Otherwise, where ill men (be they heretics or other malefactors) may be punished or suppressed, without disturbance and hazard of the good, they may and ought, by public authority, either spiritual or temporal, to be chastised or executed. Popery Stripped of Its Garb - Page 41by James M. Horner - 1836 - 279 pagesFull view - About this book
| England - 1827 - 944 pages
...chapter of St Matthew, — " Nay ; lest while ye gather up the tares, ye root out the wheat also."— " The good must tolerate the evil, -when it is so strong that it cannot be redressed without ilanger and disturbance of the whole church, and commit the matter to God's judgment in the latter... | |
| 1840 - 772 pages
...heing entered into, hy Romanists against memhers of the Protestant Churches. The note reads thus: — "The good must tolerate the evil when it is so strong that it cannot he redressed without danger and disturhance of the Church ; otherwise ill men, he they heretics or... | |
| 1835 - 792 pages
...— On 2 John x. " The good (»'. e. the Papists) must tolerate the evil (»'. e. the Protestants), when it is so strong that it cannot be redressed without danger or disturbance of the whole church ; otherwise, where ill men, be they heretics or other malefactors,... | |
| William Blair - Church and state - 1819 - 288 pages
...annotations: ' The good (ie the Roman Catholics) must tolerate the evil (ie the Protestants, &c.), when it is so strong that it cannot be redressed without danger or disturbance of the whole Church, and commit the matter to God's judgment in the latter day; otherwise,... | |
| Arminianism - 1839 - 1092 pages
...indignantly repudiate. This is explained in the same book. In the note on Matthew xiii. 29, 30, it is said, " The good must tolerate the evil when it is so strong...cannot be redressed without danger and disturbance to the whole Church, and commit the matter to God's judgment in the latter day. OTHERWISE, where ill... | |
| English literature - 1822 - 696 pages
...by creation, yet they are made execrable by the profane blessing of heretics or idolaters:'' that " the good must tolerate the evil , when it is so strong that it cannot be suppressed •without danger and disturbance of the whole Church," (meaning the Church of Rome,) "... | |
| William Beloe, Thomas Fanshaw Middleton, William Rowe Lyall, Robert Nares - Books - 1823 - 700 pages
...members of their Church as exclusively ' the faithful,' and exclusively ' Catholics !') that though « the good must tolerate the evil, when it is so strong...cannot be redressed, without danger and disturbance to the whole Church, and commit the matter to God's judgment in the latter day ;" yet " where ill men,... | |
| Hannah Adams - 1823 - 494 pages
...authorities, are such persecuting sentiments as the following: — On Matt.xiii. 29, it is said, " The good must tolerate the evil, when it is so strong that it cannot be redressed without danger or disturbance of the whole church, and commit the matter to God's judgment in (he latter day; otherwise,... | |
| Arthur Henry Kenney - 1827 - 306 pages
...only to themselves and their party. The duty of toleration is explained thus in the Rhemish notes : " The GOOD must tolerate the evil, when it is so strong...without danger and disturbance of the whole church." (Note on Matt. xiii. 29); and the May268 APPENDIX. nooth divinity class book quotes the authority of... | |
| Arthur Henry Kenney - 1827 - 298 pages
...themselves and their party. The duty of toleration is explained thus in the Rhemish notes : " The GOOD mutt tolerate the evil, when it is so strong that it cannot...without danger and disturbance of the whole church." (Note on Matt. xiii. 29) ; and the Maynooth divinity class book quotes the authority of Bossuet with... | |
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