[11], 213 [i.e. 205] p."I. That the Protestants without any necessity of inquiring into the decrees of the Council of Trent have sufficient reason to reject it, II. That the doctrine of the Council of Trent is contrary to the antient doctrine of the Catholic Church, III. That the Council of Trent was so far from reforming the disorders which had crept into the church that it really made the breaches in its discipline wider and cut off all hopes of correcting the antient abuses, [and] a conclusion of the foregoing discourses concerning the state of the Church of England and how she hath bin more successful in the reformation of her faith and manners than the Church of Rome."An answer to Abraham Woodhead's "Considerations upon the Council of ...
[16], 295, [1] p.Errata: p. [1] at end.Reproduction of original in Union Theological Seminary Librar...
The standard evaluation of the Council of Trent, which is basically due to Hubert Jedin's detailed h...
The first purpose of this essay is to look at Trent\u27s understanding of transubstantiation and the...
The Council of Trent is the most important assembly in the history of the Latin Church. To exaggerat...
This article begins by examining what is meant by the Catholic Reformation and how it relates to the...
Examines the attitudes of William Ewart Gladstone to the doctrine of papal infallibility propounded ...
The Reformation marked the end of Middle Ages and the beginning of modern times. Instead of generati...
The Roman Catholic Church responded to the Protestant Reformation with two overlapping yet distinct ...
The Council of Trent (1545-1563) is often depicted as being primarily concerned with the promulgatio...
The Council of Trent (1545-1563) is often depicted as being primarily concerned with the promulgatio...
[15], 295-695, [3] p.Reproduction of original in Huntington Library and Duke University Library.Form...
[2], xxiii, [5], 163 p.Includes bibliographical references.Advertisement: p. [148].Reproduction of o...
[4], 119 p.Reproduction of original in University of Illinois Library.Appears as the second part of ...
In this chapter attention is paid to the way in which the Council of Trent discussed the issues Orig...
[4], 68 p.A reply to: Two discourses / Abraham Woodhead [i.e., R.H.].Written by F. Atterbury. Cf. Ha...
[16], 295, [1] p.Errata: p. [1] at end.Reproduction of original in Union Theological Seminary Librar...
The standard evaluation of the Council of Trent, which is basically due to Hubert Jedin's detailed h...
The first purpose of this essay is to look at Trent\u27s understanding of transubstantiation and the...
The Council of Trent is the most important assembly in the history of the Latin Church. To exaggerat...
This article begins by examining what is meant by the Catholic Reformation and how it relates to the...
Examines the attitudes of William Ewart Gladstone to the doctrine of papal infallibility propounded ...
The Reformation marked the end of Middle Ages and the beginning of modern times. Instead of generati...
The Roman Catholic Church responded to the Protestant Reformation with two overlapping yet distinct ...
The Council of Trent (1545-1563) is often depicted as being primarily concerned with the promulgatio...
The Council of Trent (1545-1563) is often depicted as being primarily concerned with the promulgatio...
[15], 295-695, [3] p.Reproduction of original in Huntington Library and Duke University Library.Form...
[2], xxiii, [5], 163 p.Includes bibliographical references.Advertisement: p. [148].Reproduction of o...
[4], 119 p.Reproduction of original in University of Illinois Library.Appears as the second part of ...
In this chapter attention is paid to the way in which the Council of Trent discussed the issues Orig...
[4], 68 p.A reply to: Two discourses / Abraham Woodhead [i.e., R.H.].Written by F. Atterbury. Cf. Ha...
[16], 295, [1] p.Errata: p. [1] at end.Reproduction of original in Union Theological Seminary Librar...
The standard evaluation of the Council of Trent, which is basically due to Hubert Jedin's detailed h...
The first purpose of this essay is to look at Trent\u27s understanding of transubstantiation and the...