The National ReviewW.H. Allen, 1886 - Great Britain |
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Page 190
They believed , and without debate acted upon the principle abundantly recognized in the earliest ages of the Church , that whatever spiritual life Christ has imparted to His Body belongs to the whole , not to a part of it — is the ...
They believed , and without debate acted upon the principle abundantly recognized in the earliest ages of the Church , that whatever spiritual life Christ has imparted to His Body belongs to the whole , not to a part of it — is the ...
Page 412
The conversation was no less lively than the whole transaction . In short , the whole air of our party was sufficient , as you will easily imagine , to take up the whole attention of the garden : so much so , that from eleven o'clock ...
The conversation was no less lively than the whole transaction . In short , the whole air of our party was sufficient , as you will easily imagine , to take up the whole attention of the garden : so much so , that from eleven o'clock ...
Page 450
For it , and it alone , places the Church in harmony with the whole tendency of modern civilization - seen especially in communities like this — by recognizing in it the principle of a true democracy , in the right of the whole body to ...
For it , and it alone , places the Church in harmony with the whole tendency of modern civilization - seen especially in communities like this — by recognizing in it the principle of a true democracy , in the right of the whole body to ...
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