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Power of Bishops in ecclesiastical matters 26.2.
The zeal of Bishops in collecting riches is to be reproved 37.1.
Superfluous pomp of Bishops produces a useless, indeed contemptible, multitude of priests 128.2.
Vestments of Bishops 83.1; their retinue, ibid.
What the life of Bishops was like 4.2.
What should be avoided by Bishops regarding the use or abuse of ecclesiastical goods 82.3.
When the dioceses of Bishops are to be visited 76.2.
It is not permitted for a Bishop to sell the estates of the Church without the synod's knowledge 64.2.
The third part of ecclesiastical revenues assigned to the Bishop 76.1.
Foundation of the institution of the Episcopate 123.1.
The legitimate desire for the Episcopate refers not to dignity but to the work 123.2.
Selling the proceeds of the Episcopate for a particular price is simony: clearly just as it is simony to sell a sanctified chalice for a certain price because of the attached consecration 110.1.
Error of John Wycliffe regarding tithes 18.1.
Error of Melchiades regarding the possession of estates in the Church 20.1.
Pope Eugenius refused ecclesiastical reformation: he did not at all suffer laws to be imposed upon him by the fathers of the Council of Basel 114.2.
Legitimate exaction of tithes 18.2.
Execution of the common debt 13.1.
To whom ecclesiastical expenses should be distributed 27.1.
Expenses of ecclesiastical revenues 77.1.
Expectative graces a reservation of a benefice before it falls vacant have brought the greatest disturbances into the Church 90.1.
Explication of the prophecy concerning Tyre 25.1.
Use of the fact facti usus de facto usage 60.2.
Plunderers of ecclesiastical resources are similar to Judas the betrayer 55.2.
Pride of Clerics 34.2.
Time of Christian happiness 25.2.
Who held the fief of tithes 17.1.
Fief owed to God 13.1.
Fief owed to God from the fruits 15.1.
Fief consists in tithes 15.1.
Why the hands of the faithful are now contracted closed/unwilling to give 9.2.
To what extent the offerings of the faithful pertain to the sustenance of Monks 45.2.
Liberality of the faithful in the time of the Apostles 19.2.
The end for which temporal things were given to the Church 36.2.
The Fiscus royal or state treasury takes what Christ did not accept 14.1.
The opinion of Franciscus Duarenus concerning the diplomas of the Roman Pontiff 102.1; concerning the arts of the Roman curia, ibid.
Order of Franciscans reproved 59.2.
Why Emperor Frederick ordered the legates of Adrian IV to depart from the borders of his land 101.1.
Fruits of riches in the Roman Church 42.2.
The fruits of the Church’s land are not to be consumed without money 6.2.
Grain provided by pious Emperors to the churches of Libya 4.1.
The true flight of the priest 6.1.
The splendor of Episcopal temples should be excluded from the oratories of Monks 39.1.
Fulk of Anjou, a count and plunderer of many goods of the Church of Tours, settled with the Pope concerning his robberies by giving a great abundance of gold 97.1.
Foundation of benefices 19.1.
The principal foundation of ecclesiastical sustenance 121.
Foundations of benefices 20.1.
Who are thieves and sacrilegious at the same time 24.2.
Ecclesiastical frugality 40.2.
Pope Gelasius on the consecration of temples 20.2.
Pope Gelasius divided the revenues and offerings of the Church into four parts 77.1.
Gerson on the abuses of Papal power 50.1.
How Gerson pronounced the exactions of annates a year's revenue of a benefice paid to the Pope unjust 108.1. 2.
Gerson proved that the Roman Church needs reformation 126.2; he taxed the plurality of benefices, ibid.
Gentiles transferred the debt of God from the true God to false deities 13.1.
Fourfold genus of tithes 13.1.
Apostle of the Germans 15.1.
Glory of the Bishop 30.1.
Gerson compares the avaricious ecclesiastic to Judas the betrayer 7.2. 1.
The opinion of Gerson regarding the justice and decency of Annates is reproved 109.1.
To which Clerics Gratian granted property 74.2.
Gregory judged and asserted that the revenue of benefices is owed to him only for sole necessities, and only for the merits of labor 121.1.
Gregory on the obligation of tithes 14.2.
Gregory X confirmed the alienations of Prelates 69.1.
Gregory X prohibited the plurality of benefices 126.2.
Gregory the Great wished that Episcopal privileges always be kept intact 89.1.
Gregory the Great abolished the abuse regarding the tradition of the pallium 104.2.
Gregory the Great judged it a most absurd thing if Clerics presided over the monasteries of Monks 132.1; he prohibited Clerics from having the power to approach monasteries except to pray, ibid.
Gregory the Great admitted legitimate alienations 68.1.
Gregory preferred to sustain the robbery of goods rather than to litigate 135.2.
Pope Gregory on the ordination of presbyters 84.2.
Gregory took property away from Clerics 74.2.
Gregory II made four portions of the revenues of the Church 77.1.
Decree of Gregory VII regarding ecclesiastical offerings 4.1.
Complaint of Gregory VII regarding the unjust usurpation of tithes 18.1.
Decree of Gregory VII regarding alienations 68.1.
Gregory VI was forced to abdicate the Pontificate solely on account of simony 107.2.
A most elegant saying of Gregory on the office and reward of ministers 6.1.
Decree of Gregory the Great on avoiding Simony 103.2.
To give to one who has is nothing else but to lose 74.2.
Common habitation in the same lodging should not belong to those whose profession is diverse 132.2.
Emperor Henry II, a most religious man, admonished all Archbishops and Pontiffs in his Empire to dispose well of what they had accepted badly through simony 117.1. 2.
Pseudo-Monks are hermaphrodites 50.1.
Hilary on the portion of the ministers of the Church 5.2.
Pope Hilary on the license of alienation 67.2.