Pius's creed to be true ; suppose the Council of Trent to have been infallible : yet, I insist upon it, That no Government not Roman catholic, ought to tolerate men of the Roman Catholic persuasion. Miscellaneous Tracts - Page 192by Arthur O'Leary - 1781 - 397 pagesFull view - About this book
| William Joseph Amherst - Catholic emancipation - 1886 - 396 pages
...same time, also wrote a letter to one of the newspapers to prove by a series of ridiculous syllogisms, that "no Government, not Roman Catholic, ought to tolerate men of the Roman Catholic persuasion." To prove that the Act of 1778 meant the toleration of Catholics, he says that Catholics... | |
| Charles John Abbey - Bishops - 1887 - 424 pages
...Let there be as boundless a freedom in religion as any man can conceive. . . . Yet I insist upon it that no Government not Roman Catholic ought to tolerate men of the Roman Catholic persuasion.' 4 He grounds this on there being no security for their allegiance. But what a firebrand... | |
| Benjamin Wills Newton - Bible - 1890 - 672 pages
...Pope Pius's creed to be true ; suppose the Council of Trent to have been infallible ; yet I insist that no Government not Roman Catholic ought to tolerate men of the Catholic persuasion. I prove this by a plain argument (let him answer it that can). That no Roman Catholic... | |
| Benjamin Wills Newton - Bible - 1890 - 674 pages
...Pope Pius's creed to be true ; suppose the Council of Trent to have been infallible ; yet I insist that no Government not Roman Catholic ought to tolerate men of the Catholic persuasion. I prove this by a plain argument (let him answer it that can). That no Roman Catholic... | |
| Jodocus Adolph Birkhaeuser - Church history - 1898 - 838 pages
...time, also wrote a letter to one of the newspapers to proye, by a series of ridiculous syllogisms, that • no government, not Roman Catholic, ought to tolerate men of the Roman Catholic persuasion. . . . ." This letter and the Defence of the Protestant Association were so Incentive to... | |
| William Richard Wood Stephens, William Hunt - Great Britain - 1906 - 404 pages
...Let there be as boundless a freedom in religion as any man can conceive. . . . Yet I insist upon it that no Government not Roman Catholic ought to tolerate men of the Roman Catholic persuasion." Can it therefore be wondered at that the Methodists, as Horace Walpole and Sir Samuel... | |
| John Henry Overton, Frederic Relton - Church and state - 1906 - 448 pages
...Let there be as boundless a freedom in religion as any man can conceive. . . . Yet I insist upon it that no Government not Roman Catholic ought to tolerate men of the Roman Catholic persuasion." Can it therefore be wondered at that the Methodists, as Horace Walpole and Sir Samuel... | |
| Edwin Hubert Burton - Bishops - 1909 - 410 pages
...creed to be true, — suppose the council of Trent to have been infallible, — yet, I insist upon it, that no government, not Roman Catholic, ought to tolerate men of the Roman Catholic persuasion." In his Defence of the Protestant Association, he laments the indifference of the public... | |
| Peter Christopher Yorke - 1913 - 332 pages
...record letters which he wrote advocating the persecution of Catholics. One dated January 12, 1780, holds "that no government, not Roman Catholic, ought to tolerate men of the Roman Catholic persuasion," and, again, "they ought not to be tolerated by any government, Protestant, Mahometan,... | |
| Thomas Benjamin Neely - Methodism - 1918 - 368 pages
...Pius's creed to be true ; suppose the Council of Trent to have been infallible ; yet, I insist upon it that no government, not Roman Catholic, ought to tolerate men of the Roman Catholic persuasion. " I prove this by a plain argument ; let him answer it that can. That no Roman Catholic... | |
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