¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sacerdotalist
1. [n -S]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sacerdotalist
Literary usage of Sacerdotalist
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Church and State in England & Wales, 1829-1906 by Michael John Fitzgerald McCarthy (1906)
"... Unjustifiable recommendations-—sacerdotalist claims :t'-" audacious than
ever—The nation's duty—Conclusion. THE report of the Ecclesiastical Discipline ..."
2. Church and State in England & Wales, 1829-1906 by Michael John Fitzgerald McCarthy (1906)
"... of America—Refusal of evangelical evidence — Unjustifiable recommendations —
sacerdotalist claims more audacious than ever—The nation's duty—Conclusion. ..."
3. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann (1913)
"They found an enormous accretion of sacerdotalist ideas embodied in the words and
... in the New Testament, the sacerdotalist conception of the Christian ..."
4. Christianity and the Social Order by Reginald John Campbell (1907)
"Stewart Headlam because he happens to be a sacerdotalist would be a piece of
unpardonable effrontery. The one thing which I have tried to keep before me in ..."
5. Christianity and the Social Order by Reginald John Campbell (1907)
"Stewart Headlam because he happens to be a sacerdotalist would be a piece of
unpardonable effrontery. The one thing which I have tried to keep before me in ..."
6. The Theological Monthly (1890)
"The Anglican sacerdotalist does not claim to produce the same effect as the Roman,
but one much more wondrous still. The Roman teaches transubstantiation, ..."
7. The Unitarian edited by Jabez Thomas Sunderland, Brooke Herford, Frederick B. Mott (1895)
"Mr. Riley himself does not find anything in the extreme Protestantism of the
Thirty-nine Articles inconsistent with his position as a sacerdotalist. ..."