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| | Ecumenical council - Art History Online Reference and Guide |
 | | Fifth Council of the Lateran, (1512-1517); attempted reform of the Church. |  | | In Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy, an ecumenical council is a meeting of the bishops of the whole church convened to discuss and settle matters of Church doctrine and practice. |  | | Council of Chalcedon, (451); repudiated the Eutychian doctrine of monophysitism, described and delineated the two natures of Christ, human and divine; adopted the Chalcedonian Creed. |
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http://www.arthistoryclub.com/art_history/Ecumenical_council
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| | Encyclopedia: The Conciliar Movement |
 | | Fourth, the secular power must cooperate with the Church to ensure that her spiritual ordinances are effected in the physical world. |  | | This principle, an obvious enunciation of the “two powers” doctrine of Gelasius demonstrates that a mode of thinking which originally arose in a context in which absolute-style monarchies were (with much resistance) the constant temptation of both secular and spiritual powers nevertheless has significant connections with a different sort of ecclesiology as well. |  | | Conciliarism proper, the theory that the supreme judicial organ of the Church of Jesus Christ is the General Council (of the whole Church, East and West), is a very old ecclesiological theory in Christendom, advocated by as many notable figures as the other great Western theory, papalism. |
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http://www.societaschristiana.com/Encyclopedia/C/ConciliarMovement.html
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| | Lateran Councils |
 | | The Second Lateran Council (1139) was convoked by Pope Innocent II to reaffirm the unity of the church after the schism (1130-38) of the antipope Anacletus II (d. |  | | When the council began in the Lateran basilica in November 1215 there were present 404 bishops from throughout the western church, and from the Latin eastern church a large number of abbots, canons and representatives of the secular power. |  | | The Lateran council therefore dutifully decreed that "in each cathedral church there should be provided a suitable benefice for a master who shall instruct without charge the clerics of the cathedral church and other poor scholars, thus at once satisfying the teacher's needs and opening up the way of knowledge to learners". |
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http://mb-soft.com/believe/txs/lateran.htm
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| | Lateran 4 - 1215 |
 | | When the council began in the Lateran basilica in November 1215 there were present 404 bishops from throughout the western church, and from the Latin eastern church a large number of abbots, canons and representatives of the secular power. |  | | The Lateran council therefore dutifully decreed that "in each cathedral church there should be provided a suitable benefice for a master who shall instruct without charge the clerics of the cathedral church and other poor scholars, thus at once satisfying the teacher's needs and opening up the way of knowledge to learners". |  | | With much foresight it was forbidden in the Lateran council for anyone to receive several ecclesiastical dignities and several parish churches, contrary to the regulations of the sacred canons, on pain of both the recipient losing what he had received and the conferrer being deprived of the power to confer. |
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http://www.ewtn.com/library/COUNCILS/LATERAN4.HTM
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| | MSN Encarta - Innocent III |
 | | The council assembled in Rome some 400 bishops and 800 abbots and superiors, along with many secular princes or their envoys—the largest such gathering in the Middle Ages. |  | | Among the most famous of the council's decrees is Omnis Utriusque Sexus, requiring of all adult Christians the annual reception of the sacraments of confession and the Eucharist. |  | | Genuinely concerned about the Holy Land, Innocent promoted the Fourth Crusade to recover it. |
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http://encarta.msn.com/encyclopedia_761572226/Innocent_III.html
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Fourth Lateran Council |
 | | He declared himself ready to drink the chalice of the Passion for the defence of the Catholic Faith, for the succour of the Holy Land, and to establish the liberty of the Church. |  | | Innocent III found himself on this occasion surrounded by seventy-one patriarchs and metropolitans, including the Patriarchs of Constantinople and of Jerusalem, four hundred and twelve bishops, and nine hundred abbots and priors. |  | | The assembly was to take place in November, 1215. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09018a.htm
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| | Medieval Sourcebook: Twelfth Ecumenical Council: Lateran IV 1215 |
 | | The council approves the existing order of the patriarchal sees and affirm, three of their privileges: their bishops may confer the pallium and may have the cross borne before them, and appeals may be taken to them. |  | | With much foresight it was prohibited in the Lateran Council that no one should, contrary to the sacred canons, accept several ecclesiastical dignities or several parochial churches; otherwise the one receiving should lose what he received, and the one who bestowed be deprived of the right of collation. |  | | But we, with the approval of the holy and general council, believe and confess with Peter (Lombard) that there is one supreme entity, incomprehensible and ineffable, which is truly Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, together (simul) three persons and each one of them singly. |
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http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/basis/lateran4.html
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| | The Fourth Lateran Council - Dr. Herb Samworth |
