Common terms and phrases
adoration altar angel appeared arms Bavaria bell Bishop blessed blood bull called candles Cardinal carried cathedral celebrated ceremony chapel child Christ Church of Rome clergy confess confessor Coronea cross crowd crucifix cure devil devotion doctrine Dominicans dressed England eyes faith fanatical Father France Franciscans friars hands head heaven heretics Hohenlohe holy water honour imposture indulgence Ireland Italy Jesuits Jesus Jetzer Joseph king kissing lady Lord Loughderg mass Maynooth miracle monks mother MUMMERIES murder night Papal Paris passed penitents performed persons picture pilgrims pious plenary indulgence Pope POPE CLEMENT VII Popery Popish pray prayers priest priesthood Prince Prince Hohenlohe procession Protestantism Protestants purgatory Queen racter received relics religion religious restored Roman Catholic Roman Catholic Church round Saint Saviour says sent sins solemn souls Spain superstition tion top joint town transubstantiation Trestaillon Virgin Mary walked whole worship young
Popular passages
Page 134 - Otherwise, where ill men (be they heretics or other malefactors) may be punished or suppressed without disturbance and hazard of the good, they may and ought, by public authority, either spiritual or temporal...
Page 191 - Moses' seat: all things therefore whatsoever they bid you, these do and observe: but do not ye after their works ; for they say, and do not. Yea, they bind heavy burdens and grievous to be borne, and lay them on men's shoulders; but they themselves will not move them with their finger.
Page 177 - Virgin with a crown on her head. The Dominicans fearing, by this discovery, to lose the fruits of their imposture, thought the best method would be to own the whole matter to Jetzer, and to engage him by the most seducing promises of opulence and glory, to carry on the cheat. Jetzer was persuaded, or at least appeared to be so. But the Dominicans, suspecting that he was not entirely...
Page 49 - Deputy, who causing it to be opened, that the secretary might read the commission, there was nothing save a pack of cards, with the knave of clubs uppermost ; which not only startled the...
Page 135 - The Protestants foolishly expound it of Rome, for that there they put heretics to death, and allow of their punishment in other countries; but their blood is not called the blood of saints, no more than the blood of thieves, mankillers, and other malefactors, for the shedding of which, by order of justice, no commonwealth shall answer.
Page 49 - Ireland (calling the protestants by that title). The good-woman of the house being well affected to the protestant religion, and also having a brother, named John Edmonds, of the same, then a ' citizen in Dublin, was much troubled at the doctor's words ; but watching her convenient time...
Page 131 - Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings Thou hast perfected praise.
Page 255 - Every tendency to receive the surrounding idolatries into a participation of the honours of the true worship — every idolatrous touch, was visited with punishment ; and that punishment, not left to the remote working of the corruption, but immediate, and, by its directness, evidently designed to make the nation feel the high importance of the trust, and the final ruin that must follow its betrayal.
Page 258 - Distracted counsels, popular feuds met by alternate weakness and violence, the loss of the national respect finally deepening into civil bloodshed, were the punishments of his betrayal of Protestantism. The sorrows and late repentance of his prison hours painfully redeemed his memory.
Page 33 - Mahometan faith,—" There is but one GOD, and MAHOMET is his prophet!" It is supposed that this chair had been, among the spoils of the crusaders, offered to the church at a time when a taste for antiquarian lore, and the deciphering of inscriptions, were not yet in fashion.