How To Use Sabbatarian In A Sentence

  • It is notable, however, that members of religions which preserve strict sabbatarianism, that is, Saturday observance, usually have little difficulty in putting that into practice.
  • Accept the Sabbatarian definition of the term covenant, and it legitimately follows that none were ever in that covenant save those who held converse with Jehovah, through Moses, saying, “All these things will we observe and do.” The Christian Foundation, Or, Scientific and Religious Journal, May, 1880
  • Wittenberg itself, Andrew Karlstadt (or Carlstadt) promoted a further movement against the Mass and, on the strength of the Old Testament attacked images and called for a stricter sabbatarianism, so that signs of the later Puritanism were already visible. CHRISTIANITY IN HISTORY
  • A conscientious diarist, though full of sabbatarian zeal, was fain to admit that 'Severall sorts of Busnesses was a-Going on: Sum a-Exercising, Sum a-Hearing o' the The Great Fortress : A chronicle of Louisbourg 1720-1760
  • Such stern sabbatarianism was once the norm on the Isle of Lewis, where the dominant sect is the Free Presbyterians. Iran wants to dazzle London, but will Prince Charles give his consent?
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  • The geese on the green downs, just below the village, had clearly never even heard of Calvin; they were luxuriating in a series of plunges into the deep pools in a way to prove complete ignorance of nice sabbatarian laws. In and out of Three Normady Inns
  • I'm not in principle a dedicated, old-style sabbatarian, but there are moments when I fully understand what that is about in its most positive sense -- and many of those moments happen when I'm enjoying a Sabbath eve meal with Jewish friends, when I realize just what it is to have twenty-four hours experienced as sheer gift and grace, to be welcomed like a bride. An address by the Archbishop of Canterbury given to a meeting of the Alcuin Club at Lambeth Palace
  • Oh, A SHOP, you mean," Philip replied, putting on at once his most respectable British sabbatarian air. The British Barbarians
  • When Count Zinzendorf, the founder of the Moravian church in Germany, visited America in 1741, he was astonished to find the hold the Sabbatarian doctrine had upon the entire German population of Pennsylvania.
  • The Israelites, a messianic sabbatarian sect, whose ritual included baptism by total immersion at midnight, the kiss of peace, and an annual passover, had made their headquarters in the location at Ntaba Class and Colour in South Africa 1850-1950 - Chapter 12
  • When he published his Entschuldigung at Nikolsburg in 1527 he was not yet a Sabbatarian (as point 7 of the booklet shows) and there is no clue to indicate why he became one.
  • Is it true that Eric Liddell abandoned sabbatarianism towards the end of his life?
  • He would bare to untired world of Leimunconon-nulstria (and what a strip poker globbtrottel they pairs would looks!) how wholefallows, his guffer, the sabbatarian (might faction split his beard!), he too had a great big oh in the megafundum of his tomashunders and how her Lettyshape, his gummer, that congealed sponsar, she had never cessed at waking malters among the jemassons since the duft that meataxe delt her made her microchasm as gap as down low. Finnegans Wake
  • The number of ships and passengers involved was large and this gave rise to two other aspects: speed and sabbatarian disapproval.
  • His name is not even mentioned here, and when it is mentioned in these years is too often coupled with tasteless gibes at Lord Shaftesbury's proclivities and Sabbatarianism. Mr. Punch`s history of modern England, Volume I -- 1841-1857
  • This brought forth the wrath of the strict Sunday observers, and pitched battles, using potatoes, turnips and bottles, were fought between deckhands and smartly - but soberly - dressed sabbatarians.
