Page images
PDF
EPUB

dent in our fore-fathers to frame, it would be undoubtedly, wise and provident in us to abolish. The days of bigotry and persecution are gone, I trust, for ever. The mind, enlightened by rational Christianity, and soothed by philosophy, has learned to appreciate justly the precepts of religion. It perceives, that moderation and forbearance are virtues of the highest order, absolutely essential to human happiness, and without which, all the doctrines of theological metaphysics, which the mind of man has hitherto been able to conceive, lose every thing of value, dignity, or goodness.

INDEX

OF

NAMES AND SUBJECTS;

AND OF

AUTHORS AND BOOKS,

QUOTED AND REFERRED TO.

A

[blocks in formation]
[blocks in formation]

Archdeacons, 403.

Architecture, influence of the reform-
ation on, 237.

Archipriesthoods, 425.
Arian controversy, 67.
Ariosto's Orlando Furioso, 52.
Arius, his death, 70.

Ark, honour shewed to the, 353.
Armenian church, 251.

Articles of faith in which all Christians
agree, 294.

Artists encouraged by Leo X., 125.
Asbury, Mr. Francis, 47.

Asia, churches of, 251.

Asia minor, churches of, 251.
Assembly of the kirk of Scotland, 268.
Athanasius, St. Dec. Com. Nic. 67,
et Ep. Africa, 68.

Atlus Geographicus, 254.
Atmore, Rev. Charles, 432.
Auditors of the Ruota, 427.
Augsburg, Luther's conference at,

[blocks in formation]

Ammir. Discorso come la Chiesa Ro- 58.

[blocks in formation]

Avignon, residence of the Popes at,

Axiom, a new one, of civil government,

131.

B

Babylon, the mystical, 257.

Bacon's, Lord, Works, 153, 166. Opi-
nion of single men, 166. Opinion of
Jesuits, ib.

Baldwinus Franc. 67.

[ocr errors]
[blocks in formation]

114.

Benedictines, order of, 163.

Benson's, Dr. History of Persecution,
445. Confutation of popery, 478.
Berington's Rev. J. Lives of Abelard
and Eloisa, 430, 438.

Bessarion, Cardinal, his influence, 87.
Beza's Life of Calvin, 449.

Bible, the, worth all the mighty tomes
of the vatican, 26. (passim.)

Bigotry, spirit of, retained by the re-
formers, 208.

Bingham's Origines Ecclesiasticæ, 16.
Bishop, universal, the phrase, 16.
Bishops, Roman, succession of, 9. Con-
gregation concerning the affairs of, 418.
Examining new, 423.

Bishops Cardinals, 405.

Blackstone's Commentaries, 467.
Blasphemies, commination against,

333.

Blondel on Bishops and Presbyters, 51.
Boccaccio's Decameron, 92.
Bodenstein, Andrew, his controversy
with Eccins, 193.

Bolsec, Jerome, 449.

Bonaparte, his plunders of the Pope's
possessions, 61. Exposé on the tem-
poralities of the Pope, 122. Zeal for
reform, 130.

28.

Boniface III., his struggle for a name,

Book of Common Prayer, 117, 319.
Books, congregation for printing of,

421.

[merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small]

Buller's Life of Fenelon, 37, 292.
Life of the Rev. Alban Butler, 108.
Account of the Life and Writings of
J. B. Bossuet, 443. Historical View of
Laws, &c. APP. 489. Statement of the
Pope's supremacy, 38, 438.

C

Calixtus, George, de Conjugio Cleri-
corum, 67.

Calmet's Diet. 306.

Calvin. Instit. 264, 450.

Calvin, spread of his opinions in Ger-
many and Scotland, 222. Declaration
for maintaining the true faith, &c. 445.
Mode of persecuting, 448.

Candles, blessed, 370.
Canning, Mr. 477.

Capet, Hugh, styled Hugh l'Abbé, 147.
Capuce of the order of St. Francis,

169.

Cardinal Nephew, 421.

Cardinals, offices, and origin of, 399.
Their titles, 406. Habit, 409. Crea-
tion, 410. Congregation of, 417.

Carlostadt, see Bodenstein.

Card's Hist. Outlines of the Rise and
Estab. of the Papal Power, 28.

Carr's, Sir John, Travels in Spain,485.
Castellio, 448.

Catechism of the Council of Trent, 300.
Catechumens' mass, 375.
Catherine de Medicis, 476.
Catholic, use of the term, 7.
Catholic Reformers, 99.

Catholic countries characterized, 142.
Address to Protestants, 336.

Catholic Christian Instructed, 394,
397, 399.

[blocks in formation]

451.

Christianisimus Primativus, 8.
Christianographie, 11.
Christiern III. of Denmark, 221.
Christmas, high mass at, 391.
Church of Rome, never described dis-
tinct from the court, 3.
And State
united, 62. View of the state of the,
78. Acted the part of a suicide, 120.
Of Christ, will never fail, ib. Her un-
natural union with civil government, ib.
Described, 280. Her spiritual and tem-
poral authority, 283. Definition of the,
299, 473. Of England, 266.

Churches erected by Constantine, 34.
Magnificence of Catholic, 236. Of En-
rope, 250. Of Asia, 251. Of Asia
minor, ib. Of Africa, 252. Patriarchal,
406.

Circassian Church, 251.

Cistercian order of monks, 150.
Civilization introduced by the monks,

[blocks in formation]

Congregation of the holy office, 417.
Congregations of Cardinals, 417.
Consecration of the Pope, 406.
Consistory, publique, 412.

Consistory, congregation of the, 424,
Constantine the Great, conversion of,
29. Became a preacher, 37.

29.

Constantinople styled New Rome, 77.
Controversy at Leipsic, 193.
Convents at Rome, 154.

Conversion of Constantine the Great,

Convocation of England, 268.
Cope, the, 387.

Copts, Christian, 252.

Corinth, division in the church of, 45.
Councell, congregation of the, 418.
- Councils, Basil, 85. Chalcedon, 43,
76. Constance, 84, 285, 314, 455, 472.
Constantinople, 43. Ephesus, 43. Flo-
rence, 315. Nice, 66. Pisa, 80, 408.
Trent, 40, 137, 292, 299, 303, 307, 309,
311, 320, 329, 373. Vienne, 79, 81.

Councils of the reformed in France,
268.

Councils, Catholic's belief of, 361.
Court of Rome, its pride, 118, 400,

430.

Creation of Cardinals, 410.

Creed, Nicene, 68. Of Pope Pius
IV. 292, 302, 505, 309, 315, 317, 319,
331-2.

Crimes of Catholics do not spring from
their religion, 5.

Crook, the pastoral, 386.

Cross, miraculous appearance of, to
Constantine, 32. Pieces of the true,
34.

Cudworth's opinion of the effects of
the Reformation, 271.

Culdees of Iona, 252.

Culto, magnificence in celebrating
the act termed; 142.

D

[blocks in formation]
« PreviousContinue »