 | | That council was known as the Fourth Lateran and was convened by Pope Innocent the Third. |  | | In 1215, a council was held that changed the Latin Church and altered the course of history. |  | | Second, we find that erroneous beliefs concerning the doctrines of the Christian faith were now subject to punishment by civil authorities. |
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http://www.solagroup.org/articles/historyofthebible/hotb_0008.html
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| | Lateran Council, Fourth |
 | | Lateran Council, Fourth, 1215, 12th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church, convened at the Lateran Palace, Rome, by Pope |  | | Encyclopedia: Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches: Councils and Treaties - Encyclopeadia articles concerning Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches: Councils and Treaties. |  | | The Councils of the Church: A Short History.(Review) |
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http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/society/A0828962.html
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| | History of the Christian Church, Volume V: The Middle Ages. A.D. 1049-1294. (ii.vii.vii) |
 | | The council expressly condemned the doctrine of Joachim of Flore, that the substance of the Father, Son, and Spirit is not a real entity, but a collective entity in the sense that a collection of men is called one people, and a collection of believers one Church. |  | | The doctrinal decisions, contained in the first two chapters, give a comprehensive statement of the orthodox faith as it concerns the nature of God, the Incarnation, the unity of the Church, and the two greater sacraments. |  | | To his successors he bequeathed a continent united in allegiance to the Holy See and a Church strengthened in its doctrinal unity. |
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http://www.ccel.org/ccel/schaff/hcc5.ii.vii.vii.html
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| | Fourth Council of the Lateran - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | It was the 12th ecumenical council and is sometimes called "the General Council of Lateran" due to the attendance by seventy-one patriarchs and metropolitans, four hundred and twelve bishops, and nine hundred abbots and priors. |  | | Jews and Muslims shall wear a special dress to enable them to be distinguished from Christians (see Judenhut, yellow badge). |  | | Innocent III stated his purposes as the defence of the Catholic faith, for the aid to the Crusader States in Palestine, and to establish the liberty of the Church from lay investiture and other lay interference. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fourth_Council_of_the_Lateran
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| | INCLUSIVE ORTHODOX CHURCH - Nicene-Constantinoplitan Creed |
 | | The Roman Catholic Church unilaterally modified the creed at the Fourth Council of the Lateran in 1215, and that creed is normative for the Western churches. |  | | One of the creeds of the Council of Antioch in Encaenia (341) reads: "and he sitteth at the right hand of the Father, and he shall come again to judge both the quick and the dead, and he remaineth God and King to all eternity." |  | | The Nicene-Constantinopolitan Creed — in its original form — is normative for the Inclusive Orthodox Church and the Eastern Orthodox Christian churches. |
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http://www.inclusiveorthodox.org/Nicreed.html
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| | IN the Big INNING |
 | | There is indeed one universal church of the faithful, outside of which nobody at all is saved, in which Jesus Christ is both priest and sacrifice. |  | | Nobody can effect this sacrament except a priest who has been properly ordained according to the church's keys, which Jesus Christ himself gave to the apostles and their successors.” Introduction of fourth General Council of the Lateran. |  | | Catholics were divided on this issue and the only unity between them was that they agreed that the presence of Christ was somehow found in the Eucharist. |
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http://www.geocities.com/baptistsite/Transubstantiation.htm
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| | Catholic Answers Forums - Fourth Lateran Council (1215) |
 | | Well, as the Council cited from Sacred Scripture, this "distinctive dress" was already part of the Law of Moses. |  | | These were, after all, Christian brothers of ours and we should at least give them the courtesy of trying to see their point of view if we disagree with their actions. |  | | Catholic Answers Forums - Fourth Lateran Council (1215) |
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http://forums.catholic.com/showthread.php?t=88809&goto=newpost
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| | Excerpt: Fourth Lateran Council |
 | | Firmly we believe and we confess simply that the true God is one alone, eternal, immense, and unchangeable, incomprehensible, omnipotent and ineffable, Father and Son and Holy Spirit: indeed three Persons but one essence, substance, or nature entirely simple. |  | | 12th Ecumenical Council of the Catholic Church, presided over by |
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http://www.ihsv.com/lateran.HTM
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| | The Origins of Anti-Semitism, Part II |
 | | In Italy she protected the Jews as "guardians of the Law" of the Old Testament, and as living witnesses to the historicity of the Scriptures and to "the wrath of God." But periodically Church councils, often with excellent intentions, and seldom with general authority, added to the tribulations of Jewish life. |  | | The attitude of the Church in these matters varied with place and time. |  | | Innocent III led the Fourth Lateran Council in its demand for a Jewish badge, and laid down the principle that all Jews were doomed to perpetual servitude because they had crucified Jesus. |
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http://www.theconservativevoice.com/modules/news/article.php?storyid=3046
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| | [No title] |
