| Philip Schaff - Church history - 1877 - 948 pages
...unto us our spiritual nourishment and continual growth in Christ 93. The change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, commonly called Transubstantiation, can not bo proved by holy Writ; but is repugnant to plain... | |
| Daniel Neal - Great Britain - 1817 - 508 pages
...unto us our spiritnal nourishment, and continual growth in Christ. 93. The change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, commonly called the transubslantiation, cannot be proved by holy writ, but is repugnant to... | |
| Daniel Neal - Great Britain - 1817 - 506 pages
...unto us our spiritual nourishment, and continual growth in Christ 93. The change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, commonly called the transuJ)st initiation, cannot be proved by holy writ, but is repugnant... | |
| George Hay (bp. of Daulis.) - 1822 - 402 pages
...Almighty a power which we find in men? Now, in the blessed Eucharist, he both changes the substance of the bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ; and Christ now really present in the blessed Eucharist, is pleased to appear to us under the... | |
| Daniel Neal - Great Britain - 1822 - 522 pages
...unto us our spiritual nourishment, and continual growth in Christ. 93. The change of the substance of bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, commonly called transubstantiation, cannot be proved by holy writ, but is repugnant to plain... | |
| John Owen - Puritans - 1826 - 634 pages
...your faith. For your sacrifice cannot be performed, without a supposition of a change of the substance of the bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, and the substance of that body and blood, in every consecrated host under the species of bread... | |
| John Owen - Puritans - 1826 - 602 pages
...hereof, such a prodigious imagination of the real conversion or transubstantiation of the substance of the bread and wine, into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, as overthrows all faith, reason, and sense also. And in the room of that holy reverence of... | |
| William Eusebius Andrews - 1826 - 976 pages
...the Catholic doctrine of Christ's Real Presence in the Eucharist, or of any change of the substance of the bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, and that he would rest his arguments on Scripture alone. With what success he did this, 1 shall... | |
| Robert Vaughan - 1828 - 488 pages
...concerning the eucharist. The word c '*"''"' transubstantiation, was designed to express the changing of the bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ, and this doctrine is rejected in his writings in almost every form of language. In his two... | |
| George Stanley Faber - 1830 - 652 pages
...all the following very important particulars : both respecting a conversion of the entire substance of the bread and wine into the substance of the body and blood of Christ ; respecting the elements being physically, by consecration, transmuted into the entire Christ,... | |
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