| Micaiah Towgood - 1748 - 132 pages
...her, but alfo a foul, filthy, old, wither'd Harlot ; " the fouleft zn&filthieft that ever was feen.— And that " as it at prefent is, and hath been for..." fo far from the Nature of the TRUE Church, that no" thing can be more *."—Note. Thefe Homilies every Clergyman publickly declares, and fubfcribes... | |
| Benjamin Flower - Church and state - 1792 - 476 pages
...but alfo a " foul, filthy, old withered harlot ; the fouleft and filthicft that ever was " feen : And as it at prefent is, and hath been for 900 years, it is fo far " from the true church, that nothing can be more." Who are plain men, like myfelf, to believe in this cafe ? The... | |
| Tracts - 1800 - 276 pages
...Ed. 1766. ' The church of Rome—hath been, for the fpace of nine hundred years and odd—fo far wide from the nature of the true church, that nothing can be more.' p. 283. The perufal of the fermon againft peril of idolatry, and that for Whitfunday, would mew us... | |
| Ecclesiastical law - 1802 - 628 pages
...the fpace of nine hundred years and odd ; you (hall well perceive the itate thereof to be fo far wide from the nature of the true church, that nothing can be more. For neither are they built upon the foundation of the Apoftles and Prophets, retaining the found and... | |
| Micaiah Towgood - Dissenters, Religious - 1804 - 376 pages
...that ever was seen. — Arid,' " that as it at present is, and hath been for 90$ " years, it is so fur from the nature of the true' " church, that nothing can be" more."* Note,' these homilies every clergyman publicly declares, and subscribes with his hand, that they contain... | |
| Micaiah Towgood - 1811 - 340 pages
...filthiest that ever was. seen.—And, " that as it at present is, and hath been for 900 '' years, it is so far from the nature of the true " church, that nothing can be more."* Note> these homilies every clergyman publicly declares, and subscribes with his hand, that they contain... | |
| Isaac Taylor - Theology, Doctrinal - 1812 - 774 pages
...the space of nine hundred years and odd, you shall well perceive the state thereof to be so far wide from the nature of the true Church, that nothing can be more. For neither are they built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, retaining the sound and... | |
| Church of England articles - 1821 - 234 pages
...space of nine hundred years and odd — you shall well perceive the state thereof to be so far wide from the nature of the true Church, that nothing can be more. For neither are they built upon the foundation of the Apostles and Prophets, retaining the sound and... | |
| Church of England - Ecclesiastical law - 1822 - 606 pages
...the space of nine hundred years and odd; you shall well perceive the state thereof to be so far wide from the nature of the true church, that nothing can be more. For neither are they built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, retaining the sound and... | |
| Arminianism - 1859 - 1200 pages
...of the Protestant controversy. In the language of the good old English Homilies, Rome is " so wide from the nature of the true church, that nothing can be more ;" and further, her Bishop "ought rather to be called Antichrist, and the successor of the Scribes... | |
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