 | | The Fourth Lateran Council also decreed that "Jews could not hold public office" and called upon the secular powers to "exterminate all heretics."9 When Hitler came to power he dutifully followed all four of these Roman Church policies. |  | | There were more than a thousand Church delegates who met in four stormy sessions to determine what the official relationship between Christians and Jews should be, as approved by the Roman Church. |  | | The official Christian policy that came out of the Fourth Lateran Council was a formal declaration supporting the conduct of the Roman Church toward the Jews for centuries prior. |
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http://www.mosquitonet.com/~prewett/hag1016.html
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| | Lateran Council IV - 1215, The Benedictines by Dom Bruno Hicks OSB (1878-1954). Pt. 8 |
 | | Turning then to Benedictines proper, that is, the Black Monks of St. Benedict, it seems that in spite of several attempts towards forming organic unions on the Cluny model, the majority of the monasteries remained in their primeval state of independent isolation. |  | | The English monks, to their credit, were the first to put the Lateran decree into effect, and three years later, in 1218, the first General Chapter of Benedictines in the Province of Canterbury was held at Oxford. |  | | The Fourth Council of the Lateran, however, in 1215, made changes that profoundly modified subsequent Benedictine history. |
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http://www.osb.org/gen/hicks/ben-08.html
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| | ENGLISH & LATERAN COUNCIL LEGISLATION |
 | | Saving in all things [the honor and privilege of the holy Roman church]. |  | | The 51st canon of the Fourth Lateran Council under Innocent III (1198-1216) |  | | previously marriage had been prohibited among sixth cousins and anyone more closely related; the Council reduced it to third cousins. |
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http://falcon.arts.cornell.edu/prh3/368/texts/council.html
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| | Lateran Council, Fourth - definition of Lateran Council, Fourth by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and ... |
 | | Lateran Council, Fourth - definition of Lateran Council, Fourth by the Free Online Dictionary, Thesaurus and Encyclopedia. |  | | This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional. |  | | Lateran Council, Fourth is not available in the general English dictionary and thesaurus. |
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http://www.thefreedictionary.com/Lateran+Council,+Fourth
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| | [No title] |
 | | The Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215), c. |  | | This is the purpose of the 44th of the Apostolic Canons; of the Council of Arles (314), and of the 17th canon the First Council of Niceaea (325). |  | | In the Council of Vienne (1311) it was declared that if any person obstinately maintained that there was no sin in the practice of demanding interest, he should be punished as a heretic (see c. |
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http://library.catholic.org/business/business13.txt
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| | JewishGates.Com - The Definitive Source for Talmudic Learning |
 | | He therefore summoned the Fourth Lateran Council in 1215. |  | | Canon 68 of the Fourth Lateran Council, however, was not only official Christian legislation; it was widely adopted. |  | | Canon 67 stated that Jews must be prevented from exacting immoderate usury from Christians, and also that Jews must pay tithes on property formerly owned by Christians. |
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http://www.jewishgates.com/file.asp?File_ID=95
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| | st dominic |
 | | In 1214 Simon gave him a castle at Casseneuil and Dominic with six followers founded an order devoted to the conversion of the Albigensians; the order was canonically approved by the bishop of Toulouse the following year. |  | | He failed to gain approval for his order of preachers at the fourth General Council of the Lateran in 1215 but received Pope Honorius III's approval in the following year, and the Order of Preachers (the Dominicans) was founded. |  | | He convoked the first general council of the order at Bologna in 1220 and died there the following year on August 6, after being forced by illness to return from a preaching tour in Hungary. |
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http://www.livingwatercommunity.com/saiints/st_dominic.htm
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| | CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Fifth Lateran Council |
 | | The pope hastened to oppose to this conciliabulum a more numerously attended council, which he convoked, by the Bull of 18 July, 1511, to assemble 19 April, 1512, in the church of St. John Lateran. |  | | Convoked by Julius II, the assembly survived him, was continued by Leo X, and held its twelfth, and last, session on 16 March, 1417. |  | | Time passed, however, and this promise was not fulfilled. |
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http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/09018b.htm
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| | Third Council of the Lateran - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The Third Council of the Lateran met in March, 1179 as the 11th ecumenical council. |  | | Three sessions were held, on 5, 14, and 19 March, in which twenty-seven canons were promulgated. |  | | Besides removing the remains of the recent antipope schism the council condemned the Waldensian and Cathar heresies and pushed for the restoration of ecclesiastical discipline. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Third_Council_of_the_Lateran
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| | ChurchRodent: Fourth Lateran Council (1215) |
 | | Under Pope Innocent III's leadership, this council provided for the state's punishment of heretics, the confiscation of their property, excommunication for those unwilling to move against the heretic, and complete forgiveness of sins for those cooperating. |  | | Be sure to visit BlogRodent, my new weblog! |
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http://tatumweb.com/churchrodent/terms/fourthlaterancouncil.htm
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