OF AUTHORS AND PLACES CITED.
ACTS OF PARLIAMENT, (Bishop Gibson's Codex Juris Eccles. Anglican, 2d Ed. Oxford, 1761, folio. See also Index I.) Of abjuration of covenant, 196; Statute of Provisors, 198; of Præ- munire, 198; of Restraint of Ap- peals to Rome, 198; to restore to the Crown its style and jurisdiction, and against annates, Peterpence, &c., 198; on the royal supremacy, 198, 199; on heresy, its definition, 199; on the four first general councils, 199.
ALTESERRA on the Metropolitan See of England, 188.
AMBROSE, ST., Archbishop of Milan, born about 340, baptized 374; consecrated eight days after his baptism, died 397. He was eminent for eloquence, but still more so for the boldness with which he resisted the usurpa- tions of the civil power. He repelled the Emperor Theodosius the Great from the Holy Communion for cru- elty, (ex ed. Bened. Paris, 1836, IV. vols. folio,) on the oneness of the Church, 35; Eve, a figure of the Church, 38; on the waxing and wa- ning of the Church, 43; on the Church as uxor and virgo, 57; on the writers of the New Testament, 65; the visible Church subject to increase and decrease, 43; salvation only in the Church, 39, 40; on the power of absolution, 142, 143, 144, 145, 146. 148; on baptismal regeneration, 145; on the Church compared to a sea, 169; on St. Paul's primacy, 288; on St. Peter's confession, 290. 293; the power of the keys given to all Presby- ters, 292; on St. Peter's primacy and name, 290. 293.
AMMONIUS, on Episcopal ordination, 111.
ANDREWES, Lancelot, a very learned English prelate, born in 1555, conse- crated Bishop of Chichester, in 1605, translated to Ely in 1609, and to Winchester in 1618; he died in 1626, leaving the reputation of the most learned divine of a learned age, and of piety equal to his learning, (Pattern of Catechetical doctrine, Lond., 1650, folio, Sermons, Ox., 1841., V. vols. 8vo.) salvation only in the Church, 40; on catechising, 74; on sacerdotal inter- cession and benediction, 156, 157; on priests as Angeli Ecclesiæ, 163; on Protestantism, 207; on the English Reformation, 209; on the unworthi- ness of ministers not affecting the validity of the ordinances which they minister, 220; on the Christian sacri- fice, 224; on the beginning of popish recusancy, 227; on St. Peter's confes- sion, primacy, and name, 293; on obedience, 397, 398.
ANSELM, S., an Italian, born in 1034, Archbishop of Canterbury from 1093 to 1101; on St. Peter's primacy, 294; the keys given to all the Apostles, 293.
APOSTOLICAL CANONS, confining the clergy to their own limits, 263. ARTICLES, THIRTY-NINE, adopted by the Church of England, in 1562, and again in 1572, and by the American Church in 1801; enact nothing new, 207; on the visible Church, 14; on perseverance, falling from grace, and recovery, 26; on the only way of sal- vation, 41, 42; General Councils may err, 44; particular Churches may err, 44; on the Canon of Scripture, 64. 68; on the power and authority of the Church, 72. 74; on a lawful call to the ministry, 91, 92. 243; on re-
mission of sins in the Holy Commu- nion, 151; on the authority of parti- cular Churches, 154, 394; on antiquity, 208; on the three orders, 216; on the unworthiness of ministers, 220; on lawful oaths, 195; on the royal su- premacy, 382, 383; on the power to decree rites and ceremonies, 396. ATHANASIUS, S., The great champion
of the church at the Council of Nice, when he was only a deacon, and after- wards during a long life. He was born in Alexandria about 296, ac- companied his Bishop to the Council of Nice in 325; was consecrated Bishop, or Patriarch of Alexandria in 326; and after an Episcopate of forty- six years, spent in an almost continu- ous persecution, died on the second of May, 372; on Scripture paramount to councils, 45.
AUGSBURG, confession of, a confession
of faith delivered by the German Reformers to the Emperor Charles V. It is the standard of the Lutheran Communion on the visible Church, 19; on Episcopacy, 123; Libri Sym- bol. Eccles. Evangelica, Hase, Lipsia, 1837.)
