¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Sacerdotalists
1. sacerdotalist [n] - See also: sacerdotalist
Lexicographical Neighbors of Sacerdotalists
Literary usage of Sacerdotalists
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)
"... Triumph of sacerdotalists — The lay franchise fixed on religious basis— Bishops
differ, but prelacy always wins — Revolt of the church- outed in ..."
2. Church and State in England & Wales, 1829-1906 by Michael John Fitzgerald McCarthy (1906)
"The subterfuges to which the Oxford sacerdotalists had recourse to conceal their
real purpose from hostile critics, so that Newman might not lose his ..."
3. History of Latin Christianity: Including that of the Popes to the by Henry Hart Milman (1881)
"In Southern France Manicheism almost suddenly swallowed up the followers of the
simple Anti-sacerdotalists, Peter de Brueys and Henry the Deacon. ..."
4. The Middle Ages, 395-1272 by Dana Carleton Munro (1921)
"Almost the only heretical belief that was common to 311 the anti-sacerdotalists
was the Donatist heresy that the sacraments are polluted in unworthy hands. ..."
5. Puritan Preaching in England: A Study of Past and Present by John Brown (1900)
"Meantime while the sacerdotalists within the Church were sleeping, there were
anti- sacerdotalists outside who were preparing ..."