Archbishop Laud - Creedopedia
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Topic: Archbishop Laud


  
 LAUD - LoveToKnow Article on LAUD
Lauds infatuated policy could go no further, and the etcetera oath, according to which whole classes of men were to be forced to swear perpetual allegiance to the government of this church by archbishops, bishops, deans and archdeacons, andc., was long remembered and derided.
While refusing to acknowledge the Roman Church as the true church, he allowed it to be a true church and a branch of the Catholic body, at the same timeemphasizing the perils of knowingly associating with error; and with regard to the English Church he denied that the acceptance of all its articles was necessary.
The opportunity came with the old kings death in 1625, for James, with all his pedantry, was too wise and cautious to embark in Lauds rash undertakings, and had already shown a prudent moderation, alter setting up bishops in Scotland, in going no further in opposition to the religious feelings of the people.
http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/L/LA/LAUD.htm

  
 Anglican Biographical Dictionary
Archbishop Laud's Prayer for Christ's Church: O Gracious Father, we humbly beseech Thee for Thy Holy Catholic Church; that Thou wouldest be pleased to fill it with all truth in all peace.
Laud ordered that the Holy Table be railed in at the east end of the churches (as we see it in nearly all Anglican parishes today) in order to protect it from profanation.
The execution of Archbishop Laud was followed by that of his King in 1649.
http://www.allsaintsanglican.org/worthies.php?id=LaudW

  
 William Laud - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Laud's policy was influenced by another aspect of his character: his desire to impose total uniformity on the Church.
Archbishop of Canterbury and a fervent supporter of Charles I of England whom he encouraged to believe in the Divine Right of Kings.
George Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham, and the king himself, he reached the highest position the Church of England had to offer, Archbishop of Canterbury, in 1633.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laud

  
 William Laud: Archbishop of Canterbury and Martyr
When Laud arose, with a profound conviction that the Christian religion of the first Christian centuries must be substantially the religion of Jesus Christ,--and I myself hold that idea to be axiomatic,--he found nearly the whole body of the Anglican clergy careless or Calvinist.
Laud!") But as an adviser of the King, and as a powerful influence in English life, he had to deal with people who were themselves intolerant revolutionaries.
The sons of the old High Church families,--Pusey, the Kebles, the Mozleys, and many more,--stood their ground to a man. And the presence of that sturdy element in the Church of England is due to Laud.
http://justus.anglican.org/resources/pc/usa/gts/laud1912.html

  
 Archbishop William Laud 1573-1645
Laud's love of ceremony and harmonious liturgy — the "beauty of holiness" — was shared by King Charles, but it was loathed by Puritans, who regarded Laud's Arminianism as dangerously close to Roman Catholicism.
Laud was accused of assuming tyrannical powers in Church and State, of subverting the true religion with popish superstition and of causing the recent disastrous wars against the Scots.
The rabble-rousing "Freeborn John" Lilburne was persecuted in 1638, provoking further popular outcry against Laud and his bishops.
http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/biog/laud.htm

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Anglicanism
In 1413 Archbishop Arundel, with the assent of Convocation, affirmed against the Lollards the faith of the English Church in a number of test articles, including the Divine institution of the Papacy and the duty of all Christians to render obedience to it (Wilkins, Concilia, III, 355).
At the same time she reasserted in the full the claim made by Henry VIII as to the Authority of the Crown in matters ecclesiastical, and the great religious changes made after her accession were carried out and enforced in a royal visitation commissioned by the royal authority.
With the truest charity, which consists in the candour of truth, Pope Leo XIII in his Encyclical on Unity, pointed out that there can be no reunion expect on the solid basis of dogmatic unity and submission to the divinely instituted authority of the Apostolic See.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01498a.htm

  
 Newman Reader - British Critic - Le Bas
Laud, in his anxiety to correct their almost brutal irreverence, was desirous that they who entered a church, should testify, by an obeisance directed towards its most hallowed spot, that they were conscious of treading within a precinct dedicated to the majesty of Heaven.
And it is most certain that, from that moment to the end of his days, Laud was detested and pursued by the party of Abbot, as a confederate of Popery, and a sworn enemy to the Gospel of Christ."—pp.
If Laud's proceedings, relative to such matters, were Popish, then are we, of the Reformed establishment of England, now living in the midst of an almost complete apparatus of Popery; for our Cathedrals and our Churches are, for the most part, in a condition which Laud himself might have looked upon with complacency.
http://www.newmanreader.org/works/britishcritic/lebas.html

