Attention! Your ePaper is waiting for publication!
By publishing your document, the content will be optimally indexed by Google via AI and sorted into the right category for over 500 million ePaper readers on YUMPU.
This will ensure high visibility and many readers!
Your ePaper is now published and live on YUMPU!
You can find your publication here:
Share your interactive ePaper on all platforms and on your website with our embed function
Truth Triumphant - Benjamin G. Wilkinson
Create successful ePaper yourself
Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.
today in its final controversy against the powers of<br />
evil, and to show the holy, unchanging message of<br />
the Bible as it has been preserved for those who<br />
will “fear God, and keep His commandments”--<br />
these a re the sincere aims of the author as he<br />
presents this book to those who know the truth.<br />
Merlin L. Neff<br />
6
today in its final controversy against the powers of evil, and to show the holy, unchanging message of the Bible as it has been preserved for those who will “fear God, and keep His commandments”-- these a re the sincere aims of the author as he presents this book to those who know the truth. Merlin L. Neff 6
Chapter 1 What Is the Church in the Wilderness? And to the woman were given two wings of a great eagle, that she mightily into the wilderness, into her place, where she is nourished for a time, and times, and half a time, from the face of the serpent. And the woman fled into the wilderness, where she hath a place prepared of God, that they should feed her there a thousand two hundred and threescore days. (Revelation 12:14, 6) The Church in the Wilderness is the connecting link between apostolic Christianity and God’s people today. The purpose of this volume is to show that there were Christian people in every country during this long period of history who possessed churches, colleges, mission stations, and theological schools; who followed closely and 7
- Page 1 and 2: ¸ TRUTH TRIUMPHANT Benjamin G. Wil
- Page 3 and 4: him. From both these original and s
- Page 5: godly souls in southern France and
- Page 9 and 10: which unlocks the meaning of great
- Page 11 and 12: and that which was obscure before,
- Page 13 and 14: without correct information concern
- Page 15 and 16: not upon the underlying, but upon t
- Page 17 and 18: Chapter 2 The Church in the Wildern
- Page 19 and 20: eligious rival of His church. With
- Page 21 and 22: Mankind should ponder the fact that
- Page 23 and 24: apostles. Sin came down from the da
- Page 25 and 26: warnings as well as descriptions ha
- Page 27 and 28: of Revelation. The devout mind whic
- Page 29 and 30: 11:2, 3; 12:6, 14; 13:5) God did no
- Page 31 and 32: visible and tangible. By the wilder
- Page 33 and 34: Chapter 3 The Apostolic Origins of
- Page 35 and 36: churches and nations which used the
- Page 37 and 38: Samaritans still existing look upon
- Page 39 and 40: God was looking to the future of th
- Page 41 and 42: Eastward into those fertile lands b
- Page 43 and 44: all Jews, even Christian Jews. In t
- Page 45 and 46: Celtic Christianity. By one of thos
- Page 47 and 48: Thus Ireland received the gospel fr
- Page 49 and 50: themselves with kings and emperors.
- Page 51 and 52: epistles are written to the young,
- Page 53 and 54: Greece was the intellectual, but Ro
- Page 55 and 56: The governor of Bithynia, in render
- Page 57 and 58:
had appeared.[38] Christianity is i
- Page 59 and 60:
considering its great age. 4. Gedde
- Page 61 and 62:
26. Westcott and Hort, The New Test
- Page 63 and 64:
Chapter 4 The Silent Cities of Syri
- Page 65 and 66:
effect upon the millions of Jews wh
- Page 67 and 68:
The exiles who settled here multipl
- Page 69 and 70:
of Syria, one historian says: Now t
- Page 71 and 72:
dawn of the twentieth century, ther
- Page 73 and 74:
advanced degree of civilization. So
- Page 75 and 76:
Kelley Prentice), covering more tha
- Page 77 and 78:
public baths, with spacious inns ne
- Page 79 and 80:
away the Roman Empire’s possessio
- Page 81 and 82:
ites and ceremonies were performed
- Page 83 and 84:
Jewish Christianity. Therefore it i
- Page 85 and 86:
we reached Oroum-El-Djoz, the sun w
- Page 87 and 88:
220. 15. Butler, Early Churches in
- Page 89 and 90:
Chapter 5 Lucian and the Church in
- Page 91 and 92:
much history about him has been pre
