 | Daniel Neal, Edward Parsons - Dissenters, Religious - 1811 - 614 pages
...I have read over your twenty-four articles, found in a Romish stile, of great length and curiosity, to examine all manner of ministers in this time, without...I think the inquisition of Spain, used not so many qustions to comprehend and to trap their priests. I know your canonists can defend these with all their... | |
 | Benjamin Brook - Puritans - 1813 - 18 pages
...articles, formed in a Romish style, to examine all manner of ministers, and to be executed ex officio nuro. I think the Inquisition of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and to trap their priests. Surely this judicial and canonical sifting of poor ministers, is not to edify or reform. This kind... | |
 | Benjamin Brook - Puritans - 1813
...articles, formed in a Romish style, to examine all manner of ministers, and to be executed ex officio nuro. I think the Inquisition of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and to trap their priests. Surely this judicial and canonical sifting of poor ministers, is not to edify or reform. This kind... | |
 | Daniel Neal - Great Britain - 1816
...encouraged, and the Queen's safety * endangered. || — I have read over your twenty-four arti< tides, found in a Romish style, of great length and curi*...in this time, * without distinction of persons, to he executed ex officio ' mero. — And I find them so curiously penned, so full of * branches and circumstances,... | |
 | Lucy Aikin - Great Britain - 1818 - 522 pages
...articles so curiously penned, so full of branches and circumstances, as he thought the inquisitors of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and to trap their preys. And that this juridical and canonical sifting of poor ministers was not to edify and reform.... | |
 | John Macdiarmid - 1820
...I have read over your twentyfour articles, found in a Romish style, of great length and curiosity, to examine all manner of ministers in this time, without distinction of persons, to be executed ex qfficio mero. And I find them so curiously penned, so full of branches and circumstances, that I think... | |
 | Henry Southern, Sir Nicholas Harris Nicolas - Bibliography - 1826
...interrogatories " so curiously penned, so full of branches and circumstances, as he thought the inquisitors of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend, and to trap their preys." By this interposition, however, Whitgift was not daunted. In an elaborate reply to the lord... | |
 | Daniel Neal - Church and state - 1822
...have read over your twenty- four articles, found in a Romish style, of great length and curiosity, to examine all manner of ministers in this time, without...these with all their particles ; but surely, under 21. Hem, " Objicimus, &c. That yon. have been heretofore noted, defamed, presented, or detected publicly,... | |
 | John Strype - 1822
...articles so curiously penned, so full of branches and circumstances, as he thought the Inquisitors of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and to trap their preys. And that this juridical and canonical sifting of CHAP. poor Ministers was not to edify and reform.... | |
 | John Strype - 1822
...articles so curiously penned, so full of branches and circumstances, as he thought the Inquisitors of Spain used not so many questions to comprehend and to trap their preys. And that this juridical and canonical sifting of CHAP, poor Ministers was not to edify and reform.... | |
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