  
 William Laud
Laud's movement for Church reform spread to Scotland when King Charles tried to force a new Prayer Book on them to bring them in line with the English...which led to riots and ultimately to resistance by the Scottish National Covenant...and the Bishops' Wars.
He felt that the discipline was breaking down in the Church and tried to promote the traditional and ceremonial ways of worship, and to make sure that all parishes worshipped in the same way.
The Lord receive my soul, and have mercy on me, and bless this kingdom with peace and charity, that there may not be this effusion of Christian blood amongst them.
http://www.thevickerage.worldonline.co.uk/ecivil/william_laud.htm

  
 Britannia Biographies: William Laud Part 10
Laud further brought in the et cetera oath by which whole classes of men were to be forced to swear allegiance to the "government of this church by archbishops, bishops, deans and archdeacons, etc".
Laud was now all-powerful in both Church and State.
And now, if the Church will not hold up themselves, under God I can do no more."
http://www.britannia.com/bios/wmlaud/archbish.html

  
 SKCM: S.Charles: History-St. Charles and the Church of England
Laud became a hate figure for the Calvinist faction who saw that Laud and the King were set on dismantling the Calvinist edifice of the Church.
Whilst keen to restore the catholicity of the Church Laud was not a Romanist and placed a special emphasis on the correct use of the Book of Common Prayer which had become almost unrecognisable in many dioceses.
Like his father before him, Charles was also a passionate believer in the doctrine of the Divine Right of Kings, a doctrine which he recognised as best upheld by the High Church party in the Church of England.
http://www.skcm.org/SCharles/History/history_Charles.html

  
 Archbishop William Laud
In the formative years of Anglican theology following the Reformation, the Church of England was beset with fanatics who attempted to drive the Church to one extreme or the other in the fight between pure Protestant theology and pure Catholic theology.
During the reign of Charles’ cousin Elizabeth, a concerted effort, led by Archbishop Matthew Parker, was made to lead the Church along a “middle of the road” in terms of theology.
English law provided for criminal punishment against those who sought to disrupt the “peace of the Church.” During these troublesome times, there were many people who were enthusiastic in doing just that, including the use of violence if they found it necessary.
http://www.southbear.com/Lectionary/Calendar_Archives/Laud.html

  
 The Puritans
Archbishop William Laud is a martyred saint of the Anglican church.
Ritual and liturgy were very important to Laud, as they gave form and beauty to the act of worship.
Now, at a time when Protestants in general feared a slide "backwards" into Catholocism, he upheld surplices, kneeling at prayer, candles, crucifixes, and other forms of worship that were regarded as Papist by most Englishmen.
http://www.dowdgen.com/dowd/document/puritans.html

  
 Laud, Liberty, and Levellers
(The title Nonconformist is here used in its historic sense as meaning one who remains in the Church of England while refusing to conform to the Catholic faith.) The action the archbishop took in the matter seems to infuriate our Protestant historians almost as much as his opposition to plutocracy.
The pulpit, the symbol of individualism, was the idol which they set up in place of the Eucharist, the symbol of social unity and community.
By whom is it practised?' No wonder the Puritans complained: 'Many nobles and worthy gentlemen are curbed and tyrannised over by some base clergyman of mean parentage.' The archbishop compelled the worthy gentlemen to disgorge part of the plunder.
http://www.anglocatholicsocialism.org/laud.html

  
 Archbishop Laud 1573-1645 (Hugh Trevor-Roper)
The tenet that Laud advanced most persistently, in the teeth of massive opposition by both clergy and laity, was the importance of preserving continuity with the pre-Reformation Church.
Activities such as the promotion of scholarship and the recovery of the church's property rights were not disconnected enthusiasms but elements of a program for reinforcing the links between contemporary and ancient Christianity and safeguarding a refurbished church from the influence of modernist opinion.
The "true" reason for, say, upholding the mystical character of the Eucharist was evidently to strike a blow at enclosures, emigration and the pretensions of Parliament.
http://shop.mdlinks.net/us/product/1842122029.htm

