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Councils that attempted ecclesiastical reformation were exploded dismissed/rejected at Rome and declared to be conventicles 112. 2.
More ancient councils on the office of the clergy 122. 1.
Decrees of ancient councils on the division of ecclesiastical revenues determine the quantity of divisions, but do not vary the mode 78. 1.
Canons of councils on the ordination of Presbyters and Deacons 85. 2.
Institutes of councils on the dispensation of ecclesiastical goods 62. 1.
Councils counseled the bishops to have the primary administration of ecclesiastical goods 61. 2.
The twofold end of preachers 113. 2.
The conflict of Damasus and Ursicinus concerning the Episcopal see 42. 2.
Public distribution of grain in the time of Constantine 7. 1.
Consecration of temples 20. 1.
Conservation of ecclesiastical things 37. 1.
Constantine, after the Council of Nicaea, ordered ecclesiastical alms to be distributed to the prefects of the provinces 7. 1.
Emperor Constantine by public law forbade clerics from becoming richer 119. 1.
Emperor Constantine's law on assuming a cleric 8. 2.
Constitutions of Emperors on the use of ecclesiastical goods 27. 2.
Constitution of Innocent III on the reward of ecclesiastics 43. 1.
The controversy between the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Archbishop of York concerning the primacy was fueled and nourished by the Pope through cunning arts 97. 1.
The controversy concerning sacred and spiritual matters is debated at Rome against ancient canons 115. 2.
What custom can do concerning the testaments of clerics 142. 2.
A bad custom, no less than a vicious corruption, is to be avoided 125. 1.
The custom of ecclesiastical oblations has been varied 6. 2.
Difficulty of conversion 40. 2.
Cruelty of the Bishops of the East 30. 1. Ecclesiastical Purples referring to Cardinals 30. 1.
Evils of greed 34. 1.
Princes ought to undertake the care of ecclesiastical goods 23. 2.
The Roman Curia attempts to cover the turpitude of its avarice with Bulls and Annates 102. 2.
The Roman Curia gives nothing without silver 102. 1.
The Roman Curia is perpetually tossed between Scylla and Charybdis 107. 2.
The Roman Curia perverts the best laws of the holy Church 130. 1; with a harlot’s forehead, it effects what is unjust and iniquitous in the eyes of the whole world, ibid.
The Roman Curia lives, is enriched, and luxuriates on expenditures 138. 1.
The arts by which ecclesiastical money is milked, squeezed, drained, and absorbed from almost the entire church of Christ are innumerable in the Roman Curia 102. 2; the workshop of the same, ibid.
The Roman Curia's vain escape from the crime of simony 109. 1.
The foulest axioms of the Roman Curia 138. 1.
The most ancient disease of the Roman Curia 102. 2.
A most deformed Roman Curia is not to be expected to reform 115. 1.
The most iniquitous style of the Roman Curia 138. 1; it introduced a new law, ibid.
Curial litigants cannot legitimately resolve disputes between beneficiaries and pensioners 138. 1. 2; they elicit blood where they cannot milk milk, ibid.
Curials are not worthy of an ecclesiastical stipend because they do not announce the Gospel 128. 1.
The office of Curials: whether it is the spiritual subsidy of the whole church 124. 1.
Whence stipends for Curials are paid 138. 2.
Cyprian on the abuses of Bishops 20. 1.
Cyprian on the administration of ecclesiastical things 62. 2.
Cyprian on the avarice of Bishops 29. 1.
Cyprian on the difficulty of conversion 40. 2.
Cyprian sustained sinners who had returned from base gain with the resources of the Church 24. 2.
Cyril’s saying on the life of a minister of the Church 3. 2.
What the tithe of all revenues is 13. 1.
By what law the ecclesiastical tithe is now paid 14. 1.
Tithes of human donation 16. 2.
Tithes by divine law 16. 2.
Tithes impropriated to a monastery 17. 1.
Tithes should be contributed faithfully to the ministers of the Church 18. 2.
Tithes exacted by emphyteutic long-term lease/tenure right 16. 2.
Tithes that are not necessary 14. 2.
Whence tithes were diminished 18. 2.
Whence tithes were given to the Levites 40. 1.
Tithes are contained under moral, divine, and natural precept 16. 2.
Tithes, through the negligence of Prelates, passed forever to heirs 17. 1.
Abundance of tithes 13. 2.
Whence the commutation of tithes was made 17. 1.
Debtors of tithes, if found to have defrauded them, are to be punished by lay powers 122. 2.
Defrauding of tithes 14. 1.
Distribution of tithes 13. 2.
Ownership of tithes 18. 1.
Fourfold genus of tithes 13. 1.
Who held the fee of tithes 17. 1.
Impropriations of tithes to be dissolved 17. 1.
When impropriations of tithes are legitimate 17. 2.
Impropriations of tithes made to monasteries are against monastic institutes 47. 2.
The law of tithes 13. 1; the use, ibid.
Obligation of tithes 14. 1.
Rigor of tithes 18. 1.
Separation of tithes 13. 2.
The payment of tithes in the Church of Christ is most ancient 16. 1.
Usurpation of tithes 17. 1.
Who first gave ecclesiastical tithes and to whom 12. 1.
Decimations of the Gentiles were not arbitrary 11. 2.
Tobias’s tithe in captivity 15. 1.
Decree of the Council of Aachen on the sustenance of monks 46. 1.
Decree of the Council of Alemannia on the usurpation of tithes 18. 1.
Decree of the IV Council of Carthage on the victuals of the clergy 7. 1.
Carthaginian decree on episcopal authority 41. 1.
Decrees concerning annates, vacancies, and common services ought to be made conformable to divine law 114. 1.
Common debt 13. 1.
What kind of debt ecclesiastical tithes are 12. 1.
A choice is to be had between local clerics and those of the same Church 125. 1.
Deputation of tithes 15. 2.
Description of religious persons 52. 1.
To whom the devotions of the collation of benefices belong 92. 2.
What it means to devour the people of God 29. 2.
God commanded tithes to be given to Him as a sign of universal ownership 15. 1.
God reserves tithes for Himself under the title of universal Ownership 19. 2.
God loves parsimony in His ministers 13. 2.
God especially cares for the poor 16. 2.