Plenary Sentence Examples

plenary
  • This remission may be either total (plenary) or partial, according to the terms of the Indulgence.

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  • The first definite instance of a plenary Indulgence is that of Urban II.

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  • They remained severely orthodox in the doctrines of the Fathers - the Trinity, the Incarnation, the plenary inspiration of the Bible - and they condemned those who rejected their teachings to a hell whose fires they were not tempted to extenuate.

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  • Thus each province or body of bishops under a metropolitan holds provincial councils, while at greater intervals a plenary or national council is held.

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  • During its continuance plenary indulgence is obtainable by all the faithful, on condition of their penitently confessing their sins and visiting certain churches a stated number of times, or doing an equivalent amount of meritorious work.

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  • On the 22nd of February 1300 the bull of Boniface VIII., Antiquorum habet fidem, promised plenary indulgence to every Roman who should visit the churches of the apostles Peter and Paul on thirty days during the year, and to every foreigner who should perform the same act on fifteen days.

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  • This placed the pilgrimage to Rome on a level with the crusades - the only mode of obtaining a plenary indulgence.

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  • Zwingli denounced the publication of plenary indulgence to all visitors to the shrine, and his sermons in the Swiss vernacular drew great crowds and attracted the attention of Rome.

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  • This salutary doctrine, however, has undoubtedly been obscured to some extent by the phrase a poena et a culpa, which, from the 13th century to the Reformation, was applied to Plenary Indulgences.

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  • The greatest of all Plenary Indulgences is of course the Roman 1 Equally strong assertions were made by the provincial council of Mainz in 1261; and Lea (p. 287) quotes the complaints of 36 similar church councils before 1538.

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  • Jewish traditions represented the Sanhedrin as retaining to the end its plenary power over the calendar, and as still fixing the first day of every month and the first month of every year.

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  • Should three such interchanges be made without agreement, a common plenary sitting is held of an equal number of both delegations; and these collectively, without discussion, decide the question by common vote.

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  • These are not so much jubilees in the ordinary sense as special grants of plenary indulgences for particular purposes (Indulgentiae plenariae in forma jubilaei).

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  • Plenary students brainstorm what they already know about European Union.

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  • A few short plenary and panel discussion sessions set the scene for in-depth deliberations during a series of breakout groups.

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  • When in 1866 the Second Plenary Council of Baltimore considered the matter of new diocesan developments, he was selected to organize the new Vicariate Apostolic of North Carolina; and was consecrated bishop in August 1868.

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  • Chmielnicki was now regarded not merely as a Cossack rebel, but as the arch-enemy of Catholicism in eastern Europe, and the pope granted a plenary absolution to all who took up arms against him.

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  • Evidence will only be called if it was duly requested at the plenary court and was wrongly deemed inadmissible.

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  • The Holy Father granted all World Youth Day participants a plenary indulgence.

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  • The DPRK has agreed to attend a third plenary of the Four Party Talks in October.

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  • Paul Ekins, Head of the Environment group at PSI, will give the opening plenary on " Making resource flows count " .

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  • The next plenary will be held on March 8, 2001 at the Palais des Nations, Geneva.

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  • And this was seen as a succesful outcome, presented in the main plenary to heads of States and governments.

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  • The Commission met for its second plenary in Madrid, Spain, in January 1992.

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  • A similar format was followed during the closing plenary which examined issues of concern in the context of legal education in Europe.

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  • The event will be divided into panel discussion and keynote plenary lectures.

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  • The opening plenary session was held in the lecture theater of the Oxford University Museum.

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  • The afternoon plenary session built on the earlier workshop presentations and suggested some action.

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  • Please also send to the civil society plenary list if you wish, but suggest you strip any personal contact information before doing so.

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  • Gluttony and winebibbing are granted a plenary indulgence by all but the most ascetic at this festal time.

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  • The Civil Society plenary issued a press release denouncing repression against We Seize!

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  • The groups reported back in a plenary session at the end of the lesson.

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  • Many of the original participants will be plenary speakers.

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  • Plenary Groups of students could tell others in the class how they propose to save the vulture.

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  • The redrafted bill will come back to the Assembly plenary at the next sitting, probably in October.

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  • A final plenary session allowed students to reflect on what they had learned and reinforced any new vocabulary learned during the day.

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  • In this sense, we can have no objection to verbal or plenary inspiration.

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  • He opened the final plenary of the NPT Conference at 10.30 pm.

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  • Torquemada to be grand inquisitor of Spain; and he offered plenary indulgence to all who would engage in a crusade against the Waldenses.

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  • Its mode of operation is to work out the matters it deals with during the intervals between the sessions, in permanent commissions, among which the whole domain of international law is divided up. The commissions, under the direction of their rapporteurs or conveners, prepare reports and proposals, which are printed and distributed among the members some time before the plenary sittings at which they are to be discussed.

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  • For many years an ardent advocate of the establishment of a Catholic university, at the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore (1884) he saw the realization of his desires in the establishment of the Catholic University of America at Washington, of which he became first chancellor and president of the board of trustees.

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  • The principal religious events in the recent history of the Church were the holding of the Third Plenary Council of Baltimore (1884), the Catholic Congress (1889).

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  • The powers of the bishops were increased, and their brethren brought in various ways under subjection to them, and in 1609 two courts of high commission were set up by the royal authority with plenary powers to enforce conformity to the new arrangements.

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  • At the time of the Vandal invasion this collection comprised the canons of the council of Carthage under Gratus (about 348) and under Genethlius (390), the whole series of the twenty or twenty-two plenary councils held during the episcopate of Aurelius, and finally, those of the councils held at Byzacene.

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  • The clerk several times used the word "plenary" (of the service), a word Petya did not understand.

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  • Within a short time his shrine at Canterbury became the resort of innumerable pilgrims. Plenary indulgences were given for a visit to the shrine, and an official register was kept to record the miracles wrought by the relics of the saint.

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