An Historical Sketch of Sacerdotal Celibacy in the Christian Church |
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Common terms and phrases
abandoned Abbot admitted adopted Archbishop Arialdo ascetic asceticism asserted autem authority benefices Bishop canons Cardinal Catholic cause celibacy century chastity Christian Chron church clergy clerical clericorum concubinage concubines council council of Trent Culdees Damiani deacons declared decretals deprived diocese discipline doctrines Eccles ecclesia ecclesiastical efforts Emperor endeavored enforce enim eorum episcopal Epist etiam evil excommunication Gregory Harduin Hartzheim held Henry heresy heretics Hist holy holy orders Ibid Innocent Jovinian laity legate licentiousness Manichean Manicheism marriage married priests monasteries monastic monks morals nisi obedience omnes omni openly orders ordination papal pastors pope prelates presbyteri priesthood prohibited promulgated punishment purity quĉ quam quia quod Ratherius reform religious rendered Rome rule sacerdotal sacerdotal marriage scandal secular shows subdeacon sunt synod tamen temporal tion uxorem uxores uxoribus vero Vigilantius virginity vows wife wives zeal
Popular passages
Page 25 - Defraud ye not one the other, except it be with consent for a time, that ye may give yourselves to fasting and prayer; and come together again, that Satan tempt you not for your incontinency.
Page 373 - ... though these three men, Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it, they should deliver but their own souls by their righteousness, saith the Lord God.
Page 314 - Peace to their shades ! the pure Culdees Were Albyn's earliest priests of God, Ere yet an island of her seas By foot of Saxon monk was trod, Long ere her churchmen by bigotry Were barr'd from wedlock's holy tie.
Page 503 - Bishops, priests, and deacons, are not commanded by God's law, either to vow the estate of single life, or to abstain from marriage ; therefore it is lawful for them, as for all other Christian men, to marry at their own discretion, as they shall judge the same to serve better to godliness.
Page 502 - ... that no manner of priest or deacon shall hereafter take to his wife any manner of woman, without the advice and allowance first had, upon good examination, by the bishop of the same diocese, and two justices of the peace of the same shire, dwelling next to the place where the same woman hath made her most abode before her marriage, nor without the good will of the parents of the said woman, if she have any living, or two of the next of her kinsfolks, or, for lack of knowledge of such, of her...
Page 517 - Grey Friars' was a place so well provided, that unless honest men had seen the same, we would have feared to have reported what provision they had.
Page 298 - Golice," the more than doubtful authorship of which, at the close of the twelfth or beginning of the thirteenth century...
Page 515 - January, 1559, when the storm was gathering, but before it had burst, the inmates of the religious houses found affixed to their gates a proclamation in the name of "The Blinde, Crooked, Lame, Widows, Orphans, and all other Poor, so visited by the hand of God as cannot work," ordering the monks to leave the patrimony intended to relieve the suffering, but usurped by indolent shavelings, giving them until Whit-Sunday to make their exit, after which they would be ejected by force, and ending with the...
Page 470 - Stokesley, Bishop of London, remarked, concerning the transaction, that "these lesser houses were as thorns soon plucked up, but the great abbots were like putrefied old oaks, yet they must needs follow, and so would others do in Christendom before many years were passed.
Page 375 - Still, they did not even yet consider themselves as separated from the Church, for they consented to submit their peculiar doctrines to the chances of a disputation, presided over by an orthodox priest. Of course, the decision went against them, and a portion of the