  
 The Scottish Preachers' Hall of Fame
Even though James believed he knew "the stomach" of the Scottish people (a phrase James used to tell Archbishop Laud that he understood what made the Scottish people tick), he was a despot who alienated the people through his circuitous dealings.
When, in 1635, Charles I and William Laud came to Scotland and tried to impose the new form of worship upon the Church of Scotland, it was evident that the day for peaceful change had passed.
Though the text aimed to be the Scottish Book of Common Prayer, it was generally known as "Laud's Liturgy." Charles wanted the English prayer book accepted without change but was advised that a Scottish prayer book might win him some support.
http://www.newble.co.uk/hall/history.html

  
 William Laud
Laud also upset the Puritans (Presbyterians) in Scotland when he insisted they had to use the English Prayer Book.
William Laud, the son of a prosperous merchant, was born in Reading in 1573.
The Puritans claimed that Laud was trying to make English churches look like those in Catholic countries.
http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/STUlaud.htm

  
 Laud Hall
Laud was a great scholar, a great "Catholic" Churchman and a sound Anglican.
O Gracious Father, we humbly beseech Thee for Thy Holy Catholic Church; that Thou wouldest be pleased to fill it with all truth in all peace.
vii.25) for Laud’s more vigorous ‘where it is divided and rent asunder, make up the breaches of it, O thou Holy One of Israel" (Amos ix.11).
http://www.unitedanglicanchurch.org/laud_hall.htm

  
 Archives of the Archbishops of Canterbury
Convocation is the ancient legislative assembly for the province of Canterbury, which since the 15th century met as two houses, the upper house of bishops, presided over by the archbishop of Canterbury, and the lower house (of clergy) who elect their own chairman.
A collection of papal bulls and rescripts, some of which were addressed to the archbishop, but the majority of which relate to monastic houses, which came to Lambeth following the dissolution of the monasteries.
Minute books of the Bishops' Meetings, a gathering of diocesan and suffragan bishops in England and Wales, chaired by the archbishop of Canterbury, and held biannually.
http://www.lambethpalacelibrary.org/holdings/archbishopsarchives.html

  
 William Laud
The Puritans objected to the surplice (a) as not mentioned in the Bible, and (b) as something that the Roman Catholics had worn before the Reformation, which made it one of the props of idolatrous worship, and marked anyone who wore it as an idolater.
In February of 1638, Scottish leaders signed the National Covenant, by which they pledged themselves to uphold the Puritan position by force, and by the end of the year they had voted to depose and excommunicate every bishop in Scotland.
On the scaffold he prayed: "The Lord receive my soul, and have mercy on me, and bless this kingdom with peace and charity, that there may not be this effusion of Christian blood amongst them."
http://www.satucket.com/lectionary/William_Laud.htm

  
 Laud, William --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Laud attempted to enforce his High Church policy in both Scotland and England.
It rejected the attempt by King Charles I and William Laud, archbishop of Canterbury,...
archbishop of Canterbury (1633–45) and religious adviser to King Charles I of Great Britain.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?tocId=4086

  
 John Workman Page
A number of years ~, when Archbishop Laud was being tried for heresy to the Protestant faith, he was charged with undue persecution of John Workman.
And it is certainly the story of John Workman that has colored the legends of the American Workmans when they say their people were connected with the Puritan movement in England and they went to Holland for religious freedom.
John contended that the church was now too “popish” in its learning and teachings, while Goodman and Laud contended that John was a heretic and traitor to his country.
http://www.familyhistoryfun.com/john_workman

  
 The New York Review of Books: GREAT TEW, CONTINUED
That was why he called on his hearers to "bind and vanquish" such insidious enemies of the faith.
That was why Archbishop Ussher, Prideaux's friend and ally, denounced in a thundering sermon at Oxford in 1640 certain "strange conceits and strange divinity," which he described as follows:
Now we have settled that Prideaux's imprimatur could not possibly have been affixed to The Religion of Protestants in good faith.
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/4368

  
 St Michael and All Angels, Observatory, Cape Town: Jan 10, 2003
Laud was elected Archbishop of Canterbury in 1633, during the reign of Charles I, at a time when contention between the extremes of Puritanism and the "High Church" views of many Anglicans was at its most intense.
Laud belonged to the latter group, taking a strong sacramental view and believing that the Roman Church was a true church, though corrupt.
Laud also sought to restore clerical power by opposing lay encroachment on church property and jurisdiction.
http://www.stmichael.org.za/TheCalendar/wc01102003.htm

