| 1823 - 600 pàgines
...p. 248.) 'that " beTore the conclusion of this period a more melancholy scene was presented to view. In every part of England, Arianism was not only embraced,...ground also in the west, whence it first sprang." It is gratifying to remark, that the effect of his Arian endeavours at Cockermouth died with its author;... | |
| 1829 - 704 pàgines
...' Aud who cau tell, without a new revelation, what does belong to it, and what not ? , VOL. II. 86 few of the Presbyterian ministers. The heresy polluted...contended so zealously for the Orthodox faith, had fmished their labors, and received a dismission from their Lord into eternal rest. Among those who... | |
| Franklin Baker - 1854 - 148 pàgines
...ably defended and spread rapidly. " In every part of England," say the historians of the dissenters, "Arianism was not only embraced, but openly acknowledged...ground also in the west, whence it first sprang."* The exercise of such mental freedom has always led its adherents away from orthodoxy to a more rational... | |
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