- Page 93 and 94:
centuries. Soon the government of t
- Page 95 and 96:
ishop of Rome, entered into a compa
- Page 97 and 98:
participant in this controversy, su
- Page 99 and 100:
exploits of Peter were emblazoned a
- Page 101 and 102:
Received Text was Lucian. None of L
- Page 103 and 104:
difference between the edition of L
- Page 105 and 106:
that of the north African allegoris
- Page 107 and 108:
(A.D. 150-235), who lived in the sa
- Page 109 and 110:
That this principle still prevails
- Page 111 and 112:
Standing Against “No-Law” Theor
- Page 113 and 114:
secure a reason for writing his boo
- Page 115 and 116:
this.”[36] Here we note the union
- Page 117 and 118:
type of Christianity. “They [the
- Page 119 and 120:
A brief summary of the theological
- Page 121 and 122:
certain extent the books from Genes
- Page 123 and 124:
substitutionary death of Christ on
- Page 125 and 126:
Reformation under Luther. The papac
- Page 127 and 128:
Ancient Eastern World, vol. 3, ch.4
- Page 129 and 130:
Second Period, par. 196, pp. 822- 8
- Page 131 and 132:
50. The Catholic Encyclopedia, arti
- Page 133 and 134:
truth based on the Bible only, thos
- Page 135 and 136:
The Struggle Against Monasticism No
- Page 137 and 138:
humility and prostration of the und
- Page 139 and 140:
of the church fathers. Learning and
- Page 141 and 142:
youth of today leaves home for four
- Page 143 and 144:
Cottian Alps, is the precise countr
- Page 145 and 146:
fourth century, which was peculiarl
- Page 147 and 148:
Vigilantius was convinced that the
- Page 149 and 150:
furnished by him, brought out a new
- Page 151 and 152:
disputation occasions, had given an
- Page 153 and 154:
France, to whom, about A. D. 404, J
- Page 155 and 156:
The New Organization of Free Church
- Page 157 and 158:
How demoralizing the influence of t
- Page 159 and 160:
Vigilantius has been called “the
- Page 161 and 162:
10. Ibid., pages 210, 211 11. Aflix
- Page 163 and 164:
monks who were devoting their lives
- Page 165 and 166:
Chapter 7 Patrick, Organizer of the
- Page 167 and 168:
Scythia to Ireland.[3] The Celts ar
- Page 169 and 170:
also in the collections of Tirechan
- Page 171 and 172:
frame with hide or leather. The pro
- Page 173 and 174:
Patrick was at the height of his wo
- Page 175 and 176:
Yeates writes: A large number of th
- Page 177 and 178:
This date agrees with the time when
- Page 179 and 180:
or creed as authority. The training
- Page 181 and 182:
it was built around certain facts o
- Page 183 and 184:
Irish, like other branches of the C
- Page 185 and 186:
against this encroachment of civil
- Page 187 and 188:
Peter and Lawrence and Stephen, and
- Page 189 and 190:
farther away from the apostolic sys
- Page 191 and 192:
state force inflicted a severe woun
- Page 193 and 194:
centuries of the Christian Era.[33]
- Page 195 and 196:
and strange doctrines flooded Europ
- Page 197 and 198:
appropriate term to express this re
- Page 199 and 200:
institutions of the church which Pa
- Page 201 and 202:
Patrick beheld Jesus as his substit
- Page 203 and 204:
Thus, the Celtic Church upheld the
- Page 205 and 206:
colleges made the Bible the origin
- Page 207 and 208:
How did the Danes succeed in overth
- Page 209 and 210:
the native Irish and their foreign
- Page 211 and 212:
eligious and that full power was no
- Page 213 and 214:
had bound that land to it before th
- Page 215 and 216:
Empire, chapter 31. 6. Smith and Wa
- Page 217 and 218:
entitled, “Aidan and the Church i
- Page 219 and 220:
Chapter 8 Columba and the Church in
- Page 221 and 222:
established by Patrick in Ireland t
- Page 223 and 224:
warriors also gained the political
- Page 225 and 226:
greatly impressed the historian Bed
- Page 227 and 228:
After he sailed from his beloved De
- Page 229 and 230:
ude shelter of pioneer construction
- Page 231 and 232:
apostle to the Picts had erected hi
- Page 233 and 234:
most of the features which can be s
- Page 235 and 236:
origin and would come to Ireland fr
- Page 237 and 238:
Having continued his labors in Scot
- Page 239 and 240:
or about one hundred years after th
- Page 241 and 242:
supreme power in both Ireland and E
- Page 243 and 244:
the Britons. Vigorously they had ex
- Page 245 and 246:
marriage is setting about a movemen
- Page 247 and 248:
This procedure was used by Margaret
- Page 249 and 250:
not servile work on that day.” ..