  • Punch's views on their recreations, therefore, were necessarily governed by his views on Sunday observance, Sunday trading and Sabbatarianism generally. Mr. Punch`s history of modern England, Volume I -- 1841-1857
  • Sabbatarianism, though considerably worn away, is still influential enough to produce a general appearance of Sabbath observance. The Hawaiian Archipelago
  • The United States wrestled with Sabbatarianism through the latter half of the 19th century and well into the 20th century, but by the 1950s, the Puritan Sunday had given way to enormous pressures for leisure, entertainment, commerce and sports. Mjh's blog — 2007 — June
  • A whole book has been written on his attitude towards the Church; in another section of this chronicle I have dealt at some length with his hostility to Pluralism, Sabbatarianism, Ritualism, and endeavoured to show how a generally tolerant and "hang theology" attitude was in the early 'fifties exchanged for one of fierce anti-Vaticanism. Mr. Punch`s history of modern England, Volume I -- 1841-1857
  • Lord Ashley was a well-known philanthropist, and his consistent support and patronage of many religious and charitable societies had naturally given him popularity among the Protestant clergy of all denominations, -- a popularity heightened in the case of the Evangelical and Calvinistic ministers by his Lordship's strict Sabbatarianism and his belief in cold dinners on The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 12, No. 71, September, 1863
  • Sabbatarianism appeared within the bounds of the association at an early date and Seventh-day Baptist churches were formed (1705 onward). Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 3, Part 1, Slice 3 "Banks" to "Bassoon"
  • Sabbatarianism, with the Lord's Day Alliance, a Canadian invention, in the van; then the gradual tightening of the laws against sexual irregularity, with the unenforceable New York Adultery Act as a typical product; and lastly, the general ploughing up and emotional discussion of sexual matters, with compulsory instruction in "sex hygiene" as its mildest manifestation and the mediaeval fury of the vice crusade as its worst. A Book of Prefaces
  • Puritan jurisprudence, 113; sabbatarian extravagance provokes reaction, 371. A History of American Christianity
  • The evangelical revival made sabbatarianism fashionable, so that on a Victorian Sunday there was no sport or pleasure, not even reading of serious secular literature.
  • I have elsewhere spoken of a past sabbatarian strictness, and I have lately received an account of a strictness in observing the national fast-day, or day appointed for preparation in celebrating Holy Communion, which has in some measure passed away. Reminiscences of Scottish Life and Character
  • We are specially struck with the reference to theft; while no less noteworthy is the absence of that sabbatarianism, which is the "moral" of the nursery tale. Moon Lore
  • I have an instance of a very grim assertion of extreme sabbatarian zeal. Reminiscences of Scottish Life and Character
  • Anti-Mason inspired social policies favored by Whigs, such as liquor and sabbatarian legislation, funding of educational and reformatory institutions, and to some extent the antislavery impulse of the party's northern wing.
  • The manner in which Sabbatarians emphasize the phrase “My Sabbath,” and “My holy day,” is well calculated to mislead the unsuspecting, but those who are schooled in biblical literature will regard it as mere _rant_, _cheap theology_, _mere display_! The Christian Foundation, Or, Scientific and Religious Journal, May, 1880
  • The Sabbatarian principle touched not only British religion but many social and economic practices as well.
  • Sunday in increasingly multicultural America will probably lose even more of its strict sabbatarian character, but Mr. Miller doubts that its specialness will ever be entirely lost. The Day of Restlessness
  • He took sabbatarianism as a type of the things that should be set at nought. De Profundis
  • One of the notable features of the age was the Sabbatarianism which forbade not only drink and games but even secular reading on Dictionary of the History of Ideas
  • But the Waldensians, encouraged by the Scots, held to the forms shaped by their own traditions and the Swiss Reformation, though they were almost equally resistant to Scots pressures to turn them into sabbatarians.
  • But in the 19th century, this essential work was seriously disrupted by the strict sabbatarianism and stifling dominance of the church.
  • Do you know if anybody has purposely marketed an electronic workaround for sabbatarian rules? The Volokh Conspiracy » Kay Hymowitz on Libertarianism and Civil Rights:
  • Besides keeping meticulous records, the fifth earl of Huntingdon was a man of exemplary piety, a moderate Calvinist who was obsessed with sabbatarianism.
  • In America the Baptists who profess Sabbatarianism are known as Seventh-Day Baptists. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
  • Seventh Day Baptists are sabbatarians, that is, they believe that Saturday and not Sunday is the proper day for Christian worship.

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