  
 William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury: 10 January
Laud was a High Churchman who felt that the majesty of God should be reflected in the liturgy of the church and rigorously set about ensuring that its ministers should practise what he preached.
His friend the King did not -- or could not -- come to his assistance and he was beheaded on this day in 1645.
William Laud was appointed Archbishop of Canterbury by his friend and ecclesiastical ally, King Charles, in 1633.
http://www.sunday-readings.com/Holydays/0110.html

  
 GENUKI: Archbishops of Great Britain (L-Z)
Odo was made Bishop of Ramsbury in 926, fought at the famous battle of Brunanburgh in 937, and was selected by Dunstan, then minister to King Edmund, to be Archbishop of Canterbury in 942.
In 1227 he took part in preaching the Crusade; and in 1233, while rector of Calne, he was appointed archbishop of Canterbury.
archbishop of Canterbury, was born at Abingdon, about the close of the 12th century.
http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/royalty/archbl-z.html

  
 George Abbot: Information From Answers.com
The King had to refer the matter to a commission of ten, though he said that "an angel might have miscarried after this sort." The commission was equally divided, and the King gave a casting vote in the Archbishop's favour, though signing also a formal pardon or dispensation.
archbishop george abbot is mentioned in the following topics:
George Abbot ( October 19, 1562 – August 5, 1633) was an English divine, Archbishop of Canterbury, born at Guildford in Surrey, where his father was a cloth-worker.
http://www.answers.com/topic/archbishop-george-abbot

  
 BBC - History Trail - Church & State
This was in direct contrast to the desires of a more conservative faction, embodied by Archbishop Laud, who wanted to leave it permanently against the east wall of the chancel.
The battle for supremacy of these directly opposed ideals was resolved during the Civil War, when even more radical ideas (the complete secularisation of places of worship) about church-based religion were aired.
Laud also wanted to surround the altar with a set of rails at which people would kneel during communion.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/lj/churchlj/parochial_04.shtml

  
 Modern History Sourcebook: Archbishop William Laud: Visitation Articles, 1635
Or against the government of the Church of England under the King's Most Excellent Majesty, by Archbishops, Bishops, Deans, Archdeacons, and other officers of the same; affirming that the same is repugnant to the Word of God and that the said ecclesiastical officers are not lawfully ordained?
And whether have you a Register Book in parchment, for Christenings, Weddings, and Burials, and whether the same be kept in all points according to the Canons in that behalf provided?
And doth he also pray for all Archbishops, Bishops, and other ecclesiastical persons?
http://www.fordham.edu/HALSALL/mod/1635laud.html

  
 Choir tour photos / 097 - Archbishop Laud window in Christ Church, Victoria.JPG
Choir tour photos/097 - Archbishop Laud window in Christ Church, Victoria.JPG
Choir tour photos / 097 - Archbishop Laud window in Christ Church, Victoria.JPG
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~sjoh0575/pages/097%20-%20Archbishop%20Laud%20window%20in%20Christ%20Church,%20Victoria_JPG.htm

  
 Scottish National Covenant
T he attempt by Charles I and Archbishop Laud to impose a modified form of the English Prayer Book in Scotland met with outrage and fierce resistance from Scots anxious to preserve their national and religious identity.
According to tradition, on 23 July 1637, Jenny Geddes flung her prayer stool at the preacher in St Giles' Cathedral, Edinburgh, when he tried to read from the new prayer book.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License
http://www.british-civil-wars.co.uk/glossary/scots-national-covenant.htm

  
 Berkshire History: William Laud (1573-1645), Part 1
The history of William Laud is in a manner the history both of church and state in England for some twenty or more most memorable years.
We ought not to forget, in judging him, this trying ordeal through which it has been his fate to be made to pass.
http://www.berkshirehistory.com/bios/wmlaud

  
 William Laud
Laud believed the Church of England to be a direct continuity with the medieval Church, and he stressed the unity of Church and State, exalting the role of the king as the supreme governor.
His identification with the unpopular policies of King Charles, his support of the war against Scotland in 1640, and his efforts to make the Church independent of Parliament, made him widely disliked.
He emphasized the priesthood and the Sacraments, particularly the Eucharist, and caused consternation by insisting on the reverencing of the Altar, returning it to its pre-Reformation position against the east wall of the church, and hedging it about with rails.
http://www.geocities.com/episcopal23/laud.html

