| Charles Hodge - 1840 - 602 pages
...plan. " Episcopacy and monarchy," he says, '•' are, in their frame and constitution, best suited to each other. Episcopacy can never thrive in a republican government, nor republican principles in an episcopal church." 1 What Dr. Chandler says in the Defence of his Appeal, in reference to the passage... | |
| Charles Hodge - 1840 - 528 pages
...the plan. " Episcopacy a11d monarchy," he says, " are, in their frame and constitution, best suited to each other. Episcopacy can never thrive in a republican government, nor republican principles in an episcopal church." 1 What Dr. Chandler says in the Defence of Ms Appeal, in reference to the passage... | |
| Francis Jenks, James Walker, Francis William Pitt Greenwood, William Ware - 1843 - 420 pages
...introduced into America, says, " Episcopacy and monarchy are, in their frame and constitution, best suited to each other. Episcopacy can never thrive in a republican government, nor republican principles in an Episcopal church." • • • " He, that prefers monarchy in the State, is more likely to approve... | |
| Thomas Smyth - 1843 - 348 pages
...says,* ' But, notwithstanding, episcopacy and monarchy are, in their frame and constitution, best suited to each other. Episcopacy can never thrive in a republican government, nor republican principles in an episcopal * Appeal on behalf of the Ch. of Eng. in America, N. York, 1707. p. 115. church. For the... | |
| Edward Royall Tyler, William Lathrop Kingsley, George Park Fisher, Timothy Dwight - 1845 - 652 pages
...that ' Episcopacy and monarchy are in their frame and construction best suited to each other, — that Episcopacy can never thrive in a republican government, nor republican principles in an Episcopal church, — and that as they are mutually adapted to each other, so they are mutually introductive... | |
| 1888 - 528 pages
...as natural allies." It was the declaration of Dr. Chandler, a distinguished Episcopal divine, that " Episcopacy can never thrive in a republican government, nor republican principles in an Episcopal church." The admitting of the laity to some share in its government is pronounced by Bishop... | |
| Arthur Lyon Cross - 1902 - 394 pages
...would gradually usurp power. He sees a particularly dangerous tendency in Chandler's statement that "Episcopacy can never thrive in a Republican government, nor Republican principles in an Episcopal Church" (p. 78). 2 Appeal Defended, 117. show that bishops would be able to do what the commissaries... | |
| James Robert Graham - 1904 - 186 pages
...reference to that action, says: "Episcopacy and monarchy are, in their form and constitution, best suited to each other. Episcopacy can never thrive in a Republican Government, nor Republican principles in an Episcopal church." But with the Presbyterians and other so-called dissenters, the case was entirely... | |
| Thomas Smyth - 1908 - 620 pages
...says,* 'But, notwithstanding, episcopacy and monarchy are, in their frame and constitution, best suited to each other. Episcopacy can never thrive in a republican government, nor republican principles in an episcopal church. For the same reasons, in a mixed monarchy, no form of ecclesiastical government can... | |
| Virginia. General Court, Sir John Randolph - 1909 - 414 pages
...them, and who said that " Episcopacy and monarchy are, in their form and constitution, best suited to each other. Episcopacy can never thrive in a republican government, nor republican principles in an Episcopal Church," — which statement is wholly controverted by subsequent events. But Dr. Graham,... | |
| |