Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
He notes language is itself part of the ecclesiological problem.
The church has a bold, simple, and perfect Ecclesiological interior."
This found ready exponents in the universities, where the ecclesiological movement was forming.
It has been said that the building "represents the beginning and the end of the ecclesiological style in the United States."
Of course in conformity with ecclesiological principles, schools were expected to be in the Gothic style.
He does not explain whether intention has an ecclesiological role, for Anglicans, in conferring or receiving sacraments.
Criticism of the Catholic Church in previous centuries was more closely related to theological and ecclesiological disputes.
Bullinger quickly established himself as a staunch defender of the ecclesiological system developed by Zwingli.
What these scattered descriptions and metaphors point to, therefore, is the ecclesiological assumption found on practically every page of what they wrote.
KPEC has an ecclesiological structure in the organization of its decision-making and executive bodies.
That society reverted to the old title of The Ecclesiological Society in 1937.
Leaving aside his articles, Avis's books can be classified in three areas of theology: systematic, ecclesiological and practical-theological.
In addition to this ecclesiological issue, the Eastern Church also considered the filioque clause unacceptable on dogmatic grounds.
For St. Andrew's, he offset the tower to the side, a variation that had become popular with Ecclesiological architects around the mid-19th century.
At the conference Darby publicly described his ecclesiological and eschatological views, including the pretribulation rapture.
Meyendorff maintains that Dionysius has led to some confusion in the areas of liturgical and ecclesiological formulations.
Its interest lies both in its sheer architectural excellence and its role in the Ecclesiological movement.
Mariology is a mainly Catholic ecclesiological movement within theology, which centers on the relation of Mary and the Church.
Nor was this just a matter of an ecclesiological argument: for many, there was a sense that Catholic worship is somehow "unEnglish".
It is noted as one of the most pristine examples of Ecclesiological Gothic architecture in the South.
The Gothic Revival-styled building strongly reflects contemporary Ecclesiological theories of appropriate church architecture.
Dialogus concludens Amedistarum errorem (1441), an ecclesiological explanation of his papal advocacy.
The original chapel was described as a low and broad room "fitted to the ecclesiological notions of George IV's reign."
Over 1,000 students, faculty, and staffed attended what would become one of his more prominent and popular marks on philosophical, theological, and ecclesiological thought.
Babcock, who was himself an Episcopal priest, designed the building with the Ecclesiological theories of Anglican church architecture in mind.