How To Use Gallican In A Sentence
- You know what the categories are - ultramontane, gallican, liberal, integriste, laicite, anticlerical, etc. - they were virtually invented here, and they never change.
- They also applied to corporate bodies, such as the Gallican Church, whose property titles were over 1,000 years standing.
- A second and related set of tensions divided Gallicans, who insisted on the independence of the national Church, and ultramontanes, who were more respectful of papal authority.
- Liturgies are all modifications of a common type; they may all be classed together as forms of what is known as the Gallican Rite. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
- Regional variations - Gallican or otherwise - were disapproved, whether liturgical, theological or pastoral.
- The latter has been called Gallican and attributed to the Province of The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
- In Western Europe the first attempt to give a symbolical meaning to the vestments of the Mass is found in what is called the Gallican explanation of the The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner
- In 1789, he was elected by the clergy of the bailliage of Nancy to the States-General, where he coöperated with the group of deputies of Jansenist or Gallican sympathies. The Journal of Negro History, Volume 4, 1919
- Erano infatti: una fede in lui che lo mise in guardia dalle sottigliezze del quietismo e del gallicanesimo; una confidenza in Dio che gli rendeva familiare come palpito l'elevarsi continuato del suo spirito in Gesù, con continuate giaculatorie come dardi d'amore; una fortezza imperterrita, in circostanze angosciose, che gli fece dire col pugno serrato sul petto: color di porpora, color di sangue: e questo vi dica, che per la giustizia e per il buon diritto di Dio io sono disposto a sacrificare la mia vita; una carità fiammeggiante di padre e di pastore estesa alle forme molteplici e più varie della dedizione di un gran cuore di uomo insigne e di sacerdote venerabile. Archive 2009-03-01
- We may accept as certain that Aquileia had from the time of the formation of separate rites (fourth century) its own use, that this use was not the same as that of Rome, that probably it was one more variant of the large group of Western Rites, connected by (Eastern?) origin, which we call Gallican, that it was probably really related to the old Milanese Rite and perhaps still more to that of Ravenna. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 16 [Supplement]