Index
I
Ignatius of Antioch, St.,
Cureton's three epistles from the Syriac not the sole genuine text, T.T.,
96-8, 129-35;
—— of the two Greek texts, the shorter (Medicean, Vossian)
genuine; the longer consists of spurious epistles, with the genuine
epistles expanded by an Arian hand, ib., 99-128;
—— peculiarity of his epistle to the Romans, ib., 125, 126;
—— Catholic character of the epistles, Ess.,
i., 235-42, 245-7;
—— takes our salvation to lie, not in the Atonement by itself, but
in the Incarnation as a present fact, ib., i., 247, 248;
—— his Eucharistic teaching, ib., i., 253, 254;
—— points of his theology, ib., i., 255-7;
—— said to be popish, ib., i., 257;
—— 'give us Ignatius, and we want nothing more to prove the
substantial truth of the Catholic system,' ib., i., 261;
—— quoted on union with the bishop, O.S.,
193, 194;;
—— his martyrdom, G.A.,
478-80. {77}
Ignatius Loyola, St., the
Practical, compared to Jacob, H.S.,
ii. 366-70;
—— what he did for St. Philip Neri, O.S.,
227-9.
Ignorance, 'assumed
economically by our Lord,' Ath.,
ii., 161-72;
—— 'received doctrine,' that Christ as man 'knew all things which
human soul can know,' ib., ii., 162; not received till after
St. Athanasius's day, ib.;
—— not so clear that the Fathers do ever ascribe to our Lord more
than an 'economical' ignorance, ib., ii., 163 sq.;
—— doctrine of Christ's ignorance as man anathematized when the
Monophysites arose, M.D.,
119;
—— invincible ignorance an excuse for non-Catholic Christians, Diff.,
i., 354-7; S.N.,
325, 327-9; Diff.,
ii., 335, 336; Ess.,
i., 217;
—— matching invincible ignorance, there is what may be called
'invincible knowledge,' G.A.,
211.
Illative Sense, the criterion
of the accuracy of an inference other than scientific, G.A.,
345;
—— [differs from Natural Inference as the reflex from the direct, Life
by Ward, II., 260, 261];
—— 'a living organon,' 'a personal gift,' judicium prudentis
viri, G.A.,
316, 317;
—— 'a sure divination' in concrete matter that a conclusion, not
logically complete, is 'as good as proved,' G.A.,
321;
—— illative sense defined, 'right judgment in ratiocination,' G.A.,
342;
—— the sanction of the illative sense is the fact that the human
mind is constituted so to judge, with which Constitution we must be
content, seeing that it comes from God, G.A.,
346-52;
—— illative sense, a sort of Aristotelian phronesis,
differing in different subject-matters, ib., 353-8;
—— its exercise, its subject-matter, the process it uses, its
function and scope, ib., 358, 359;
—— the illative sense is 'the reasoning faculty as exercised by
gifted, or educated or otherwise well-prepared minds,' G.A.,
361 [something like what the writer has elsewhere called 'philosophy,'
Idea, 124 sq.;
U.S., 282 sq.];
—— being a personal gift, the illative sense supplies no common
measure between mind and mind,—that is left to Logic, G.A.,
362;
—— the Illative Sense, called in Via Media, 'a strong
sense,' a 'moral instinct,' a 'happy augury;' 'it is the second-rate
men who prove, reconcile, finish, and explain,' V.M.,
i., 283, 284; G.A.,
380; U.S.,
257;
—— 'I am suspicious of scientific demonstrations in a region of
concrete fact,' G.A.,
410, 411;
—— 'we are bound to look for certainty by modes of proof, which,
when reduced to the shape of formal propositions, fail to satisfy the
severe requisitions of science,' G.A.,
412.
Images, worship of, suspended
out of policy in England, V.M.,
ii., 112, 373;
—— images a help to prayer, ib., ii., 113, note;
—— is latria due to the wood of the Cross? ib., ii.,
126, 127, note;
—— the Crucifix, ib., ii., 215, 216;
—— abuse of image-worship, condemned alike by Trent and Article
xxii., ib., ii., 304, 305;
—— a precedent for image-worship in the honour paid to the statues
of the Emperors, Ath.,
ii., 185, 186;
—— St. John Damascene on Images, Dev.,
376, 377;
—— in early fourth century prohibited in Spain, Dev.,
410, 411;
—— virtue in images, L.G.,
25;
—— if absurd to honour an image, equally absurd to burn in effigy,
Prepos.,
180; King William, blown out of his saddle, ib., 181.