  
 Carlton (1987) Archbishop William Laud
Church of England; Bishops; Biography; Great Britain; History; Church history; Charles I, 1625-1649; 17th century; Statesmen; Laud, William
http://www.getcited.org/pub/102625231

  
 Did the Members of the High Commission Court Have Any Influence on the KJV?
Conant noted: "So pertinaciously, indeed, did the people cling ot it [the Geneva Bible], and so injurious was its influence to the interests of Episcopacy and of the 'authorized version,' that in the reign of Charles I, Archbishop Laud made the vending, binding, or importation of it [Geneva Bible] a high-commission crime" (English Bible, p.
Other KJV translators that were Bishops were most likely also members of this Court.
Frere described Laud as "the man who was to take up Andrewes' work and carry it out into practice by energetic means" (English Church, p.
http://www.tegart.com/brian/bible/kjvonly/rick/influence.html

  
 Who were they
The early years of Presbyterianism had seen the intervention by James VI and latterly Charles I, who both sought to exercise their `Divine Right` and be the Supreme Governor of the Kirk- as they were of the Church of England.
Worse still, two of his ministers were the Earl of Strafford, who persecuted the Scots in Ulster, and Archbishop William Laud who in 1637 sought to impose on the Scots a new prayer book ( Laud`s Liturgy) and the reintroduction of other Catholic-like practices.
The office of Bishop was frequently filled by political appointees from whom the monks, friars and nuns took their lead.
http://www.orrnamestudy.com/covenanters1.htm

  
 Archbishop Sharpe Coin Collection by Coin Collecting Center .com
Home Timelines Biography Military Site Map Links Archbishop William LAUD 1573-1645 Archbishop of Canterbury whose attempts to bring uniformity of worship and the "beauty of holiness" into...
Bourges, having elected an Archbishop without his consent, he...
THE SOCIETY of ARCHBISHOP JUSTUS was formed in 1996 and incorporated in 1997 as a...
http://www.coin-collecting-center.com/archbishop-sharpe-coin-collection.html

  
 MSS. Laud
The Western manuscripts of the Laudian collection are now subdivided according to language into three parts with distinct shelfmarks:
William Laud (1573-1645) was born at Reading, Berkshire, attended St John's College, Oxford, was ordained priest in 1601 and became Archbishop of Canterbury in 1633.
Archbishop Laud's donation to the Library comprised 1242 volumes which were received in three main instalments in 1635, 1636 and 1639, and in smaller ones in 1640-1.
http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/online/medieval/laud/laud.html

  
 Bodleian Library: Western manuscripts to c.1500: MSS. Laud
[There follow ‘supplementary notes’ by Craster, with further footnotes supplied by Nicholson, largely concerning the provenance of the manuscripts and the dates of Laud’s gifts of them to the Library: see Summary Catalogue, II, pp.
Lord Arundel is known also to have given Laud some Latin MSS.
The transference of the Barocci, Roe, Laud, and Digby collections to their new position took place in 1640 and 1641: until then the Laudian MSS.
http://www.bodley.ox.ac.uk/dept/scwmss/wmss/medieval/mss/laud.htm

  
 [No title]
Unitarian ( many Christians hold Unitarians not to be Christians at all due to the rejection of the godhead of Christ)
Desmond Tutu, Anglican Archbishop of Capetown, peace activist
William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury under Charles I of England
http://www.informationgenius.com/encyclopedia/p/pr/protestantism.html

  
 Literary Encyclopedia: Taylor, Jeremy
Taylor impressed the congregation so much that he was requested to return to this distinguished pulpit several times thereafter.
He was, by all accounts, a moderate and a learned man; a devout Catholic, he had nevertheless offended many Catholics in his attempts to show, in his book Deus, Natura, Gratia (1634), that Anglican doctrine was nearer in spirit to Catholic teaching than was commonly supposed.
He carried the manuscript of this book with him when, in November 1642 - his patron Laud being then in the Tower - he finally left Uppingham for Oxford, where the King was sojourning after having raised his standard at Nottingham to signal the beginning of the Civil War.
http://www.litencyc.com/php/speople.php?rec=true&UID=4329

  
 BBC - Radio 4 - This Sceptred Isle - The Scottish Revolt and the Seeds of Civil War
William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, is desperately trying to unite the Church in England and Scotland.
His determination that Scotland should adhere to the English Prayer Book led to conflict with Scotland.
Lead the Armenian Party (High Church) under Charles I culminating in being made Archbishop of Canterbury in 1633
http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/history/sceptred_isle/page/60.shtml?question=60

