| Erasmus Middleton - 1810 - 574 pages
...might be called bread: But he departed not from the doctrine of the church about the transubstantiation of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ. But it is of small importance with the church of Romc, in what particular points the judgments of men coincide... | |
| Erasmus Middleton - 1816 - 558 pages
...be called bread : But he departed not from the doctrine of the church about the transubstantiation of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ. But it is of small importance with the church of Rome, in what particular points the judgments of men coincide... | |
| Erasmus Middleton - 1816 - 566 pages
...be called bread : But he departed not from the doctrine of the church about the transubstantiation of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ. But it is of small importance with the church of Rome, in what particular points the judgments of men coincide... | |
| Richard Hayes - 1822 - 584 pages
...earth, where the name of Christ was known, all vouch the transubstontiation, or substantial conversion of the bread and wine, into the body and blood of Jesus ; nor was this dogma ever called in Question by any one individual, even among the heretics, for one... | |
| Jean François M. Le Pappe de Trévern (bp. of Strassburg.) - 1828 - 402 pages
...at your public service, and finding neither altar nor sacrifice, nor the invocation for the change of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ, they heard the people publicly cautioned to beware how they entertained any sentiment of adoration,... | |
| John Hughes - 1834 - 498 pages
...that on the Eucharist all the liturgies of the east and west, teach the real , presence by the change of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ. This I shall make appear at large. I have now answered the arguments of your letter to the satisfaction,... | |
| 1854 - 466 pages
...then ask ? A. The priest then asks for the performance of the greatest of miracles — the changing of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ ; he has a right to ask it, and he has the power to obtain it. Q. Who gave him this power ? A. Our... | |
| John McClintock, James Strong - 1867 - 982 pages
...destroys equally the nature of transubstantiation, because (1) transnbstantiation is a real conversion of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ. Now, in every conversion there must be something common to both substances remaining the same after... | |
| Papal garrison - 1871 - 218 pages
...methodical form," and the word "transubstantiation" was brought into use to express the conversion of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ in the Eucharist. The opinion, in its gross and materialistic interpretation, owed its origin to one... | |
| C L. Trivier - 1873 - 248 pages
...to believe the strangest things. But even supposing transubstantiation, that is to say, the changing of the bread and wine into the body and blood of Jesus Christ, to be distinctly taught in the Gospels, as an act performed by the Saviour on the eve of His death,... | |
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