Incarnation, Catholic
doctrine of, {78} P.S.,
ii., 30-2;
—— the Eternal Son in humiliation, P.S.,
iii., 162-6;
—— God for thirty-three years 'became one of the beings that are
seen,' P.S.,
iv., 202, 203;
—— for thirty years led an ordinary life, ib., iv., 241,
242;
—— indebted to this world for nothing, P.S.,
v., 95, 96;
—— the Son of God made Man, P.S.,
vi., 55-67; P.S.,
viii., 251, 252;
—— sundry texts to be understood of both Natures together, P.S.,
vi., 58-60;
—— Christ, though man, not strictly a man, ib., vi, 62;
—— His manhood almost as a new attribute of His Person, ib.,
vi., 65; T.T.,
307, 381;
—— when He suffered, it was God suffering, P.S.,
vi., 71-3;
—— Incarnation has 'introduced a thousand new and heavenly
associations into this world of sin,' ib., vi., 265;
—— the Incarnation 'the article of a standing or a falling
Church,' U.S.,
35;
—— two reasons for, atonement and renewal in holiness, Ath.,
ii, 189-91;
—— the union of two natures no circumscription of the Divine Son, Ath.,
ii., 192;
—— personal aptitude of the Son for Incarnation, P.S.,
vi., 58-60; Ath.,
ii., 220, 221;
—— two natures in one Person, Ath.,
ii., 191, 192, 223-5;
—— Nestorianism inconsistent with the Incarnation, ib.,
ii., 293, 294;
—— the Word assumed our nature as it has been since the Fall, with
its liabilities, ib., ii., 294-9, not its imperfections and
faults, T.T.,
373, 374;
—— 'we should rather say that God is man than that man is God, not
that the latter proposition is not altogether Catholic,' Ess.,
i., 74, 75;
—— summary of heresies affecting the Incarnation, Dev.,
439, 440;
—— brings God nigh, Mix.,
292-4, 298, 299, 302-4;
—— if Incarnation at all, what life we should have thought
becoming for the Incarnate Word on earth? Mix.,
300, 301; but 'He came, not to assert a claim, but to pay a debt,' ib.,
301, 302;
—— decree of, antecedent to Adam's sin, Ath.,
ii., 188; S.N.,
296, 297; Mix,,
321, 322, 358;
—— doctrine of, not really held by the mass of Protestants, Mix.,
344-6; P.S.,
iii., 169-71;
—— Deipara the witness of Emmanuel, Mix.,
346-9;
—— no other miracle so stupendous as the Incarnation, Prepos.,
305; Mir.,
185;
—— special charm of Christmas, S.N.,
95, 96;
—— a 'tangible history of the Deity,' S.N.,
302, note.
Inconsistency, not always
blameworthy, Ess.,
i, 276, 277.
India, sermon on the mutiny
of 1857, S.N.,
147-54.
Indiction, a cycle of 15
years, when first used as a date, Ath.,
i., 99, note.
Indulgences, Cardinal Fisher
on, V.M.,
i., 72;
—— doctrine of, ib., i., 97, 98, note, 113-5, note;
—— 'takes from the Roman Catholic the fear of hell, and gives him
the certainty of purgatory,' ib., i., 121;
—— sed contra, 'this is not so,' ib., note;
—— specimens of large and reckless Indulgences, V.M.,
ii., 301;
—— 'indulgence never is absolution or pardon itself,' Prepos.,
346, 347.
