「protestantism」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)
該当件数 : 114件
ergy, Amyraut very speedily gave to French | Protestantism a new force. |
eavours to unite the different sections of | Protestantism against Catholicism. |
Protestantism also spread into France, where the Protest | |
His humor revolved around rural Southern | Protestantism and earned him the title as "The Prime Min |
of England represented a via media between | Protestantism and Catholicism. |
Olympia's father having died a convert to | Protestantism, and Olympia embraced the doctrines of Lut |
Early in his life he converted to | Protestantism and his own father, Richard Milton, subseq |
While Henry initially leaned towards | Protestantism and supported parts of the Augsburg Confes |
elated topic with a similar name regarding | Protestantism and resistance to Nazism in Nazi Germany, |
been used in secular histories of Mainline | Protestantism and the Emergent church movement (denomina |
fftzer's liberal philosophy as well as his | Protestantism, and had considerable trouble achieving re |
onment, but influenced with a sympathy for | Protestantism, and Dorothea herself acquired Protestant |
ish" the Catholic church at the expense of | Protestantism and would introduce "popish idols." |
denomination of Catholicism to Evangelical | Protestantism and founded Bernal Christian Records in or |
slations: The 16th century saw the rise of | Protestantism and an explosion of translations of the Ne |
communism and felt that a conflict between | Protestantism and Catholicism was inevitable. |
olyer, see Robert H. Keller, Jr., American | Protestantism and United States Indian Policy, 1869-82 ( |
defend and promote mainstream evangelical | Protestantism and to oppose the errors of Rome. |
nominations, opposing Nazi adulteration of | Protestantism and Nazi intrusion into Protestant church |
, and Staging Reform, Reforming the Stage: | Protestantism and Popular Theater in Early Modern Englan |
Under Edward VI he was a defender of | Protestantism, and Nicholas Ridley seems to have meditat |
rlotte of Bourbon (1547-1582) converted to | Protestantism and escaped from the abbey in a cart of ha |
though not necessarily of those leaning to | Protestantism, and in many places immediately preceded t |
ew England's anti-authoritarian Low-Church | Protestantism, and - as L.K. Gilbert argues - wedded the |
the Peace of La Rochelle, re-criminalizing | Protestantism and beginning a new chapter in the French |
ng colonial times as laborers), along with | Protestantism and English surnames via the British Isles |
The Bible, | Protestantism, and the Rise of Natural Science. |
recognized: Islam, Buddhism, Catholicism, | Protestantism and Hinduism. |
The family later converted to | Protestantism and served in the military. |
t of social injustice, National Socialism, | Protestantism and the Partition of Ireland. |
Viewing | Protestantism as heresy, he talked of exterminating the |
ed a middle ground between Catholicism and | Protestantism as the solution to Europe's problems. |
r retain academic appointments despite his | Protestantism, as Herwart himself was "an ardent Catholi |
a part of the Bible Belt with evangelical | Protestantism being the majority religion. |
The 2002 Census reported | Protestantism being professed by the majority of the pop |
His | Protestantism caused a scandal when he was involved in a |
with the upholding and dissemination of a | Protestantism conservative enough to bolster the values/ |
Most of the monks converted to | Protestantism during the 16th century, and the church wa |
arily a commonly held belief within modern | Protestantism, especially Evangelicalism and those denom |
rotestant Catechism, or Popery refuted and | Protestantism established by the Word of God, 1854. |
As | Protestantism expanded through parts of Europe, leaders |
1560 the bishops and magistrates embraced | Protestantism, expelled the monks, and demolished the ca |
believing that only in unity could German | Protestantism find strength. |
Hermann of Wied, had in fact converted to | Protestantism), Friedrich rebuffed efforts by Protestant |
urad entertained the notion that Islam and | Protestantism had "much more in common than either did w |
In his fight with German | Protestantism, he requested much more flexibility from R |
Despite having converted to | Protestantism, he became the chancellor of Bishop Tiedem |
Although Leopold personally objected to | Protestantism, he had to rely on his Protestant German p |
urt, but when Turberville was converted to | Protestantism he expressly told William Lloyd that, apar |
In 1562, having converted to | Protestantism, he failed in an attempt to open Toulouse |
Hostile to | Protestantism, he founded an anti-Protestant league. |
mperor Charles V had won a victory against | Protestantism in the Schmalkaldic War of 1547. |
It provided limited tolerance of | Protestantism in her Roman Catholic realms, especially i |
ligious orthodoxy (i.e. to counter nascent | Protestantism in the area). |
rk critical of Luther, Oliver Cromwell and | Protestantism, in 1652. |
r, in persuading Sir James Hales to abjure | Protestantism in 1554. |
