| John Brown - Great Britain - 1823 - 560 pages
...settlements, in the same manner. The Assembly 1 7.^6, by an act, declared it the principles of this church, That no minister should be intruded into any parish contrary to the uill of the congregation. By their 7th act, they enjoin ministers and preachers to warn their hearers... | |
| John Struthers - Jacobite Rebellion, 1715 - 1828 - 676 pages
...that it is, and has been since the Reformation, the principle of this church, that no minister shall be intruded into any parish contrary to the will of the congregation, and therefore it is seriously recommended, by the said act, to all judicatories of this church, to... | |
| John Struthers - 1828 - 660 pages
...that it is, and has been, since the reformation, a principle of this church, that no minister shall be intruded into any parish contrary to the will of the congregation, do therefore seriously recommend to all judicatories of this church, to have a due regard to the said... | |
| W. Davidson - Lanark (Scotland) - 1828 - 244 pages
...That it is, and -has been, since the Reformation, the principle of this Church, that no Minister shall be intruded into any parish, contrary to the will of the congregation; and therefore, it is seriously recommended, by the said act, to all Judicatories of this Church, to... | |
| Thomas Stephen - Constitutional history - 1835 - 806 pages
...is, and has been ever since the Reformation, the principles of this church, that no minister shall be intruded into any parish, contrary to the will of the congregation ; and therefore it is seriously recommended to all judicatories of this church, to have a due regard... | |
| Theology - 1838 - 728 pages
...tendency ; for instance, in 1/36, a resolution was passed, declaring it to be the principle of the church that no minister should be intruded into any parish contrary to the will of the congregation. This seems to have been the model of the declaratory act adopted by the same body in May, 1834, nearly a... | |
| United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. General Assembly - 1838 - 586 pages
...for giving full effect to the ancient and fundamental principle of her constitution, that no minister be intruded into any parish, contrary to the will of the congregation. It has been found by the courts of law, that when we act upon that principle, and reject a presentee... | |
| John M'Kerrow - Church of Scotland - 1841 - 982 pages
...they declared, that it was, and always had been since the Reformation, a principle of their church., that no minister should be intruded into any parish contrary to the will of the congregation, yet with singular inconsistency did these very men, who emitted this declaration, dismiss a complaint... | |
| Stephen Collins - Essays - 1842 - 318 pages
...Scotland declares, as a fundamental principle of her Ecclesiastical Constitution, "That no pastor shall be intruded into any parish contrary to the will of the congregation; and that this Church, as every Church of Christ, is free from secular control in the exercise of those... | |
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