Infallibility, taken for a
bar to progress, as though Christianity were good for one age, not for
another, U.S.,
2, 3;
—— Mussus, Bishop of Bitonto, on Papal infallibility, V.M.,
i., 82;
—— infallibility said to be the bane of the Church, then
afterwards claimed for her, V.M.,
i., 69, note; 84-8, notes 190-4;
—— infallibility as amounting to omniscience, ib., i.,
89-93;
—— sed contra, ib., notes;
—— impressiveness {79} of, Rome 'alone of all Churches dares claim
it,' ib., i., 115-8; L.G.,
225; Mix.,
229;
—— seat of infallibility, V.M.,
i., 123-6;
—— infallibility not wanted, ib., i., 143, 144;
—— lost to the Church along with unity, ib., i., 195-201; V.M.,
ii., 132-4;
—— like unity, not altogether lost, V.M.,
i., 202;
—— sed contra, 'we cannot talk of a little unity,' ib.,
note;
—— difficulties in the working of infallibility, Ess.,
i., 169-72;
—— 'there are gifts too large and too fearful to be handled
freely,' Diff.,
ii., 342;
—— early Church virtually infallible, D.A.,
11;
—— presumable on hypothesis of development, Dev.,
78-80;
—— 'the very idea of revelation implies a present informant, and
that an infallible one,' Dev.,
87, 88; especially in an intellectual age, Dev.,
89; Diff.,
ii., 322, 323;
—— infallible utterance of Pope, 'not a transaction that can be
done in his travelling dress, etc.,' H.S.,
ii., 340, note;
—— Tractarians took the Anglican Prayer Book as practically
infallible, Diff.,
i., 132-5;
—— its work in curbing human intellect as that intellect
historically is, Apo.,
245, 246;
—— what this power claims, Apo.,
249, 250;
—— every act of Infallibility brought out 'by operation of the
Reason, and provokes a reaction of Reason,' Apo.,
252;
—— 'cannot act outside of a definite circle,' Apo.,
253, 254;
—— the pomœria of infallibility, like British waters,
prohibition herein is rather disciplinary, and temporary, may be
mistaken, but usually proves to have been mainly in the right, Apo.,
257, 258;
—— 'the whole body of Christian people cannot be wrong,' S.N.,
77;
—— papal, declared no article of faith by English and Irish
bishops in 1826, yet steadily held by the Holy See, Diff.,
ii., 187-94;
—— a known point of controversy, ib., 353-5;
—— instances of papal action into which infallibility does not
enter, Diff.,
ii., 257;
—— conditions limiting infallibility, Diff.,
ii., 325, 326, 329-32;
—— infallibility not inspiration, no direct suggestion of divine
truth, but simply assistentia, i.e. an external
guardianship keeping off from error, V.M.,
i., 310, note; Diff.,
ii., 327, 328,—hence, Molina says, 'definitions are more or less
perspicuous, and need 'investigation and diligence,' Diff.,
ii., 307, 308;
—— contra, Ess.,
i., 159;
—— obiter dicta not infallible, Diff.,
ii., 329, nor the reasons given for the definition, ib., 326;
—— cautious use of papal infallibility, Apo.,
267, 268;
—— Bishop Fessler's statement that only the last sentences of the Unam
sanctam are infallible, Diff.,
ii., 326, 376, 377;
—— Chillingworth's confusion of infallibility with certitude, G.A.,
224-7, 493, 494; V.M.,
i., 122, note; Dev.,
81.
Inference, not a felt
reality, P.S.,
iv., 231;
—— always conditional, G.A.,
1, 2, 12;
—— expressed by a conclusion, ib., 3;
—— we may infer what we do not understand, ib., 8;
—— akin to notional apprehension, ib., 12;
—— mostly engaged on notional propositions, hence notional assent
seems like inference, ib., 39;
—— inverse relation between inference and assent, ib., 40,
41;
—— inference not the measure of assent, G.A.,
160-81;
—— the terms 'inference' and 'logic' used here indiscriminately, G.A.,
264;
—— formal inference (formal logic), what it does and what it
cannot do, G.A.,
262-87;
—— reasoning ordinarily presents itself as a simple act, not {80}
as a process, G.A.,
259, 260, 330;
—— 'natural inference' from things to things, not from
propositions to propositions, G.A.,
330, 331; e.g., the weather-wisdom of a peasant, the diagnosis
of a physician or of a lawyer, ib., 332; natural inference
sometimes amounts to genius, Newton, Napoleon, calculating boys, ib.,
333, 334 (Natural Inference differs from the Illative Sense as the
direct from the reflex, Ward, Life, II., 260, 261];
—— genuine reasoning not an instrumental art, G.A.,
338;
—— each genius has its own subject-matter, ib., 339-41;
—— put into formal propositions, the proofs on which we are bound
to look for certainty in concrete matter fail to satisfy the
requisitions of science, G.A.,
412.
Intellectualism, rule of
intellect rather than of Conscience, P.S.,
i., 223, 224;
—— a fruit of the fall, not found in paradise or in heaven, P.S.,
v., 112;
—— inventions only of use in remedying the effects of the fall, ib.,
v., 113;
—— Scripture silent on intellectual excellence, U.S.,
56;
—— what is and is not rationalism (intellectualism), Ess.,
i., 31-8;
—— the religion that comes of intellectualism, philosophical
religion, Idea,
190-3, 202;
—— exemplified in Julian, commended by Shaftesbury, ib.,
194-200;
—— where vice is said to have lost half its evil by losing all its
grossness, ib., 201;
—— tends 'to view revealed religion from an aspect of its own, to
fuse and recast it, to tune it to a different key, and reset its
harmonies,' Idea,
217, 218;
—— partly an ignoring, partly an adulteration of theological
truth, ib., 229;
—— fitness of infallible teaching for 'smiting hard and throwing
back the immense energy of the aggressive, capricious, untrustworthy
intellect,' Apo.,
245, 246; intellect so characterized, not 'when correctly exercised,'
but considered 'actually and historically,' Apo.,
243; P.S.,
v., 114;
—— originality of thought not true if it leads away from God, M.D.,
521;
—— intellectual pleasures, G.A.,
205-8;
—— obedience of intellect, L.G.,
203, 204; G.A.,
191; S.N.,
11, 12.
