Asia Minor, 243. Five Welsh bishoprics established prior to the Augustine mission, 243. British church estab- lished in Northumbria, 243; and in Essex and Mercia, 244 Apostolate of the Primitive
Church. Successors in, 214. Epaphroditus-an apostle, 215. Powers exclusively vested in, 213. Titus and Timothy instructed as to the duties of their apostolic office, 214. Theodoret on the change of name, 217. Clemens Romanus on the appointment of successors in the apostolate, 218 Appropriation Clause, 263 Arius. Condemned at Nice, 192 Artaxerxes Longimanus.-State
church legislation, 135, 138 Articles.-The Forty-two, 235, The Thirty-nine, 207, 235 Atheistic-figment, that religion was feigned as an engine of state-craft, 30. Plato upon, 31. Sextus Empiricus upon, 32. Spinoza upon, 32 Athelstan. Encourages Church building, 236, 237. Lords of manors follow the royal ex- ample, 238. Origin of parishes and of tithe, 238
Bacon, Lord.-Upon the kingly office, 28
Baines, Mr. Edward, M.P.- Returns as to percentage of
rooms, etc., for Association Methodists, Primitive Metho- dists, and Baptists, 74. Fal- lacious statistics as to Cotton and Woollen Districts, 89. Errors of classification, 91. Statistics per contra, 91-94 Baird, Dr.-Statistics as to American Voluntaryism, 52, 53. Statement as to the supposed evil of state-church- ism, 106
Baptist Sect.-Ministers, 65; Churches or Societies of all kinds, 65. Distribution of ministers in different coun- ties, 101. Preachers without pastoral charge, 66. Ratio of preachers in Ireland to the population, 68. Chapels, pastors, and sittings in Lon- don, 95. Comparative sta- tistics for Yorkshire and Lancashire, 91-94. Compara- tive statistics for the counties of Nottinghamshire and Lincolnshire, 97. Percentage of rooms among so-called chapels, 74.
Barnes, Rev. A.-Observations on Isaiah, xlix., 23,-note 143. Exposition of Acts i., 26,-195
Baxter, Richard.-Denounces toleration, 166 Bengel.-Interpretation of 1, Tim. iii, 13, 212. Exposition of 1 Tim. iv., 14, 213 Bentham, Jeremy.-Concerning legal fictions, 3. The public
good ought to be the object of the legislator, 24. A man's political views may be safely inferred from the religion he professes, 40. Equality an object contemplated by the civil law, 155. Limits neces- sary to be put upon equality 156. Impracticability of the doctrine of equality of rights,
Berenger his opinion of Pas-
chasius Radbert, 250 Bertram or Ratramn.-Opposes the doctrine of Transubstan- tiation as raised by Radbert, 249. Ratramn's views adopted by Elfric in his Homilies,
Beza, Theodore.-Favours in- tolerance, 165
Bickersteth, Rt. Rev. Dr.,
Lord Bishop of Ripon.- Church-extension in the diocese of Ripon under, 55. Initiates the Leeds Church- extension fund, 56. Diocesan statistics on church-building etc., 58.-On Education, 59. On contributions to Home and Foreign missions, 59 Bill of Rights, 266 Bill, the Repeal, 263; the Relief, 257 Bishops.-Bill for the Relief of
257. Their right to a seat in the House of Lords, 245, 246. Sat in the Saxon Wi- tenagemote, 245. Confirmed in this right and privilege by
Magna Carta, 247. The Lords Spiritual, according to Black- stone, a distinct estate of the realm, 255, 256. Chan- cellor Burton upon the duties of Bishops in parliament, 255, 256. Bishops—an order in the Apostolic Church, 216, 217. Testimony of Ignatius of Antioch, 219 Blackstone, Judge. Upon fic- tions of the law, 3. The restoration to the crown of the right of nomination to bishoprics, 151. Church property not national pro- perty, 152. The Test Act- its provisions, 167. Subjects of dominion or property- hereditaments corporeal and incorporeal, 223. Origin of parishes and of tithes, 237, 238. On Queen Anne's Bounty, 239. The Lords Spiritual one of the three estates of the realm, 256. Concerning the lex et consue- tudo parliamenti, or the law and custom of parliament,
Calamy.-Denounces religious toleration, 166
Calvin.-Practices intolerance and puts Servetus to death 165. This persecution ap- proved by Viret, Farel, and Melancthon, 165, Note. Per- secution of Bolzec and Cas- talio, 165. Decapitation of Jacques Gruet, 165 Capitation-tax.-Paid by our
Saviour and by St. Peter, 140 Cave. Opposed to toleration, 166