- Page 251 and 252:
Sunday laws. In a land like Scotlan
- Page 253 and 254:
It is a remarkable fact that those
- Page 255 and 256:
small degree to the impetus given i
- Page 257 and 258:
22. Fitzpatrick, Ireland and the Ma
- Page 259 and 260:
Chapter 9 Papas, First Head of the
- Page 261 and 262:
greatness of his vision meant much
- Page 263 and 264:
Bardesanes, writing about 180, puts
- Page 265 and 266:
Was it permissible for brethren bel
- Page 267 and 268:
church, he moved its headquarters t
- Page 269 and 270:
The tolerant attitude of the Parthi
- Page 271 and 272:
were more threatening than the phys
- Page 273 and 274:
which “he sun was to be the centr
- Page 275 and 276:
churches which celebrated Easter as
- Page 277 and 278:
power as “the first essay of papa
- Page 279 and 280:
With its alluring philosophy, its d
- Page 281 and 282:
a style and form, as would make it
- Page 283 and 284:
man,[31] the resurrection of the de
- Page 285 and 286:
who was the coeval and rival god of
- Page 287 and 288:
when the early Christians had multi
- Page 289 and 290:
We have noted the unparalleled rapi
- Page 291 and 292:
Throughout the Han Dynasty commerci
- Page 293 and 294:
Testament teachings and was similar
- Page 295 and 296:
The Church of the East Combats Hind
- Page 297 and 298:
such a pitch of enthusiasm as the v
- Page 299 and 300:
peace and rippleless thought of dei
- Page 301 and 302:
human emotions which for the first
- Page 303 and 304:
agreements between the events of Ch
- Page 305 and 306:
(gopala) with the gopis [females]
- Page 307 and 308:
until it had accomplished its missi
- Page 309 and 310:
276. 24. Bower, The History of the
- Page 311 and 312:
49. Beal, Buddhists’ Records of t
- Page 313 and 314:
Chapter 10 How the Church Was Drive
- Page 315 and 316:
career when Ulfilas was a lad. Asia
- Page 317 and 318:
the Goths, as he informs us, was no
- Page 319 and 320:
usually represented to us or not, w
- Page 321 and 322:
the son-in-law of the Roman emperor
- Page 323 and 324:
Conversion of the Goths by Ulfilas
- Page 325 and 326:
in the second place, many of these
- Page 327 and 328:
The 1260--Year Prophecy of the Litt
- Page 329 and 330:
Observing the power and influence o
- Page 331 and 332:
Christianity he was championing if
- Page 333 and 334:
This question Clovis settled, not l
- Page 335 and 336:
Fired by the victory of Clovis, the
- Page 337 and 338:
more blighting to the intellect, ha
- Page 339 and 340:
the Ostrogoths had been assembled f
- Page 341 and 342:
churches? Such a kingship requires
- Page 343 and 344:
exercised by the Caesars, Romanism
- Page 345 and 346:
also in Chapter xvi, entitled, “T
- Page 347 and 348:
cardinals was abolished, and religi
- Page 349 and 350:
the Welsh nation, and he gave direc
- Page 351 and 352:
The Arrival of Christianity Christi
- Page 353 and 354:
Step by step the Anglo-Saxons conqu
- Page 355 and 356:
Augustine in Great Britain When Aug
- Page 357 and 358:
Then followed more strategic marria
- Page 359 and 360:
of King Arthur and the landing of A
- Page 361 and 362:
to be swayed by the exhortations an
- Page 363 and 364:
adhered to what their holy fathers
- Page 365 and 366:
In the second place the Welsh would
- Page 367 and 368:
pronouncement against a section of
- Page 369 and 370:
fidelity to apostolic truths which
- Page 371 and 372:
he decreed that English law should
- Page 373 and 374:
Church was repulsed, if not defeate
- Page 375 and 376:
416, 417. 21. Bund, The Celtic Chur
- Page 377 and 378:
Nearly two hundred years later this
- Page 379 and 380:
Two events occurred which singled o
- Page 381 and 382:
consideration should be given to th
- Page 383 and 384:
proved unavailing, they persuaded t
- Page 385 and 386:
oth town and country on foot, never
- Page 387 and 388:
Taking Iona as a model, Aidan did f
- Page 389 and 390:
their offices and duties by their o
- Page 391 and 392:
that Aidan and other religious men
- Page 393 and 394:
to make an attempt, and retired to
- Page 395 and 396:
preaching. Finan At Aidan’s death
- Page 397 and 398:
ordained Mellitus as bishop to Sabe
- Page 399 and 400:
Kent), and Mellitus at London, thou
- Page 401 and 402:
that great numbers of the apostates
- Page 403 and 404:
secondly, the fact that his antagon
- Page 405 and 406:
them; for though your fathers were
- Page 407 and 408:
from the church. Thus, we can see t
- Page 409 and 410:
centuries later, his followers are
- Page 411 and 412:
south by forced marches to meet the
- Page 413 and 414:
p. 411. 9. Lingard, The Antiquities
- Page 415 and 416:
163, 164. 36. Bede, Ecclesiastical
- Page 417 and 418:
from darkness to a leadership of li
- Page 419 and 420:
of civilization which he and his fo
- Page 421 and 422:
The First Three Centers in France T
- Page 423 and 424:
union with the papacy in order to g
- Page 425 and 426:
Anagrates. Columbanus founded a thi
- Page 427 and 428:
country, obtaining a precarious liv
- Page 429 and 430:
Here is an incident by which one ma
- Page 431 and 432:
churches, monasteries, and hospital
- Page 433 and 434:
new settlements starting with Metz
- Page 435 and 436:
Refusing to stay at the court, howe
- Page 437 and 438:
Roman Catholic Church followed the
- Page 439 and 440:
Rome on very important questions, w
- Page 441 and 442:
in the city of Rome observed Saturd
- Page 443 and 444:
influential of the monasteries and
- Page 445 and 446:
pages 7-14. 13. Thatcher and Schwil
- Page 447 and 448:
35. Fitzpatrick, Ireland and the Fo
- Page 449 and 450:
death during the medieval period of
- Page 451 and 452:
of Charlemagne gained power with th
- Page 453 and 454:
we now call France, Belgium, German
- Page 455 and 456:
doctrines and practices of the Roma
- Page 457 and 458:
missionaries whose work he was dele
- Page 459 and 460:
only, but in France, the sovereign
- Page 461 and 462:
Charles Martel Like Boniface, Charl
- Page 463 and 464:
should protect the pope, the church
- Page 465 and 466:
forever by the pope and his success
- Page 467 and 468:
the religion of which he was at lea
- Page 469 and 470:
knot.”[29] By the expression, “
- Page 471 and 472:
Scriptures and were willing to die
- Page 473 and 474:
Jesus. Zatik, or Easter, is kept on
- Page 475 and 476:
Ample forgiveness of sins committed
- Page 477 and 478:
glorifying St. Francis, the founder
- Page 479 and 480:
Reformation led by Luther had broke
- Page 481 and 482:
to western lands, the armies of the
- Page 483 and 484:
To whom shall be ascribed praise fo
- Page 485 and 486:
Europe, pages 18, 162-164. 13. Nean
- Page 487 and 488:
2, p. 93. 41. Neander, General Hist
- Page 489 and 490:
ever loyal to the gospel. The Walde
- Page 491 and 492:
His people safe and secure retreats
- Page 493 and 494:
Testament and the primitive Christi
- Page 495 and 496:
in the Wilderness have endeavored t
- Page 497 and 498:
took his stand against the new rela
- Page 499 and 500:
Their Territory Was Not Roman A dis
- Page 501 and 502:
of this region knew the straight tr
- Page 503 and 504:
With almost undetectable shrewdness
- Page 505 and 506:
dominant because of her apparent vi
- Page 507 and 508:
Evidently Claude, while maintaining
- Page 509 and 510:
taught: “God has commanded us to
- Page 511 and 512:
inferior status. From that time on,
- Page 513 and 514:
ead and wine of the Lord’s Supper
- Page 515 and 516:
called Vallenses, because they dwel
- Page 517 and 518:
that they wish, thinking thus to ju
- Page 519 and 520:
celestial.[38] Can this be the test
- Page 521 and 522:
father to son, its poison of supers
- Page 523 and 524:
had corrupted all of France, Englan
- Page 525 and 526:
world leadership of the pontiff in
- Page 527 and 528:
questions, and saying in it that on
- Page 529 and 530:
everyone knows, the subject of a bi
- Page 531 and 532:
favor of a married clergy concluded
- Page 533 and 534:
fastened celibacy upon the Roman Ca
- Page 535 and 536:
sword and start for Palestine in A.