Inquisition, Spanish, 'an
expression of that very Church-and-King spirit which has prevailed in
these islands,' Idea,
215, 216;
—— doings of, Prepos.,
210-2, 222.
Instinct, 'a force which
spontaneously impels us, not only to bodily movements, but also to
mental acts,' G.A.,
62;
—— our assent to the existence of a world external to ourselves
'founded on an instinct,' G.A.,
61-3.
Ireland, early Irish Church, Idea,
25-7; H.S.,
iii., 125-7, 265, 266;
—— devastated by Danes, ib., 266, 270;
—— Brian Boroimhe defeats Danes at Clontarf, ib., 272-4;
—— as Alfred in England, so Brian failed to restore what had been,
ib., 277;
—— bull of Adrian IV., reasons for, ib., 261-5, 287, 307,
308;
—— ancient University of Dublin, H.S.,
iii., 207-12;
—— coming prosperity of Ireland, like Corinth on the highway of
commerce, ib., iii., 483, 484;
—— strong Catholicism of Irish cities, ib., 484, 485;
—— special aptitude of the Irish mind for science, ib.,
485, 486;
—— 'Irish people worn down by oppression, not allowed to be
joyous, not allowed to be natural,' Diff.,
i., 306;
—— 'cannot distinguish between their love of Ireland and their
love of religion,' {81} Diff.,
ii, 185, 186;
—— 'one John of Tuam,' Diff.,
ii., 211.
Irish University, H.S.,
iii., 1, 2, 17, 31, 32, 47, 48, 50-3, 65-70, 146, 177, 178, 212, 251;
—— ultimate success certain, even though it seem to fail: decision
of the Holy See, ib., 148, 149; Idea,
12, 13, 266;
—— 'hopes in which I may have been too sanguine,' Idea,
239;
—— 'enough for me if I do so much as merely begin what others may
more hopefully continue,' Idea,
267, 506, 519;
—— Ireland the proper seat of a Catholic University, Idea,
483;
—— Irish University Bill of 1873, Diff.,
ii., 181-3.
Irvingites, L.G.,
390-5.
J
Jacob, character of, P.S.,
v., 75-82; H.S.,
ii., 370;
—— Jacob, Moses, David, three shepherd types of Christ, P.S.,
viii., 236-41.
Jansenism, history of, Diff.,
i., 321-8;
—— Jansenius set up to correct the Church by aid of St. Augustine,
Diff.,
i., 158, 159.
Jerome, St., 'were he not a
saint, there are words and ideas in his writings from which I should
shrink,' H.S.,
ii., 173;
—— letter to Demetrias, ib., 174-8;
—— 'so dead to the world that he can imitate the point and wit of
its writers without scandal,' H.S.,
ii., 285;
—— 'only too fond of the Cicero and Horace, whom he put aside,—a
literary Father par excellence,' ib., 450.
Jerusalem, topography of,
site of Holy Sepulchre, line of north wall, Mir.,
302-26;
—— Church, called the Martyry, built by Constantine on the site of
the Holy Sepulchre, Ath.,
i., 92;
—— failure of Julian to rebuild the Temple, Mir.,
334-7;
—— taken by Sultan Malek Shah, recovered by Crusaders, H.S.,.
i., 96, 102;
—— Jerusalem Bishopric, S.D.,
335, note; L.G.,
400, 401; Diff.,
i., 10, 11; Apo.,
141-6; 'demolished the sacredness of diocesan rights,' Apo.,
149.
