The Religious History of Ireland: Primitive, Papal and Protestant Including the Evangelical Missions, Catholic Agitations, and Church Progress of the Last Half-centuryKing, 1873 - 313 pages |
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Page 8
... the same reason , because they refused to have their reason bound in the fetters of authority ; and it is to prevent the existence of such thinkers among the Roman Catholics that the study of philosophy was to be , if possible , interdicted ...
... the same reason , because they refused to have their reason bound in the fetters of authority ; and it is to prevent the existence of such thinkers among the Roman Catholics that the study of philosophy was to be , if possible , interdicted ...
Page 48
... the Last Half-century James Godkin. 6 Archdeacon Cotton , speaking of the Diocesan Records in Ire- land , says that the ... Roman Catholics might be excused for having much more of that feeling than Protestants ; but they have the good ...
... the Last Half-century James Godkin. 6 Archdeacon Cotton , speaking of the Diocesan Records in Ire- land , says that the ... Roman Catholics might be excused for having much more of that feeling than Protestants ; but they have the good ...
Page 109
... the Roman party thought that this was a case , if ever there was one , in which the end sanctifies the means ; for the property in question was not English or Protestant property , but Irish and Catholic , bestowed by Irish Catholics for ...
... the Roman party thought that this was a case , if ever there was one , in which the end sanctifies the means ; for the property in question was not English or Protestant property , but Irish and Catholic , bestowed by Irish Catholics for ...
Page 114
... the Last Half-century James Godkin. which he might have abundantly illustrated ... Roman Emperors were the greatest persecutors of the Christians ; that the ... Catholics , were the most gentle , the most generous , the most refined of ...
... the Last Half-century James Godkin. which he might have abundantly illustrated ... Roman Emperors were the greatest persecutors of the Christians ; that the ... Catholics , were the most gentle , the most generous , the most refined of ...
Page 116
... the Lord Deputy Mountjoy to Dublin , and the day after James was proclaimed he repeated the absolute submission which he had made at Mellifont Abbey . The accession of James I. produced a delirium of joy in the Catholics of the South ...
... the Lord Deputy Mountjoy to Dublin , and the day after James was proclaimed he repeated the absolute submission which he had made at Mellifont Abbey . The accession of James I. produced a delirium of joy in the Catholics of the South ...
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12 Paternoster Row 65 Cornhill abbot ancient Archbishop Archbishop of Dublin Armagh army authority became Belfast bishops Black Oath building called Cashel Castle cathedral Celtic Celts century chapel chiefs Christian Church of Ireland Church of Rome clergy Clonmacnoise Columba Connaught Cromwell crosses Crown 8vo Derry diocese divine Dublin ecclesiastical England English erected Established Church fact favour Froude Glendalough Government heathen Henry historian holy honour houses Illustrated Irish Church Irish language island justice King labour land late London Lord Deputy ment ministers missionary monasteries nation native never Norman O'Neill Papists parish Parliament Patrick political Pope population preached prelates Presbyterian present priests Primate Protestant Protestant ascendancy Protestantism race Reformation religion religious Roman Catholics Rome Round Towers Royal ruins saints says Scotland spirit stone Synod temples tion tithes town Tuam Ulster Ultramontane worship
Popular passages
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Page 10 - YOUMANS (Eliza A.). An Essay on the Culture of the Observing Powers of Children, especially in connection with the Study of Botany. Edited, with Notes and a Supplement, by Joseph Payne, FCP, Author of " Lectures on the Science and Art of Education,
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Page 30 - No one who reads these sermons will wonder that Mr. Brooke is a great power in London, that his chapel is thronged, and his followers large and enthusiastic. They are fiery, energetic, impetuous sermons, rich with the treasures of a cultivated imagination.