- Page 537 and 538:
devotion and great learning were st
- Page 539 and 540:
The oath by which a person suspecte
- Page 541 and 542:
known of his teachings is found in
- Page 543 and 544:
the followers of Patrick. He is cal
- Page 545 and 546:
founder under whom he might tabulat
- Page 547 and 548:
held them.”[68] This same pope co
- Page 549 and 550:
temporal power of the clergy. He ca
- Page 551 and 552:
forces of the emperor. His body was
- Page 553 and 554:
unless it has produced a glorious l
- Page 555 and 556:
Peter Waldo of Lyons, France, began
- Page 557 and 558:
vol. 25, p. 300; also, Robinson, Ec
- Page 559 and 560:
northern ltaly, who in A.D. 945 com
- Page 561 and 562:
47. Migne, Patrologia Latina, vol.
- Page 563 and 564:
festum colerent’ ut opinatus est
- Page 565 and 566:
Chapter 16 The Church of the Walden
- Page 567 and 568:
contrasted with hierarchical canons
- Page 569 and 570:
tirades written to vilify them, the
- Page 571 and 572:
augments, and purifies all the powe
- Page 573 and 574:
The extent to which the doctrines o
- Page 575 and 576:
proved by comparing the Itala versi
- Page 577 and 578:
waged in order to destroy every ves
- Page 579 and 580:
high idea of their populousness. Th
- Page 581 and 582:
Bartholomew from Carcassone in the
- Page 583 and 584:
admitted that their beliefs were li
- Page 585 and 586:
Reformation they conformed to certa
- Page 587 and 588:
easonable cause presents itself.[27
- Page 589 and 590:
Socrates, a church historian of the
- Page 591 and 592:
the attitude of Christians in Spain
- Page 593 and 594:
dwellers in the valley, they often
- Page 595 and 596:
taken to be a branch of the Waldens
- Page 597 and 598:
France. Nicetas, the Paulician lead
- Page 599 and 600:
The following quotation from Michae
- Page 601 and 602:
Shortly after the decree of King Al
- Page 603 and 604:
Moravia, Switzerland, and Germany
- Page 605 and 606:
they were designated by the signifi
- Page 607 and 608:
their joy and boundless feelings of
- Page 609 and 610:
across the borders—such revolting
- Page 611 and 612:
A World-Wide Awakening to Bible Pro
- Page 613 and 614:
Notes: 1. Arnaud, The Glorious Reco
- Page 615 and 616:
vol. 4, 1845, p. 233. 29. Socrates,
- Page 617 and 618:
50. Geddes, Miscellaneous Tracts, v
- Page 619 and 620:
Chapter 17 Aba and the Church in Pe
- Page 621 and 622:
city of Rome. During the intervenin
- Page 623 and 624:
The mobeds, the priests of Magianis
- Page 625 and 626:
Europe, nevertheless there were tho
- Page 627 and 628:
threatened to destroy every church
- Page 629 and 630:
Persian Christians Escape Theology
- Page 631 and 632:
marry.[11] Missionary Expansion Fro
- Page 633 and 634:
far into Eastern Asia. The Arabs we
- Page 635 and 636:
A.D. 325, the year of the Council o
- Page 637 and 638:
traveled geographer of about A.D. 5
- Page 639 and 640:
from the splendid work of W. A. Wig
- Page 641 and 642:
eforming work is as high a testimon
- Page 643 and 644:
from his prison in the Magian stron
- Page 645 and 646:
answer the accusation when called u
- Page 647 and 648:
leader. From Aba to the Moslem Conq
- Page 649 and 650:
odies through the centuries were ke
- Page 651 and 652:
escaped many of the beliefs and pra
- Page 653 and 654:
monotheistic religion like the Jews
- Page 655 and 656:
Notes: 1. Gibbon, Decline and Fall
- Page 657 and 658:
20. Gordon, “World Healers,” pa
- Page 659 and 660:
Chapter 18 Timothy of Bagdad; The C
- Page 661 and 662:
granting protection and freedom of
- Page 663 and 664:
The Mohammedans used the conquered
- Page 665 and 666:
The Catholicate of Timothy Timothy
- Page 667 and 668:
though delayed because of the immen
- Page 669 and 670:
These were the bishops who preached
- Page 671 and 672:
leaders who, for decade after decad
- Page 673 and 674:
wilderness. These Turks had their p
- Page 675 and 676:
Mention should be made here of the
- Page 677 and 678:
story of great significance. The na
- Page 679 and 680:
alike engulfed. No part of all Asia
- Page 681 and 682:
Kuyuk Spares Europe It was the terr
- Page 683 and 684:
menacing attitude of Ogotai’s ski
- Page 685 and 686:
connected with a significant fact f
- Page 687 and 688:
catholicos, the head at Bagdad, the
- Page 689 and 690:
the Church of the East, “the Nest
- Page 691 and 692:
the Law, but to fulfil it. It is no
- Page 693 and 694:
As one looks upon the approximately
- Page 695 and 696:
East. It was able to give a reason
- Page 697 and 698:
Bulletin of John Ryland’s Library
- Page 699 and 700:
Chapter 19 The St. Thomas Christian
- Page 701 and 702:
Revelation. Thomas and the Gospel i
- Page 703 and 704:
preached at all in India has been f
- Page 705 and 706:
colonies had settled in a country a
- Page 707 and 708:
way which recalled their Jewish ass
- Page 709 and 710:
until the judgment. For the first s
- Page 711 and 712:
India into one of the grand ecclesi
- Page 713 and 714:
Writings over from the apostolic ag
- Page 715 and 716:
The evangelical and simple spirit s
- Page 717 and 718:
with the patriarch of the Assyrian
- Page 719 and 720:
from the West. This event evidently
- Page 721 and 722:
simple and workable as well as stro
- Page 723 and 724:
the fifteenth century. He tells of
- Page 725 and 726:
These churches held fast throughout
- Page 727 and 728:
17. Gibbon, Decline and Fall of the
- Page 729 and 730:
etween 1250 and 1600, as authentica
- Page 731 and 732:
38. Ibid., page 33. 39. Temple, The
- Page 733 and 734:
Jesus, generally known as the Jesui
- Page 735 and 736:
“Religion, or rather religious fa
- Page 737 and 738:
was tolled as the victims were led
- Page 739 and 740:
the Holy Scriptures and in their pl
- Page 741 and 742:
original plan be executed. Though t
- Page 743 and 744:
and men everywhere to submit to the
- Page 745 and 746:
emained nearly two years without se
- Page 747 and 748:
opened, and his remains disinterred
- Page 749 and 750:
ishops in the accepted usage of the
- Page 751 and 752:
preparation had been made for his r
- Page 753 and 754:
to renounce the patriarch of Babylo
- Page 755 and 756:
pastor, and choir. Along with them
- Page 757 and 758:
purgatory, eternal punishment, the
- Page 759 and 760:
was contained in the profession.[20
- Page 761 and 762:
hand, grew out of this opposition,
- Page 763 and 764:
Judaizers because they solemnized t
- Page 765 and 766:
Jesuit Seapower Destroyed by the En
- Page 767 and 768:
eneath what they called their Babyl
- Page 769 and 770:
Notes: 1. Rae, The Syrian Church in
- Page 771 and 772:
Religion and Church, vol. 1, p. 295
- Page 773 and 774:
the Far East. When the Spirit of Go
- Page 775 and 776:
years before Christ, being called
- Page 777 and 778:
eighty thousand men. His caravan wh
- Page 779 and 780:
journey just after Columbanus had f
- Page 781 and 782:
large enough to keep back the encro
- Page 783 and 784:
Restorer. The Magi who journeyed fr
- Page 785 and 786:
River of northwestern China carryin
- Page 787 and 788:
supervisors of church provinces, ea
- Page 789 and 790:
means of travelers, Confucius could
- Page 791 and 792:
Buddhism, and Confucianism that in
- Page 793 and 794:
all mankind. Theophilus of Antioch
- Page 795 and 796:
and already possessed multiplied ch
- Page 797 and 798:
of the second century!”[37] Anoth
- Page 799 and 800:
considerable strength. The inscript
- Page 801 and 802:
The clergy who led the Church of th
- Page 803 and 804:
the imperial majesty, ridiculed and
- Page 805 and 806:
century, is invincibly proved by th
- Page 807 and 808:
22. The attendant at the “forest
- Page 809 and 810:
42. Li Ung Bing, Outlines of Chines
- Page 811 and 812:
concerning the growth of Christiani
- Page 813 and 814:
The kings of Germany, France, and E
