| Church of England, Edmund Tyrrell Green - 1912 - 474 pages
...God, and with no intention of contradicting the former book." The First Book is, moreover, described as a <; very godly order, agreeable to the Word of God and the Primitive Church." In view of such statements as these we can scarcely interpret the substitution of Table for Altar as... | |
| Percy Herbert Osmond - 1913 - 428 pages
...ornaments or anything beside that was appointed in the former book, but acknowledged it all to have been ' a very godly order, agreeable to the Word of God and the primitive Church.' Whereupon, by authority of Parliament, in the 1st year of Queen Elizabeth, albeit it was thought most... | |
| Charles Hugh Egerton Smyth - 1926 - 352 pages
...repudiation of the Church of Rome, and grudged Cranmer even the admission that the Book of 1549 was 'a very Godly order. . .agreeable to the word of God, and the primitive Church.' Hooper, for .instance, described the book to Bullinger as 'inadequate and ambiguous, in some parts... | |
| 1881 - 1092 pages
...in various particulars the Book of 1549, declared in their own statute of supersession that it was a godly order, agreeable to the word of God and the primitive Church, very comfortable for all good people desiring to live in Christian conversation, and most profitable... | |
| Arthur Pierce Middleton - 2001 - 356 pages
...Scripture, as to the usages in the Primitive Church'. In 1552, the Act speaks of the Book of Common Prayer, 'a very godly order, agreeable to the Word of God and the primitive Church . . .'.L'9 The 1552 Book arose from the agitation of Continental Reformers that the Church of England... | |
| 48 pages
...misinterpretations and doubts, at the same time gratuitously commending the first Book as having been "a very godly order... agreeable to the Word of God and the primitive Church, very comfortable to all good people." The 1552 Book, also prepared under Cranmer's aegis but less a... | |
| rev. george ayliffe poole, m.a. - 1855 - 566 pages
...framed. Even the bill which substituted for it its very inferior successor, declared the first book " 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... | |
| 1823 - 940 pages
...yet the very act of parliament which authorized that alteration, calls King Edward's " a very gbilly order, agreeable to the word of God and the primitive church, and very comfortable to all good people desiring to live in Christian conversation." The English church,... | |
| 1881 - 1098 pages
...particulars the Book of 1549, declared in their own statute of supersession that it 1881. 767 was a godly order, agreeable to the word of God and the primitive Church, very comfortable for all good people desiring to live in Christian conversation, and most profitable... | |
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