AUGUSTINE, S., Bishop of Hippo, in Africa, from 375 to 430. He is gen- erally esteemed the greatest of the Latin Fathers, and was the favourite author of Luther and of most of the English Reformers, (ed. Bened. Paris, 1836-1838; XI. vols. 8vo.) on the Catholicity of the Church, 6; on Baptism profitably received, 8, 9; on the types of the visible Church, 9, 10, 11; on the ark and St. Peter's sheet, 11; on the mixed condition of the Church, 11; on the Church as a field, a threshing floor, and a net, 12; on the visible Church, 14; on the body and soul of the Church, 14; on the difference between a visible and invisible Church, 15; on the oneness of the Church, 37; no salvation out of the Church, 35; remission of sins only in the Church, 39; on the salva- tion of men before the Incarnation, 40; Eve, a figure of the Church, 38; on falling away in the Church, 42, 43; councils may err, 44; on the reign of Anti-Christ, 44; on heresy, 56;
on the Church as mater and virgo, 57; on heresy and schism, 58; on the imperfect separation of heretics and schismatics, 60, 61; on the Jews as the librarii of the Christians, 63; on the Church as a witness of Holy Writ, 64. 65. 67; on translations of the Scriptures, 71; on human teach- ing, 76, 77; on authorized teachers, 78, 79; on the difference between the Scriptures and other writings, 80, 81; on the authority of the doctors of the Church, 79; on the paramount autho- rity of Sripture, 80. 83, 84. 212; on Sacraments, 86. 162; on the good educed from the evil of heresy, 83; on Christians as priests, 90; on a due mission, 93; on the prophecies re- specting the Church, 30; analogy be- tween Adam and Eve, and Christ and the Church, 38; the Church may be more or less clear at different times, 43; on the latter days, 45; heretics and schismatics, how far in the Church, 60, 61; on Scripture proving the Church, 68; on the Hebrew and Greek originals, and on versions, 71; on canonical books, 64; on Episco- pacy, 96; Bishops successors to the Apostles, 99; whatever is held by the whole Church is Apostolical, 103; on the Angels of Churches, 106; on the heterodoxy of Aerius, 109; the keys were given to all the Apostles, who were all pastors, 136, 137. 293, 294; on Church discipline, 139, 140; on regeneration, 145, 146; on remis- sion of sins, 142; on the power of absolution in the Church, 142; on Lazarus, a type of absolution, 44; on baptismal regeneration, 145, 146; the Church the house of discipline, 147; on benediction and intercession, 158, 159; on the union of the word with the element to make a Sacrament, 162; on the efficacy of public prayer, 163; on the Sardican canons, 181; on the sufficiency of the Scriptures, 212; on Apostolic succession, 217; on unworthy ministers but valid or- dinances, 220. 223; on the transfer of Donatist endowments, 222; on re- baptization, 239; on true Catholicity, 242; on St. Paul's primacy, 288; on St. Peter in typo Unicæ Ecclesiæ, 280.
293; on St. Peter's name, 290; on Petros and Petra, 291; on St. Peter's confession, primacy, and name, 291; on the true Head of the Church, 304; on obedience to rubrics, 392, 394. 396. 398.
AUGUSTINI CANTUARIENSIS, Vita, on his authority in England, 189.
BACON, Francis, the great philosopher, Lord Chancellor of England in the reign of James I., (Works, Lond. 1778, V. vols. 4to.) The Church the keeper of Holy Writ, 62. BARLOW, William, consecrated Bishop of Rochester in 1605, translated to Lincoln in 1608, died in 1613, (Re- mains, Lond. 1693, cases of conscience, Lond. 1693, Popery dangerous to Pro- testant Kings, 1679,) on the necessity of a lawful call to the ministry, 92. BARNS, I., a monk of the seventeenth century, Catholico Romano Pacificus on the Jus Cyprium, of England, 184. BARONIUS, Cardinal, on necessity of submission to the Pope, 231, 232. BARROW, Dr. Isaac, a learned divine and professor of the University of Cam- bridge, born 1630, died 1677, (Works Lond. 1683, IV. vols. folio,) on the unity of the Church, 4; on the visi- bility of the Church, 31; on the sal- vability of the heathen, 41; on au- thorized preaching and obedience to spiritual guides, 77; on Episcopacy, 104; on the Apostolic institution and universality of Episcopacy, 109; on diocesan Episcopacy, 127; on the modification of the precedence and extent of patriarchates, 134; on the changes in the oath of the Roman Catholic Bishops to the Pope, 194; on the novelties of the Trent creed, 210; on Councils, 288; on St. Peter's primacy, 288. 294; on the question as to what St. Peter's primacy was, 289; on the Keys given to all the Apostles, 293; on the parity of Bishops, 298; on St. Peter as Bishop of Rome, 360; on obedience to ru- brics, 394.
ments, 86; on St. Peter's commission, 293.
BAXTER, Richard, one of the fathers of Presbyterianism in England. He left the Church finally in 1662, on priestly intercession, 158. BEDA, Ven, an Anglo-Saxon monk, and Ecclesiastical historian, born 673, died 735, on the British Episcopate, 172. 176; on the independence of the British Church, 174; on St. Aus- tin's mission, 182. 187; on the erec- tion of sees in England, 187. BELLARMIN, Robert, an Italian Jesuit, born in 1542, was made a cardinal in 1599, and died in 1621. He was the champion of the Church of Rome in his day, and is still regarded as a great pillar of her cause, on the se- cular claims of the papacy, 231. 241. 300; on its spiritual claims, 289. 300. 302; on the deposition of heretical princes, 300; on the Pope's superio- rity to councils, 303.
