Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
The first of these was the conflict between monarchism and conciliarism.
Like many men of his time, he promoted Conciliarism, the idea that a general council should be above the pope.
In this crisis, conciliarism took center stage as the best option for deciding which pope would step down.
Now it seemed to be serving as a step back up from Conciliarism to Catholicism.
The fathers remaining at Basel became the apogee of conciliarism.
The whole matter was a futile attempt to revive 15th century conciliarism and to employ it for political purposes.
It is not to be confused with conciliarism, which is a particular historical movement within the Catholic Church.
But have you grasped the full depth of the religious war - no less - raging now for 40 years between Conciliarism and Catholicism?
France forced Catholic theologians to support conciliarism and deny Papal infallibility.
Because unrelenting Conciliarism has blinded the Cardinal to the triumph all around him of what St.
Also began conciliarism.
In the larger or more populous monarchies the impulse toward conciliarism had a provincial or particularist character.
It is, admittedly, less clear that the Nicene Creed excludes Conciliarism.
The failure of Conciliarism to gain broad acceptance after the 15th century is taken as a factor in the Protestant Reformation.
This treatise illustrates the role of traditional ideas in the formation of conciliarism, the idea that a church council could regulate the papacy.
Populated by cardinals opposed to conciliarism, the Lateran Council condemned the authority of conciliary bodies.
William of Ockham (d. 1349) wrote some of the earliest documents outlining the basic understanding of conciliarism.
Conciliarism at the Fifth Lateran Council?
The Papacy itself was questioned by conciliarism expressed in the councils of Constance and the Basel.
Voluntarism and Conciliarism in the Work of Francis Oakley.
Conciliarism and Papalism, trans.
Adam's writings supported conciliarism, the view that the authority of ecumenical councils was greater than that of the papacy.
When Execrabilis was issued, many prelates in France and Germany were opposed to this bull on account of their support for conciliarism.
Nicholas of Cusa synthesized this strain of conciliarism, balancing hierarchy with consent and representation of the faithful.
Peter's, i.e. to practice Tridentinism under Rome's control and without attacking Rome's Conciliarism.