Chalmers, Dr.-Theory of, 7. Corruption of Christianity not caused by state-churchism 202 Church, Judaic.-Established
by divine command, 120.— Hierarchical, 122. Popular suffrage excluded, 123. Main- tenance-not abandoned to
the voluntary principle, 123. The civil magistrate required to enforce the laws ecclesias- tic, 124
Apostolic.-Orders in, of Bishops, Presbyters, and Deacons, 211. Bishops the successors of the apostles, 214. Identical with the
'angels" of the Asiatic churches, 215, 216. They alone confirmed, and had the power of ordination in sole,
217. The episcopate neces- sary to the existence of the visible church, as such, 219. Presbyters could only ordain by concurrency, 212. Diaco- nate-institution of, 195.— Voluntaryism of, 44. Com- munism of, 46. Peculiar circumstances of, 47, 48. Canons against heresy and schism, 179, 180, 205. Go- vernment of, not in the hands of the people, 194, 195
-, Anglican.-Its supe- rior provision of religious means in Lancashire and Yorkshire, 91-94. Superior provision of religious means in the diocese of London, 95. More Church-sittings in the diocese of Ripon than Chapel- Sittings (Congregational) in the whole principality of Wales, 96. Churches, clergy, and Church-Sittings in the diocese of Lincoln in a ma- jority over Congregational
chapels, preachers, and cha- pel-sittings in twenty-two counties, 99. Statistics for the four dioceses of London, Winchester, Exeter, and Lichfield, as compared with Congregational voluntaryism in the whole of Great Britain, 103. Its property of private origin, 152. The tenure of it in frankal- moign, 152. In vassalage to the state according to J. A. James, 184. Alleged multi- plicity of its Orders, 210-212. Ecclesiastical supremacy of the crown said to be incom- patible with that of Christ, 206. Holds a property in church-rates, 224, 225. Church-rates a species of in- corporeal hereditament, 222, 223. Nationality of the, 229 Incommunicable attributes of the, 232. The state a sort of lay-patron, 233. The liturgy of,-composed or compiled by ecclesiastics, 235. Origin of parishes, 237, 238. Not supported by the state, 239. Pays largely to the sustenta- tion of Dissent, 240. Anti- quity of, 243. Always Pro- testant, 249, 251, 252. The Reformation--a restoration to her ancient faith, 250. Its perpetuity as an Establish- ment secured by the Act of Union with Scotland, 260; the Act of Union with Ire-
land, 261; the Coronation Oath, 265; the Bill of Rights and the Act of Settlement, 266.
Cicero.-Governments under Divine providence, 15. De jurejurando, 19. Doctrine of the XII. Tables, 23. On the opinions of the Atheistic philosophers, 30
Coercion in Religion.-Inad- missible in the opinion of Wardlaw, 43, 179. Condemned by Locke, Pascal, and Simon, 179
Coleridge, S. T.-Theory of Church and State, 6 Congregationalism.-Contribu- tions to Domestic and Foreign Missions, 63. Number of Churches-and of preachers, Number of preachers without charge, and societies without pastors, 66. Ratio of pastors to the population of Ireland, 68. Ratio of do. to the population of the Isle of Man, and that of Scotland 68. Table of denominational statistics, 71. Statistics as to members of churches, 72. Chapels many of them mere preaching-rooms, 73. Per- centage of rooms, etc., accord- ing to Mr. Edward Baines's returns, 74. Ebenezer Chapel as described in Parliamentary returns, 47. Chapel-debts, 75. Disproportion between churches (or societies so-called)
and chapels, 75. Dr. Hume's table of statistics, 76. The average capacity of chapels in Wales, 77. In English Counties, 77-78. Pluralities -ministers their education, etc., 81. One-fourth of the to- tal number have received no ministerial training, 82-85. Actual chapel accommodation does not exceed 3.8 per cent of the population, 85. Dis- tribution of such accommo- dation, 86. Per-centages for several English counties, 89. Chapel-metamorphoses, note to 88. Statistics for London, 95. For the dioceses of York and Ripon, 94. For the diocese of Lincoln, 97. Num- ber of preachers in several counties, 101. Mischievous effects of popular voting, according to the late J. A. James, 197. According to Baldwin Brown, 201. Has no true canonical clergy, 219 Deacons spurious, 220 Convention Parliament, Scotch,
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