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" They loved the constitution of the Church, and the Liturgy, and could well live under them : But they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished that things might have been carried with more moderation. And they continued to keep... "
Bishop Burnet's History of His Own Time: With the Suppressed Passages of the ... - Page 324
by Gilbert Burnet - 1823
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History of Christian Doctrine

George Park Fisher - Theology, Doctrinal - 1896 - 616 pages
...of the Church, and the liturgy, and could well live under them ; but they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished that things...a good correspondence with those who had differed with them in opinion, and allowed a greater freedom both in philosophy and in divinity; from whence...
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Burnet's History of My Own Time: A New Edition, Based on that of M. J. Routh ...

Gilbert Burnet - Great Britain - 1897 - 666 pages
...could well live under them : but they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished things might have been carried with more moderation...continued to keep a good correspondence with those who differed from them in opinion, and allowed a great freedom both in philosophy and in divinity : from...
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The English Church from the Accession of Charles I. to the Death of Anne ...

William Holden Hutton - 1903 - 396 pages
...of the Church and the liturgy, and could well live under them ; but they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished that things...divinity ; from whence they were called men of latitude." The Cambridge school had two distinctive marks. In the first place, it designed to set up a rational...
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A History of the English Church: Hutton, W. H. The English church from the ...

William Richard Wood Stephens, William Hunt - Great Britain - 1903 - 398 pages
...of the Church and the liturgy, and could well live under them ; but they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished that things...divinity ; from whence they were called men of latitude." The Cambridge school had two distinctive marks. In the first place, it designed to set up a rational...
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Cambridge

Mildred Anna Rosalie Tuker - Cambridge (England) - 1907 - 758 pages
...unlawful to live under another form. . . . They continued to keep a good correspondence with those who differed from them in opinion, and allowed a great freedom both in men, from the two colleges Emmanuel and Christ's, so as to embrace a moral and political philosophy,...
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The Century Illustrated Monthly Magazine, Volume 82

Literature - 1911 - 982 pages
...of the church, and the liturgy, and could well live under them; but they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished that things...continued to keep a good correspondence with those who differed from them in opinion, and allowed a great freedom both in philosophy and divinity, from whence...
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Characters from the Histories & Memoirs of the Seventeenth Century: With an ...

David Nichol Smith - Great Britain - 1918 - 396 pages
...of the Church, and the Liturgy, and could well live under them : But they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished that things...more moderation. And they continued to keep a good 30 correspondence with those who had differed from them in opinion, and allowed a great freedom both...
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The Ecclesiastical Sonnets of William Wordsworth, Volume 7

William Wordsworth - Christian biography - 1922 - 364 pages
...of the Church, and the liturgy, and could well live under them; but they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished that things...great freedom both in philosophy and in divinity. . . . And upon this men of narrower thoughts and fiercer tempers fastened upon them the name of Latitudinarians.'...
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The Century: 1911, Volume 82

1911 - 980 pages
...of the church, and the liturgy, and could well live under them; but they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished that things...continued to keep a good correspondence with those who differed from them in opinion, and allowed a great freedom both in philosophy and divinity, from whence...
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The American Church Monthly, Volume 11

Anglo-Catholicism - 1922 - 530 pages
...constitution of the Church and the liturgy, and could well live under them; but they did not think it unlawful to live under another form. They wished that things might have been carried with more moderation." That means, a liturgy making more concessions to Puritanism, hence less Catholic. "They were all very...
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