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Therefore, why He is now accustomed to give earth of brass 15. 2.
Deacons elected in the Church of Jerusalem 61. 2; their office, ibid.
The first institution of deacons shows the common life of the ministers of the word 72. 2.
Deacons as money-changers 64. 1.
In the time of Jerome, deacons at Rome were more noble than Presbyters 128. 2.
Christ’s saying in Matthew 5, "Whoever shall strike," etc., is to be understood regarding the preparation of the mind 10. 2.
Difference between Christ’s saying in Luke 14, "Whoever shall not renounce," and Matthew 5 10. 1.
Difference of ministers of the Church 9. 2.
How conflicts concerning the ownership of the clothes, food, and furnishings of the mendicant Franciscans are to be settled 59. 2. 60. 1.
Dionysius, Bishop of the Corinthians, on the ancient piety and liberality of the Roman Church 94. 2.
Apocryphal letter of Pope Dionysius on the division of prebends 78. 2.
Diploma of Boniface 28. 2.
Ecclesiastical discipline in the monastery troubled 33. 1.
Difference between the civil and the ecclesiastical Republic 123. 1.
Difference between Monks and Clerics 80. 1.
Difference between Clerics and Monks concerning the use of oblations 46. 1.
An excellent dispenser 30. 1.
The cavil sophistry/trick of Papal dispensations makes many secure, but no one safe 124. 1.
He who seeks an iniquitous dispensation is the cause of the iniquity, and he who uses it is always entangled in the same iniquity 124. 1.
Disputation concerning the vow of poverty of the Apostles is idle 59. 2.
The distinction between compatible and incompatible benefices, between cared-for and simple ones, between those requiring residence and those not requiring it, is entirely new and unheard of formerly 127. 1.
Distraction dissipation/diverting of ecclesiastical lands 25. 2.
Distribution of tithes 13. 2.
Distribution of ecclesiastical revenues 27. 1.
By what reason a rich man is to be admitted to ecclesiastical ministries 119. 1.
Division of the monthly collation among the clergy 4. 1.
Division of true ecclesiastical goods 75. 2.
Division of the land of Canaan 40. 1.
Document of Prosper concerning the stipendiary thing of the church 27. 1.
Scholastic doctors as sycophants 6. 2.
The power of doctrine 19. 2.
In whom the ownership of ecclesiastical goods resides 56. 1.
Ownership and use are distinguished in consumable things 74. 1.
Conditional ownership is not repugnant to supreme poverty 61. 1.
In whom the ownership of all ecclesiastical things resides 61. 1.
The ownership of ecclesiastical revenues is not to be regulated by human law alone, but rather by divine 6. 2.
True ownership is not entirely denied to Christ and the Apostles 60. 2.
What kind of ownership of the land of Canaan was granted to the Israelites 13. 1.
Twofold ownership of earthly things 13. 1.
Ownership of temporal and spiritual things in the Roman Church multiplied 42. 2.
Ownership of usufructuaries 57. 1.
Dominicus Soto modestly disapproved of the turpitude of so many Roman arts in gathering gold 102. 2.
Donations made to the Church are conditional 80. 1.
Complaint of the Donatist ecclesiastics concerning lands taken from them by Catholics 56. 1.
Ecclesiastical endowments 20. 2.
Duarenus piously detested the abuse of the plurality of benefices 127. 1.
Duarenus rejects the excuse of those who use the vicarious work of certain priests in performing their own work 124. 1.
Duarenus sharpened his style vehemently against Annates 116. 1.
A dynastic ruler of the Church 33. 1.
The Church founded by the poor and abject 40. 2.
The Church retained donated lands against Apostolic institution 58. 1.
The Church is a dove 56. 1.
The Church is the sole owner of all ecclesiastical goods 145. 2.
The Gallican Church embraced the salutary decrees of the Council of Basel with very eager arms 115. 2.
The Church of Jerusalem is the exemplar of all others founded after it 61. 1.
The Church does not return a reward to the laborer, but only provides what is necessary to the needy 8. 1.
The Church does not need an Authoritative One, a Sector, a Titular, and a Governor, but a minister and an actual worker 127. 2.
The Church for many centuries saw the abuse concerning the administration of temporal goods 67. 2.
The primitive Church sold offered lands for the use of ministers and the poor 22. 1.
To whom the primitive Church gave the regimen of ecclesiastical goods 61. 1.
How the Church possesses goods in common 41. 1.
The Roman Church does not admit many to sacred orders unless to the title of a patrimony 8. 2.
The Roman Church does not show itself so much a mother to other churches as a stepmother 99. 2.
The Roman Church, lest it be subjected to reformation, troubled and impeded the Council of Constance and Basel 115. 1.
The Roman Church proposes and indicts prohibitions of the plurality of benefices not to avoid most foul abuse, but for the occasion of profit from dispensations 127. 2.
The Roman Church is greater in power and riches, lesser in virtues 37. 1.
The Church can subsist without Monks 80. 1.
The Church, still serving under the yoke of servitude and captivity, is compelled to tolerate the Babylonian stain and many other Roman abominations 111. 1.
The universal Church can never fail 57. 1.
The universal Church cannot exercise particular ownership in the goods of particular Churches 58. 2.
When great poison was poured into the Church 48. 2.
Whether clerical churches can be donated to military orders 133. 2.
Ecclesiastical resources are not proper but common 62. 2.
The church becomes a great harlot where one rules over many 128. 1.
Ministers of the Church, from distributive justice, ask not only for what is necessary, but also for something more for modest comfort 128. 1.
By the name of the Church, the whole assembly of the faithful is understood 58. 1.
Whether to offer money to the Church or to the poor: which confers more 38. 1.
All churches are attenuated if the Pope alone and the Curials abound 100. 1.
The most precious ornament of the Church 38. 1.
The Church as a granary 44. 1.
By what title are the lands of the Church to be transferred to other rights 68. 1.
Whence the Church is desolated 131. 2.
Prelates of the Church ought to have nothing besides food and clothing 40. 2.
Privileges of the prior churches canceled by Roman Pontiffs 62. 1.
To what extent the face of the primitive Church has been changed 21. 1.
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