- Page 815 and 816:
joint travels of Sauma and Marcos w
- Page 817 and 818:
These two, in deciding to go to Jer
- Page 819 and 820:
compelled to remain in Khotan for s
- Page 821 and 822:
The Pastors Meet the Catholicos It
- Page 823 and 824:
Upon returning to the catholicos, h
- Page 825 and 826:
Yabhalaha. God blessed him with goo
- Page 827 and 828:
given by Manuel Komroff: Two outsta
- Page 829 and 830:
mentioned by Sauma, Marco Polo noti
- Page 831 and 832:
Shakespeare wrote about Cathay, the
- Page 833 and 834:
dominion over all the lands subject
- Page 835 and 836:
The onsweep of the savage Tamerlane
- Page 837 and 838:
flourishing and populous centers in
- Page 839 and 840:
from the mandarins. It was not unti
- Page 841 and 842:
household gods and prayers for the
- Page 843 and 844:
Kircher, a Jesuit who was living at
- Page 845 and 846:
necessary for the mandarins to depe
- Page 847 and 848:
which compare the characters of bot
- Page 849 and 850:
church of the East in China is conf
- Page 851 and 852:
24. Ibid., vol. 1, p. 284. 25. Ibid
- Page 853 and 854:
Chapter 23 The Church in Japan and
- Page 855 and 856:
the social, political, and religiou
- Page 857 and 858:
was soon imitated by the Japanese a
- Page 859 and 860:
of Christianity, it would be a dead
- Page 861 and 862:
white horses laden with writings an
- Page 863 and 864:
faith. Reichelt says of Amitabha, t
- Page 865 and 866:
tens of thousands of the Japanese,
- Page 867 and 868:
Thus, in the capital city of China,
- Page 869 and 870:
Dalshi, mightily influenced by Chri
- Page 871 and 872:
give much in rapid sentences, this
- Page 873 and 874:
His memory lives all over the count
- Page 875 and 876:
other worth-while nation whom she c
- Page 877 and 878:
task. The structure of the faith, g
- Page 879 and 880:
the Christian missionaries had avoi
- Page 881 and 882:
universe; Harvey had lighted on the
- Page 883 and 884:
Europe, we have the singular result
- Page 885 and 886:
21. Ibid., page 148. 22. Reichelt,
- Page 887 and 888:
victor, what had she won for humani
- Page 889 and 890:
nations, and tongues.” Revelation
- Page 891 and 892:
e shortened, there should no flesh
- Page 893 and 894:
31), and terminates it with “the
- Page 895 and 896:
did, though bearing other names, sp
- Page 897 and 898:
had eliminated the study of Greek l
- Page 899 and 900:
God were so powerful that the waves
- Page 901 and 902:
acknowledged the Bible as the supre
- Page 903 and 904:
The Background of the Day of Worshi
- Page 905 and 906:
The Civilization of the Church of t
- Page 907 and 908:
nearly all Asia by the Mongols. The
- Page 909 and 910:
the Orient, called in 1545 for the
- Page 911 and 912:
eligious freedom was bound to be fo
- Page 913 and 914:
would preach again with power not o
- Page 915 and 916:
who made a show of disbanding them,
- Page 917 and 918:
specifications better than France,
- Page 919 and 920:
translates this phrase thus: “Man
- Page 921 and 922:
Bible, giving special attention to
- Page 923 and 924:
Constantinople, Jerusalem, St. Hele
- Page 925 and 926:
When religious freedom was granted,
- Page 927 and 928:
to the vices and luxuries of the Ol
- Page 929 and 930:
upon the soon return of Christ as t
- Page 931 and 932:
This message proclaimed by the Remn
- Page 933 and 934:
increasing darkness. Remember the p
- Page 935 and 936:
vol. 2, pp. 201, 202. 6. Muir, The
Inappropriate
Loading...
Inappropriate
You have already flagged this document.
Thank you, for helping us keep this platform clean.
The editors will have a look at it as soon as possible.
Mail this publication
Loading...
Embed
Loading...
Delete template?
Are you sure you want to delete your template?
DOWNLOAD ePAPER
This ePaper is currently not available for download.
You can find similar magazines on this topic below under ‘Recommendations’.