tly German-populated Royal Prussia adopted | Protestantism in 1557, while the majority of the Kingdom |
is father left his family and converted to | Protestantism in order to marry another woman. |
re, or subsequent to, the establishment of | Protestantism, in August 1560. |
faith through Cardinal Pole, but embraced | Protestantism in the following year, and went to Strasbo |
He was unable to stop the spread of | Protestantism in his Northern provinces, but succeeded i |
Since the advent of | Protestantism in the 16th century, the relations between |
t to encourage the queen to further reform | Protestantism in England. |
e city destroyed after the introduction of | Protestantism in 1527, including the chapel of Mary Magd |
step in the intellectual justification of | Protestantism in England. |
tch Republic but also at the domination of | Protestantism in England; Charles had promised Louis to |
f Nantes, ending the limited toleration of | Protestantism in France. |
ng the short reign of Edward VI to promote | Protestantism in Ireland, and the "plantation" by Englis |
ng himself into a general campaign against | Protestantism in general and the Anglican form of it in |
chbishop issued a scathing denunciation of | Protestantism in Mexico, claiming, "There is solid groun |
The family converted to | Protestantism in 1823. |
of the army of Albert, he was converted to | Protestantism in 1531. |
She was a leading figure in spreading the | protestantism in Monnickendam through bible meetings. |
While the harsh oppression of | Protestantism initiated by King Louis XIV had largely re |
Protestantism, introduced from the United States in the | |
The number of adherents of | Protestantism is estimated at above 100,000, even though |
Hence the popular opinion that | Protestantism is one of the elements upon which a powerf |
Protestantism is by far a minority in Muslim Saudi Arabi | |
the Council, to define the Church against | Protestantism, it professes many important parts of the |
formerly a Catholic but later converted to | Protestantism, joining the Evangelical Church in the Rhi |
the beginning, including issues involving | Protestantism, Judaism, Scientology and Catholicism amon |
After the 1940s this changed; nevertheless | Protestantism kept growing, particularly Pentecostalism, |
order to wage more successful war against | Protestantism, King Philip II of Spain obtained from Pau |
u Fail has been suspected of converting to | Protestantism), linking du Fail to the other great human |
ries, and failures to convert Catholics to | Protestantism, marked Woolsey's twelve-year residence at |
y replacing Catholic associations with the | Protestantism of Geneva. |
L. Revivalism and Social Reform: American | Protestantism on the Eve of the Civil War Johns Hopkins |
oners to the Catholic Church as opposed to | Protestantism or traditional religions. |
n movement with its origins in Evangelical | Protestantism, particularly in the Campus Crusade for Ch |
Pentecostal | Protestantism reached Switzerland from the United States |
In 1618 he converted to | Protestantism, returned to Prague, joined the forces arr |
567, Philip, who was a zealous opponent of | Protestantism, sent Alba into the Netherlands at the hea |
All forms of | Protestantism showed a degree of hostility to religious |
Marian | Protestantism: Six Studies, (St Andrews Studies in Refor |
Both, very religiously committed to | Protestantism socially and politically, were given the p |
rics in Ulcinium of being inclined towards | Protestantism, therefore labeling them as heretics. |
French | Protestantism, though its appeal increased under persecu |
on-papal Catholicism, for others a form of | Protestantism though without a dominant guiding figure s |
mily in central France He was converted to | Protestantism through a conversation with an itinerant S |
with Mussolini, also in the plot, to smash | Protestantism throughout Europe". |
In 1701, having converted from | Protestantism to Roman Catholicism, he appealed against |
Towards the end of the decade | Protestantism took hold in Scotland, and in 1560 the Sco |
eter Martyr Vermigli, a shaper of Reformed | Protestantism, took pains to maintain the contradiction, |
The History of | Protestantism was also reprinted by Hartland Publication |
His trend toward the Reformed | Protestantism was strengthened during his study of law a |
During his reign, | Protestantism was introduced in the country and he wante |
Wylie's classic work, The History of | Protestantism, went out of print in the 1920s, although |
the aims of John Dury, as far as unifying | Protestantism went, and wrote in his favour, a piece sub |
religious tolerance: both Catholicism and | Protestantism were allowed. |
uding the old-Prussian synodals - declared | Protestantism were based on the complete Holy Scripture, |
The Cirksenas supported | Protestantism whilst both Balthasar and his father remai |
of the monastery was settled in favour of | Protestantism; with abbot Buchinger withdrawing in proce |
Outside of these cities, | Protestantism worship was forbidden completely. |
"If | Protestantism would include Mr. Abbot in this case," New |
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