Sentences with phrase «giving magisterial»

Giving magisterial authority to the death penalty, Pope Innocent III required disciples of Peter Waldo seeking reconciliation with the Church to accept the proposition: «The secular power can, without mortal sin, exercise judgment of blood, provided that it punishes with justice, not out of hatred, with prudence, not precipitation.»
Thomas F. Torrance gives a magisterial account of the theology of God the Father and the mystery of our knowledge of God, drawing on his profound appropriation of Athanasian theology.
The author of Ragtime, City of God, and The Book of Daniel has given us a magisterial work with an enormous cast of unforgettable characters — white and black, men, women, and children, unionists and rebels, generals and privates, freed slaves and slave owners.
Given his magisterial design for the synagogue's Torah ark curtain, Gottlieb's chutzpah is deserved.
Manet, Lautrec and especially Matisse in his Cubist phase, gave magisterial blacks and greys a primary role as if to dramatize the drastic, two - dimensional character of modern painting; by its very nature monochrome painting is more abstract than colour.

Not exact matches

«To dismiss the attention due the Church's written instruction as listening to a dusty document, Mankowski writes, «is more the language of a high school manifesto than an episcopal council, and is especially perverse given the purpose and history of the magisterial office.»
In one respect this is the Protestant option as originally given in two forms, either the visible community of people through Anabaptism or the invisible community of the elect through the Magisterial Reformers.
In reality, there is a growing number of clergy who accept this teaching and are seeking to show it in its positive and life - giving fullness in their pastoral work: many of them have had the opportunity to be involved in movements which embrace the Church's teaching and / or have come into contact with Humanae Vitae for themselves and subsequent Magisterial teaching.
So one's revelation, one's scriptures, one's bible, one's magisterial teaching may give one a privileged insight; but those outside the fold can not — unless hypocritical — share the insight based on that revelation.
An attempt was made to broaden the governing authority of the Church by giving the bishops more than their present consultative Magisterial influence; but, as the latest scandals reveal, that change was never implemented and the power remains solely in the hand of the Pope in union with the Roman Curia rather than with the Pope in union with the Bishops which would be closer to the governing structure of the Othodox Churches of the East.
Nonetheless, given the almost hysterical reaction of some theologians, particularly a fair number among the members of the Catholic Theological Society of America (CTSA), to such Vatican directives as Ex Corde Ecclesiae (1990) and Ad Tuendam Fidem (1998), we can conclude that many professional theologians, and theological faculties, apparently have yet to absorb Newman's point that magisterial authority is necessary for the proper teaching and pursuit of theology.
Given these difficulties, what is to be made of Cardinal Schönborn's assertion that Amoris Laetitia is a binding document of magisterial authority?
Given that liturgical reformers after Vatican II emphasized intellectual participation much more than visual, it is worth noting that the more traditional approach had been at the forefront of magisterial attention only shortly before.
After reading nearly 70 books on the Civil War, I find I am drawn to books written with a literary elegance and operatic sweep, which matches the tragic and haunting history of this horrendous yet magisterial engagement that gave birth to these United States.
Review:» [Curator Scott Rothkopf] gives the artist's work the magisterial treatment it deserves.»
The individuals involved in your court case (s) will be provided an opportunity to give their input on the merits of your application, including the district attorney, any victim (s), the sentencing judge or sentencing magisterial district judge.
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