From all sedition and privy conspiracy, from the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities, from all false doctrine and heresy, from hardness of heart, and contempt of thy word and commandment. The Church of England: The medieval church - Page 248by Henry Donald Maurice Spence-Jones - 1897Full view - About this book
| Henry Norbert Birt - 1907 - 708 pages
...almost immediately after Elizabeth's accession, contained the petition of its Edwardine prototype : " From the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities," as well as another clause marking its date of publication, " That it may please Thee to keep Elizabeth... | |
| Johann Jakob Herzog, Albert Hauck, Samuel Macauley Jackson, Charles Colebrook Sherman, George William Gilmore - 1909 - 532 pages
...alteration of " Head " to " Governor "; but the deprecation was struck out of the Litany which read, " From the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome and all his detestable enormities, good Lord, deliver us." The queen retained, against the protest of bishops, an altar, crucifix, and... | |
| Ecclesiological Society - 1910 - 352 pages
...all which were then retained in this Church, when yet, in her very Litany she pray'd to be delivered from the Tyranny of the Bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities ; I dare appeal to all the truly Learned whether they are not exactly agreeable to the most Primitive... | |
| Samuel Hart - 1910 - 300 pages
...patriarchs and prophets . . ,' were asked to 'pray for us,' and a little further on was the petition, 'From the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome and all his detestable enormities, Good Lord, deliver us.' In another and more pleasing way, the introduction of new petitions bears testimony... | |
| Hugh Chisholm - 1911 - 1008 pages
...In the Litany the following petition found in both the 200 261 Edwardian Prayer Books was omitted " from the tyranny of the bishop of Rome and all his detestable enormities, good Lord deliver us." 4. In the Communion service the two clauses of administration found in the first... | |
| Church of England, Edmund Tyrrell Green - 1912 - 474 pages
...usurped and foreign power." At the Elizabethan revision of the Prayer Book (1559), too, the clause, " from the tyranny of the bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities " (Good Lord deliver us), was omitted from the Litany. This very moderate attitude of the English Church... | |
| Dyson Hague - 1893 - 298 pages
...found faulty or wanting. Why, then, perchance some one will ask, was that grand old petition omitted, " From the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities, Good Lord, deliver us " ? For the simple reason, in truth, that it was no longer necessary. Finally... | |
| James Gairdner - 1913 - 450 pages
...Then kneeled Dr. Taylor down, and held up both his hands, and said, " Good Lord, I thank thee; and from the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome and all his detestable errors, idolatries and abominations, good Lord deliver us! And God be praised for good King Edward!"... | |
| Percy Dearmer - 1915 - 310 pages
...embers of Smithfield were hardly cooled, the petition (in the First Prayer Book) to be delivered " from the tyranny of the bishop of Rome, and all his detestable enormities " was removed from the Litany. In 1560 the Prayer Book was published in Latin; and in the same year... | |
| William Paul McClure Kennedy - 1916 - 360 pages
...interest from two points of view. Not only did it contain for the first time the petition in the Litany for deliverance from " the tyranny of the Bishop of Rome and all his detestable enormities," but the Eucharist was definitely stated to be only a memorial, and the Real Presence was implicitly... | |
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