BENTLY, Richard, born 1661, died 1742, (Works, ed. Dyce, Lond. 1838, III. vols. 8vo.,) on versions of the Scrip- ture, 71; on Bishops, as successors of the Apostles, and on the difference between presbyteri and cleri, 101. BEVERIDGE, William, born in England in 1636, ordained 1661, consecrated Bishop of St. Asaph, 1704, died 1708. He was very eminent both for learn- ing and piety, (Ser. Oxford, 1842. On XXXIX Arts., Oxf., 1840, II. vols. Svo.,) on the word Church, 1; on the Church as a keeper of Holy Writ, 49; on diocesan Episcopacy, 126; on the independence of the British Church, 173, 174; on the Canon De Concionatoribus, 214; on Apostolical succession, 217; on unworthy minis- ters, 220; how St. Peter was Rome, 287.
BEZA, Theodore, a Frenchman, the dis- ciple of Calvin, his colleague at Ge- neva, and his successor in the central of his followers, on Episcopacy, 124. BILSON, Thomas, born 1547, consecrated Bishop of Worcester, 1596, translated to Winchester, 1597, died in 1616, (Perpetual Government of the Church, Oxford, 1842. On Christian Subjec tion, Lond., 1586,) on the words cler
BASIL, S., was born in Cappadocia in 329, consecrated Bishop of Cæsarea in 370, died in 379, (Opera Paris, 1618, III. vols. folio,) on the Sacra-
gy, lady, and priest, 88; the grace given by the Holy Spirit in ordina- tion, 94; on the word priest, 96; on Episcopacy, 105. 107; on diocesan Episcopacy, 127; on the priesthood of the Patriarchal Dispensation, 156; on St. Augustine's mission, 188; on resistance to the encroachment of the Bishops of Rome, 296; on parity of Bishops, 298; the Pope has no juris- diction over other Bishops, 298. BINGHAM, Joseph, a learned English divine, born in 1668, died in 1723, (Orig. Eccles. Lond. 1834, VIII. 8vo.) [The American Editor uses the Lon- don edition in two vols. 8vo. ;] on apocryphal books, 68; on the three orders, 95; on Bishops, 111; on the functions of Bishops, 111; on the mo- dification of Sees, 133, 134; on sacer- dotal intercession, 157; on Church assemblies, 164; on Bishops as cen- tres of unity, 165; on the number of Bishops in England, 172, 173; on the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Rome, 178; on the Jus Cyprium of England, and on the British Episcopate, 184; on iteration of Baptism, 240; on Episcopal ordination, 251; on the true means of Church unity, 305; on Catholic Bishops in the dioceses of schismatics, 366.
BISHOPS, American House of, on the authority of the English Ecclesias- tical Law in the American Church, 317.
BOSSUET, James Benigne, a very dis- tinguished French Romanist, born 1627, consecrated Bishop of Condom in 1670, which See he resigned the next year, but in 1681 he became Bishop of Meaux, he died in 1704, (History of the Variations of the Pro- testant Churches, English translation, Dublin, 1829, II. vols. Svo.,) 204; his testimony to the Apostolic succes- sion of the Church of England, 219; on the fall of Pope Zozimus, 302. BRAMHALL, John, born in Yorkshire
in 1593, consecrated Bishop of Der- ry, in Ireland, in 1634, translated to the Archbishopric of Armagh, in 1660, and died in 1663, (Works, Oxf. 1842--1844,) on the difference be- tween particular Churches and the
Universal one, 43; on schism, 57; on the British Church, 171. 174; on St. Austin's mission, 182. 184. 188; on the pallium, 192; on the oath of the Romish Bishops, 194; on the transfer of patriarchates, 134. 196; on the title of universal Bishop, 191; concerning the protest in 1246, 197; on the English Reformation, 203; on Henry VIIIth's character as affecting that of the Reformation, 199; how Rome is a true Church, 204; on the primitive character and certainty of the Church of England, 203; on the Trent Creed, 211. 306; on the Apostolic succession, 217, 218; on the English succes- sion, 219; on the Christian Sacrifice, 224; the Church of England not liable to a charge of schism, 226; origin of Roman Catholic recusancy in England, 227; on Roman errors and novelties, 226; on the parallel between Romanism and Donatism, 241; on the parity of the Apostles, 287; on the Pope's conduct to Apos- tles and their successors, and to coun- cils, 302. 303.
