The introductions continue and soon John has an audience fit for a King, filled with Dukes and Ladies, professors and clergymen. |
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These four are political quietists and do not think that clergymen should enter politics directly. |
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It would be easy to dismiss these frightful orations as the rantings of frustrated clergymen. |
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Unsmiling portraits of Victorian clergymen have been found in Ripon Cathedral appeared to offer little excitement. |
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In the colonial period, a number of major colleges were founded primarily for the purpose of educating clergymen. |
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There was once a time in America when all its writers seemed to be clergymen. |
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Over the past few weeks clergymen and parochial staff have been terrorised by youngsters and church buildings plundered by thieves. |
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This mission was successful and we can assume that two such similar clergymen established a strong and useful partnership. |
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It was ordained that no ecclesiastic, but dignified clergymen, should wear vair, gray, or ermine. |
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Local clergymen have joined the Bishop of Manchester in condemning a poster showing baby Jesus wearing a Father-Christmas-style hat. |
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It became compulsive viewing on a Sunday evening, resulting in clergymen changing the times of Sunday evening church services. |
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Even now he is surrounded by his ministers and clergymen prepared to administer final rites. |
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In the beginning they came from the leisured class of doctors, clergymen, and the landed gentry. |
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About 300 clergymen are said to be considering leaving the Church if the decision is taken to consecrate women bishops. |
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They exploit the exigencies of war to sound like clergymen, seizing religious language to veil partisan public policies in a miasma of ersatz godliness. |
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Cranham has had many clergymen, and, at last, one clergywoman. |
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The party's assumption is that pastoral clergymen would be more lenient and accommodating than the stern and remote rabbinical judges. |
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Accusing respected clergymen of lying was a political schoolboy error. |
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Kidnappings for ransom are rife: celebrities and clergymen are plucked off the street in daylight. |
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Taking advantage of the post-Christmas torpor, the second and fourth most senior clergymen in the Church went on the attack. |
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The Brotherhood's members are largely lay professionals, not clergymen, and instinctively shrink from handing clerics too much power. |
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The two telegraph companies did not hesitate to offer service free of charge to doctors and clergymen to help expand the telephone system. |
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Of course, He has left us the task of organising our labour market and of course clergymen have their civil and social rights. |
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Finally, the British Chaplain-General promised to intervene on behalf of the Canadian clergymen. |
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This assistance cannot be given in a casual or routine way by teachers, clergymen and parents. |
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In their efforts to spread honesty and decency among the population, clergymen use sales techniques to persuade us to be good. |
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The Department regulates the evangelical movement, clergymen and foreigners. |
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The conflict between reformers and conservative clergymen is increasingly coming to a head. |
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Many clergymen of all confessions paid for this testimony with their lives. |
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Between these areas, there is no contact at all, since a restriction of circulation is imposed for clergymen in these areas. |
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As of December 2006, 122 foreign clergymen had been registered, with working permits, to serve in places of worship. |
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They were staffed by clergymen ordained in the Church of England. |
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A conference to promote church tourism, held recently in Lastingham Village Hall in Ryedale, attracted churchwardens and clergymen from all parts of North Yorkshire. |
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A rabbi differs from clergymen in other religions in a number of ways. |
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He became so unreasonably importunate in his addresses to the daughter of one of the clergymen of Aberdeen, that it was found necessary to put him under restraint. |
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Without adequate doctors, medical facilities, and transportation, the clergymen heroically struggle to save lives and ease the pain of the victims. |
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The feature tries to touch on some of the more controversial points of the Gospels that have been fiercely debated by academics and clergymen over the years. |
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Other clergymen appointed include the Reverend Donald Soper, the Reverend Timothy Beaumont, and some Scottish clerics. |
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Half-baptisms are not recorded, though some clergymen make memoranda of them. |
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The clergy could even be imprisoned, as occurred in the Stonehaven Tolbooth after three clergymen held services at the chapel at Muchalls Castle. |
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He favoured Low church clergymen in promotion, disliking other movements in Anglicanism for political reasons. |
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This condition in Bahrain was so important that the clergymen of Iran went to Bahrain for obtaining the Shiites science. |
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Special courts, set up after the revolution, continue to try clergymen in secret for fear that news of their misdeeds would reflect badly on the regime. Even so, lonely voices are emerging to say the unsayable. |
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The United Kingdom confirmed that members of the clergy, in respect of their core duties as clergymen, are officeholders and not employees under UK employment law. |
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Two Episcopal clergymen were in an ice-cream parlor in Englewood. |
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With the Scottish clergymen Samuel Rutherford, Robert Baillie, and George Gillespie, Henderson engaged in preaching and propagandizing for the Church of Scotland in the Westminster Assembly. |
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Can anyone remember these do-gooders defending the human rights of children abused by perverted clergymen? |
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It is not unwholesome curiosity to ask whether and to what extent the Church approves of the controversial positions that her clergymen take in public. |
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Other clergymen appointed include the Methodist Donald Soper, the Anglican Timothy Beaumont, and some Scottish clerics. |
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The legal right of lay patrons to present clergymen of their choice to local ecclesiastical livings led to minor schisms from the church. |
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When a favourable wind came for Haakon to leave, he commanded the clergymen to return ashore. |
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Of course, Asturian and Galician minor nobles and clergymen sent their own expeditions with the peasants they maintained. |
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It was aimed towards the less learned clergymen and the laymen, while the second, more coherent version was aimed towards all literates. |
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The pope was originally chosen by those senior clergymen resident in and near Rome. |
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Both of the abducted clergymen survived five months of imprisonment. |
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In 1906 the chimp cage at the New York Zoological Society included a pygmy man, until objections from black clergymen led to his withdrawal. Thankfully there were pioneers to move zoos out of their dark age. |
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Strategy was determined by a group of 12 clergymen under the leadership of Abraham Malpan. |
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Thus, in total, the Lord Chancellor appoints clergymen in over four hundred parishes and twelve cathedral canonries. |
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These mourners marched six abreast, and were followed by the funeral committee, 28 local clergymen and two more mutes. |
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From the side of the English clergy she moves her finger over the heads of the English clergymen and then places it between the two outspread fingers of the Pope. |
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He was strongly supported in his work by clergymen and hundreds of volunteers who agreed to take part in the creation of cooperative organizations, as members, administrators or founding pioneers. |
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Several cases of arbitrary arrest of clergymen were reported in Juba. |
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The Kentish court included a number of visiting clergymen at that time, including Benedict Biscop, a noted missionary. |
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The church printed Bibles and Prayer Books in Gaelic, and some churches, and some Protestant clergymen like William King of Dublin, held services in the language. |
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The purpose of the Westminster Assembly, in which 121 Puritan clergymen participated, was to provide official documents for the reformation of the Church of England. |
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Haig saw himself as God's servant and was keen to have clergymen sent out whose sermons would remind the men that the war dead were martyrs in a just cause. |
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Among the immigrant Britons, there were some clergymen who helped the evangelisation of the region, which was still pagan, particularly in rural areas. |
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The cavalry was held in reserve, and a small group of clergymen and servants situated at the base of Telham Hill was not expected to take part in the fighting. |
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The Church did, however, seek to counterbalance the influence of nonconformity in the 19th century, and Merthyr had a succession of notable clergymen as parish priests. |
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However, they spoke no Welsh and relied on information from witnesses, many of them Anglican clergymen at a time when Wales was a stronghold of nonconformism. |
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His embracement of Popery beginning to make a noise, he decoyed several of the most eminent Protestant clergymen in France to give assurances of the contrary. |
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