Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
He was Greek by birth, and born of schismatic parents.
While most Covenant-breakers are involved in schismatic groups, that is not always the case.
The schismatic cults have all died out or become regional.
As a schismatic, you have torn and divided the body of Christ.
Each school has various subgroups, which often are schismatic in origin.
Besides these the sect has produced a number of schismatic groups.
It was destroyed in 1356 by local schismatic population.
Lots of schismatic cells around but those could be weeded out.
The government had also noted the proliferation of schismatic religious movements over the previous few years.
And the victim of the less schismatic shaft, how's he?"
Had the archbishop not written about his desire for the schismatic Serbs to return to the true faith?
Clancy, now 33, wasn't fully alive to the schismatic politics back then.
There seems to be an unusual concentration of schismatic religions in this colony world.
But schismatic and heretical movements also developed, usually as forms of political protest.
A schismatic church may be recognized as having valid sacraments and clergy.
As a result, a number of schismatic individuals were legally tolerated in the 1690s.
I believe we must accept the schismatic nature of contemporary life and learn to live with dichotomies."
They were convinced that anything different from the Western Church was schismatic and heretical.
The church of Rome is a schismatic invention.
But in addition, this same society would "preserve, forever, its broken, fragmented, schismatic character".
Various equal temperaments lead to schismatic tunings which can be described in the same terms.
But Astor Place's schismatic nature endures, although it is taking new forms.
The full Host had not been summoned since the Schismatic Wars themselves.
I am not at all a schismatic, and I call not to a schism.
He declared them schismatical, but promised to renounce the papacy if they would do the same.
He returned therefore and conducted a vigorous and successful campaign against the schismatical practice, especially in his native Lancashire.
The antecedents of Browne and the schismatical character of his appointment did not recommend him to the Dublin clergy.
'You are a schismatical knave,' roared out Jeffreys, as soon as Baxter was brought into court.
A Reproof of Certain Schismatical Persons (15??)
And if those heretics and schismatics so clearly uphold such a clear truth, do we want to be more heretical and schismatical than they, by denying it?
In the North, the General Convention of 1862 declined to adopt resolutions that would have denounced the Southern Churchmen as seditious and schismatical.
Peck was known for what the eminent Norfolk historian Rev. Francis Blomefield called his "violent schismatical spirit".
For instance the Licensing Act of 1662 was aimed generally at "heretical, seditious, schismatical or offensive books of pamphlets" rather than just erotica per se.
The Aquileian Rite was a particular liturgical tradition within the schismatical province of the ancient patriarchal see of Aquileia.
Wood represents him as being at this time a zealous son of the church, and as only taking to schismatical courses through the disappointment of his eagerness for preferment.
These young men had to study the sacred sciences, in order to spread later sacred and profane learning among their fellow-countrymen and facilitate the reunion of the schismatical churches.
At the fifteenth session, 5 June 1409, the Council of Pisa deposed the two pontiffs as schismatical, heretical, perjured, and scandalous; they elected Alexander V (1409-10) later that month.
On June 17, 1513, he denounced the schismatical council of Pisa and submitted to the pope's authority in a letter later read at a session of the Fifth Council of the Lateran.
This work was condemned by the faculty of theology at Paris (1 Sept., 1734), and by the Archbishops of Sens and Embrun, as containing erroneous, schismatical and heretical assertions.
This work, which endeavours to prove that the discipline of the church of England is of apostolic origin, and that, therefore, any departure therefrom is schismatical, became popular; it was, however, attacked by nonconformists.
To which is added, a Dissertation upon the case of heretical and schismatical Baptisms at the close of the Council of Carthage in 256; whose Acts are herewith published,' 2 parts, London, 1717.
Five Episcopal priests objected at the point in the service when Corrigan asked if there was "any impediment" to the ordinations, one calling the ordinations a "perversion" and another calling them "unlawful and schismatical".
One such mixed collection is dated in the 6th century and has been erroneously attributed to John the Scholastic; another of the 7th century was rewritten and much enlarged by the schismatical ecumenical patriarch Photius (883).
Its political views may be estimated by its assertion that 'monarchy is the best safeguard to mankind, both against the great furious bulls of tyrannical popery, and the lesser giddy cattle of schismatical presbytery.'
The See of Aquileia under Bishop Macedonius broke communion with Rome in the Schism of the Three Chapters in 553 and became a schismatical patriarchate, which lasted till the year 698.
In 1716, he assailed the extruded churchmen of the nonjuring schism in The Nonjurors Separation from the Public Assemblies of the Church of England examined and proved to be schismatical upon their own Principles.
On one of the emperor's visits to St Peter's Basilica, the pope openly called him to account for his favourite's conduct, exhorting him by the grave of St Peter to promise that he would allow no schismatical assemblies in Rome.
But for several centuries past, the teaching of St. Thomas alone has prevailed and is accepted by the whole Church, to the effect that ordinations performed by heretical, schismatical or simoniacal ministers are to be considered as valid ["Tractatus de ordine", cap.
In 1559 Pope Paul IV charged Woulfe with a special Apostolic Mission to 'to absolve all manner of lapses from the church, and chiefly heresies and schismatical faults' and to set up Grammar schools if possible and persuade parents to send their children to them.