  
 Jewish Exponent: Archbishop, Israeli consul laud Vatican-Israel links@ HighBeam Research
Now, said the archbishop of Philadelphia, thanks to the recent Fundamental Agreement under which the Holy See and Israel normalized relations on Dec. 30, he'll never have to answer that question again.
Local Jewish and Catholic leaders gathered at the Archdiocese to hear...
Whenever he has spoken at synagogues, Anthony Cardinal Bevilacqua told a small local audience last week, the first question he's asked has always been, "Why doesn't the Vatican recognize Israel?"
http://www.highbeam.com/library/doc0.asp?docid=1P1:2226059&refid=ink_tptd_np

  
 Pastwords: Laud on the chopping block
Visit their site to learn about their library, camp grounds, conference center and other offerings.
A man of rigid principle, he had made life hard for them during his years as Archbishop of Canterbury.
You'l pardon my old Memory, and upon so sad occasions as I am come to this place, to make use of my Papers, I dare not trust my self otherwise.
http://www.gospelcom.net/chi/pastwords/chl007.shtml

  
 Church of England
Letter from twelve Bishops to Elizabeth I, interceding on behalf of Archbishop Grindal (MS.
Amongst documents from the 17th century of unmistakable Lambeth provenance are an account of the baptism by Archbishop Laud of the future King Charles II.
On the fall of Archbishop Laud the papers of the Tudor and Stuart Archbishop of Canterbury were removed from his study on behalf of Parliament by the lawyer and antiquary John Selden.
http://www.lambethpalacelibrary.org/news/fairhurst.html

  
 William Bray chaplain to Archbishop Laud
I am looking for information on a 17th century, Caroline divine, the Reverend William Bray, who was sometime chaplain to Dr Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, scourge of the puritan element within the Church of England and foe of Oliver Cromwell.
Does anyone have information on this William Bray's antecedents or descendants?
Re: William Bray chaplain to Archbishop Laud Barbara Brain Greiner Anderson 3/23/00
http://www.genforum.genealogy.com/bray/messages/1232.html

  
 Publisher description for Library of Congress control number 2001369741
Library of Congress subject headings for this publication: Laud, William, 1573-1645, Church of England Bishops Biography, Anglican Communion England Bishops Biography
The most powerful man in England during the so-called "Eleven Years Tyranny" from 1629-1640, archbishop of Canterbury William Laud was thrown from power in 1640 and executed on Tower Hill during the Civil War.
An esteemed scholar uncovers the social ideal that lay behind Laud's political and religious conservatism--an ideal fatally obscured by the archbishop's human limitations.
http://www.loc.gov/catdir/description/ste022/2001369741.html

  
 Slavery Illegality in All Ages and Nations (1855), by Edward C. Rogers
Johannes Eleemosynarius, patriarch of Alexandria, addressing himself to a slaveholder, said,
[Archbishop of Reims, St.] Remigius [437-553] thus wrote to [King] Clovis [481 A.D. "Let the gate of your palace be open to all, that every one may have recourse to you for justice.
They [early Christian Church leaders] united their exertions to enlist even the barbarian princes in the cause of the slave.
http://medicolegal.tripod.com/rogersuos.htm

  
 Alibris: Browse Books by ISBN
0080028633 : Archbishop Cranmer's Immortal Bequest: The Book of Common Prayer of the Church of England: An Evangelistic Liturgy
0080029397 : Archbishop Davidson and the English church
0080036997 : The Archbishop of Cambray's dissertation on pure love, with an account of the life and writings of the lady, for whose sake the Archbishop was banish'd from court.
http://www.alibris.com/books/isbns/1075

  
 The Covenanters by Brian Orr Time Line
Jenny Geddes said to have thrown a stool at the Bishop in St. Giles Church, Edinburgh July 23.
New form of service prepared by Laud rejected
Revivals gather strength in Ireland and Scotland led by the preaching of Robert Blair in Ireland, John Livingstone and David Dickson in Scotland.
http://www.tartans.com/articles/covtimeline.html

  
 William laud - Network Live
[Categories: Archbishops of Canterbury, 1645 deaths, 1573 births]
William Laud - definition of William Laud in Encyclopedia
Network Live does not have an article with this exact name.
http://william_laud.networklive.org

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