BRENT, on the commencement of the Romish Episcopate in the United States, 353.
BREVEWOOD on British Episcopacy, 172.
BROWN, Fasciculus Rerum Expetenda- rum, 184.
BROWNE, Thomas, B. D., on English orders, 218.
BUDDEUS, (Isagage Lips. 1727, II. Vols. 4to.) on the forged decretals, 228.) BULL, George, Bishop of St. David's, born 1634, consecrated 1705, died 1709; he was distinguished for piety, for attachment to the principles of the Church, for firmness, and for pro- found and extensive learning, (Works, Oxf., 1827, VI. vols. 8vo.,) on the Catholic Church, 6; no one visible head of the Church, 27; on the au- thority of the primitive Church as a standard for other Churches, 72; on the use and value of Christian anti- quity, 79, 80; on Common Prayer, 168; the Church of Jerusalem the mother of all Churches, 175; on the true foundation and continuity of the
Church of England, 203; on the Nag's-head fable, 218; on Roman errors and corruptions, 203; on the orthodoxy of the Church of England acknowledged by Popes, and Roman- ists generally, in practice, 228; on the parity of the Apostles, 289. BULLS, Papal, 236.
BURN, Ecc. Law, on the exercise of
jurisdiction in a vacant diocese, 286. BURKE, Rt. Hon. Edmund, (Lond., 1826-1827, XVI. vols. 8vo.,) on the Protestantism of the Church England, 207. BURNET, Bishop, on the numbers of the non-conforming clergy, in 1559, 222. BUTLER, the greatest divine and philo- sopher of the English Church during the eighteenth century, was born 1692, consecrated Bishop of Bristol in 1738; translated to Durham in 1750, died 1752, (Analogy of Religion, Natural and Revealed. Boston, 8vo. 1809,) on the salvability of the hea- then.
BUTTMAN, P., (Lexilogus, Lond. 1836,) on diaconos, 97.
CABASSUTIUS, (Not., Conciliorum Sanc- tæ Ecclesiæ Lovani, 1776,) on law- ful ordination, 112; on Episcopacy, 123, 124; on diocesan Episcopacy, 127. 129.
CALVIN, John, a Frenchman, born 1509,
died in 1564. He was the founder and first ruler of the Church of Ge- neva, the inventor of the Presbyte- rian form of government, and the systematizer of what is called the Calvinistic theology. On the visible Church, 19; on Episcopacy, 123, 124; Rome a true Church, 205. CAMDEN, on the number of the non- conforming clergy in 1559, 222; on the origin of the Romish recusancy,
CANONICUM JUS ROMANUM, (Corpus J. C. L. Richter, Lipsia, 1839, see In- dex I.,) claims of papacy, 229-232; on Episcopal consecrations, 338- 340.
CANONS, Apostolical, 263.
CANONS of the Church of England, of
1603, (see Index I.,) Rome a Church, 206; on preaching, 213, 214; on
abuse not taking away lawful use, 215; on the three orders, 216; their regard for antiquity, 209; the Church of England not liable to the charge of schism, 226; on authority, 394. CANONS, of the American Church, on ministers removing from one diocese to another, 267; on clergymen offi- ciating in the parishes of other clergy- men, 268; on the mission of a Bishop throughout his diocese, 271; on the exercise of jurisdiction in vacant dio- ceses, 386.
CARLETON, George, consecrated Bishop
of Llandaff 1618, translated to Chi- chester, died Bishop of that see in 1628, on Episcopacy, 112; on Epis- copal ordination, 112; on the one Episcopate, 305.
CASAUBON, Isaac, a native of Geneva, born 1559, died 1614. He settled in England, and was much favoured by James I., in whose name, in con- junction with Bishop Andrewes, he managed a controversy with Cardi- nal Perron. He also wrote many other learned works, (Exercit. in Baronii Annal Genev., 1654, Epis- tolæ Roter. 1709, folio,) on the word Church, 1; on catholicity, 7; on the only way of salvation, 41, 42; on the power of the keys given to all in Peter, 137; on Episcopacy, 171; on the English Reformation, 200. 202. 209; is Rome a true Church? 205; on Anglican orders, 218; on the Scriptural and Apostolical character of the English Church, 218. 226; vindication from the charge of schism, 226. 236; on Church unity and com- munion, 239. 242; on the treatment of the Church of England by Rome, 241; on Petros and Petra, 290, 291; on St. Peter's confession, 293. CASSANDER, on discipline as a note of the Church, 14.
CATECHISM of King Edward VI., 1553, on discipline as a note of the Church, 14; on the only way of salvation, 41. CATECHISMUS ROMANUS, on iteration of Baptism, 240.
CHARLES I., King, (Works, Lond. 1687, folio,) on the Church as the interpre- ter of Holy Writ, 73; on the func
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