We are using cookies This website uses cookies in order to offer you the most relevant information. By browsing this website, you accept these cookies.
Did you know? You can double click on a word to look it up on TermGallery.
Meanings of protestant sect in English
We have no meanings for "protestant sect" in our records yet.
Usage of protestant sect in English
1
Catholic religion-Concordat-Ownership of church buildings-Clergy-Religious sentiment-Shrines-Religious customs and holidays-Religious toleration- Protestantsects.
2
The early Protestantsects punished dissenters as zealously as the Roman Church punished heretics.
3
The evangelical Protestantsects have a hard time holding her.
4
The Protestantsects were divided into two hostile camps, known as Calvinists and Arminians.
5
And communities there were where men had forgotten the very names almost of Protestantsects.
6
This also applies to Methodists and other Protestantsects, known as "Non Conformists".
7
In due time the Protestantsects abolished monasteries, and the Catholic countries later followed their example.
8
From that standpoint the various Protestantsects are better than the Catholic, but not much better.
9
Liberal men would have rejoiced to see a toleration granted, at least to all Protestantsects.
10
These are but isolated instances of the leveling of religious barriers between Protestantsects in the Northern colonies.
11
The same thing applies to the flagellants of the declining Middle Ages, and some Protestantsects of modernity.
12
In Gueldres Count Megen showed more severity, and entirely suppressed the Protestantsects and banished all their preachers.
13
Since Alexander Campbell-deadnow for a decade and a half-noProtestantsect of any importance had been established.
14
Unquestionably there have been very numerous Friendships, worthy of notice, between clergymen and devout women, in the Protestantsects.
15
The amazing multitude of Protestantsects is due in a great degree to this superiority of lay preaching over clerical.
16
Years passed, years of bitter struggle and heartache, before the impossibility of uniting the various Protestantsects was generally recognized.