| Alexander Hugh Hore - 1881 - 716 pages
...retained. The Act of Uniformity attached to the second book speaks of the Prayer-Book of 1549, " as a godly order, agreeable to the Word of God and the primitive Church," yet that " because divers doubts and disputes had arisen as to the way in which the book was to be... | |
| Herbert Mortimer Luckock - 1882 - 516 pages
...minister and mistakers than of any worthy cause." And the First Prayer-book the Statute declared to be " a very godly order, agreeable to the Word of God and the Primitive Church, very comfortable to all good people desiring to live in Christian conversation, and most profitable... | |
| Alexander Lendrum - 1882 - 202 pages
...Continent. Though it was pronounced to have been f1nished " by the aid of the Holy Ghost," and to be a " very godly order agreeable to the Word of God and the Primitive Church, very comfortable to all good people desiring to live in Christian conversation, and most profitable... | |
| Church congress - 1882 - 606 pages
...Ridley, thought it well to say in an Act of Parliament for which they were responsible, that " it was a godly order," "agreeable to the Word of God and the Primitive Church, very comfortable to all good people desiring to live in Christian conversation, and most profitable... | |
| John Rowland West - 1883 - 60 pages
...urged, differ very essentially from those in the First Book. Even in 1552 the First Book was spoken of as " a very godly order, agreeable to the Word of God and the Primitive Church." But it is in its general form that our present Book so seriously suffers, in comparison with the first... | |
| Edward Hayes Plumptre - 1884 - 442 pages
...the ministers and mistakers than of any worthy cause," and it declared the First Prayer Book to be "a very godly order, agreeable to the Word of God and the primitive Church, very comfortable to all good people desiring to live in Christian conversation, and most profitable... | |
| George Gresley Perry - 1886 - 260 pages
...insert second in it a handsome tribute to the merits of the i'iiiformity First Book. It is described as ' a very godly order, agreeable to the word of God and the primitive church, very comfortable to all good people desirous to live in Christian conversation, and most profitable... | |
| Alexander Hugh Hore - 1886 - 596 pages
...King Edward VI.) appeared ; the Act of Uniformity attached to it speaks of the First PrayerBook " as a godly order agreeable to the word of God and the Primitive Church," yet " because divers doubts and disputes had arisen as to the way in which the book was to be used... | |
| Alexander Hugh Hore - 1891 - 578 pages
...Uniformity speaks as if Parliament was half ashamed of it. It says that the First Prayer-book was "a godly order agreeable to the Word of God and the primitive Church." Of the Second Prayer-book it says that it was rendered necessary because " divers doubts and disputes... | |
| Arthur Cleveland Coxe - 1892 - 198 pages
...the act of uniformity, which establishes the second Book, indorses the first in these words : " It is a very godly order, agreeable to the Word of God and the primitive Church, very comfortable to all good people desiring to live in Christian conversation and most profitable... | |
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