Jesuits, their 'economy,' in
the matter of the Chinese Rites, parallel of St. Gregory Thaumaturgus,
V.M.,
i., pref., pp. lxxvi.-lxxix.;
—— their season over, according to La Mennais, Ess.,
i., 157;
—— their obedience, Dev.,
399;
—— 'school and pattern of discretion, practical sense, and wise
government,' H.S.,
ii., 369, 370;
—— SS. Ignatius, Dominic, Benedict, are as Practical Sense,
Science, Poetry, or again as Jacob, Isaac, Abraham, ib., ii.,
366-70; O.S.,
220, 221, 228, 229;
—— splendid organization, can afford, it is said, to crush
individualities, H.S.,
iii., 71;
—— the first six Jesuits, Mix.,
243;
—— fictions concerning, Prepos.,
17;
—— Blanco White on, ib., 18, 19, 404-6;
—— Steimnitz's revelations, a disappointment, Prepos.,
176;
—— article on The Revival of Jesuitism, in British
Critic for 1839, of which, as Editor, 'I did not like the tone,' Apo.,
60.
Jews, importance of their law
to Christians, P.S.,
i., 85;
—— the law observed in the early Church, P.S.,
ii., 70, 71, 76;
—— many present-day Christians exactly in the state of the Jews, P.S.,
vi., 182-7;
—— they equate Christian with Jewish rites, ib., vi., 183;
—— repudiate inward justification, ib., vi., 184;
—— take to themselves what St. Paul says of the unregenerate Jew, ib.,
vi., 186;
—— despair of the gift of purity, ib., vi., 187;
—— 'we act as they did,' P.S.,
viii., 85, 86;
—— Jewish ordinances, 'tokens not of the presence of {82} grace,
but of its absence,' Jfc.,
283-5;
—— Jews took their law not as a means but as the end, ib.,
312, 313;
—— parallel of the Anglican Church with the Jewish, V.M.,
i., 336-44;
—— prosperity and influence of Jews in third and fourth centuries,
Ari., 10-2;
—— Judaism a source of Arianism, ib., 18-23;
—— real peculiarity of Judaism, S.D.,
97-100;
—— Christian Church a continuation of the Jewish doctrine of the
remnant, S.D.,
192-6; S.N.,
253; G.A.,
437-9;
—— Judaism local because imperfect, Mix.,
247;
—— prayer for conversion of, M.D.,
255, 256;
—— God's judgments on, S.N.,
214-9;
—— Judaism, a tragic chorus, V.V.,
192-4;
—— theism the life of the Jews, their country the classic home of
religion, as Greece of intellect, and Rome of political sagacity, G.A.,
432, 433;
—— their final overthrow at the very epoch in which they were
looking for a Deliverer, ib., 433-5;
—— their punishment, as we witness it, described by anticipation
in the book of Deuteronomy, ib., 435, 436;
—— Judaism supplanted by Christianity [as Esau by Jacob], promises
made to the former fulfilled in the latter, G.A.,
437-9;
—— 'Christianity clears up the mystery that hangs over Judaism,
accounting for the punishment of the people by specifying their
heinous sin,' G.A.,
438;
—— Jews had faith without the promise, i.e., were without
regeneration and the indwelling of the Holy Ghost: 'I am not speaking
of this or that highly-favoured saint, but of the people;' they 'were
aided by God's grace, but they were not inhabited by it,' P.S.
ii., 220-3; P.S.,
iii., 263-70; P.S.,
iv., 170, 171; P.S.,
vi., 179-82; V.M.,
ii., 145, 146, 149, 150, 161, 163-8, with note (added in 1877),
to pp. 166, 167.
John the Evangelist, St., the
saint of the young, the middle-aged, the old, S.N.,
186.
Joseph, St., his death, M.D.,
414-6;
—— saint of home: type of rest, repose, peace, S.N.,
204;
—— devotion to him of late date, Diff.,
ii., 30, 31.
Journalist, omnia novit,
Idea, pref.,
pp. xx.-xxii.
Judgment Day, expectation of,
P.S.,
vi., 236 sq.; H.S.,
ii., 434-9; S.N.,
225-7;
—— ever near, because the course of the world runs along the brink
of it, P.S.,
vi., 241;
—— no souls in heaven till then, P.S.,
iii., 372-83;
—— sed contra, U.S.,
326;
—— till then, sin not fully forgiven, P.S.,
iv., 129; V.M.,
i., 119;
—— waiting for Christ, P.S.,
vi., 234 sq.; O.S.,
31 sq.;
—— rash prophecies, S.N.,
224, 228;
—— will come when the Church is at the last gasp, S.N.,
231;
—— 'only mortal sins at the last judgment,' ib., 305;
—— all in memory, all in judgment, V.V.,
85;
—— particular judgment, V.V.,
342, 351, 352, 358-60, 366.
Justice, a primary notion,
not resolvable into solicitude for the general good, U.S.,
106, 108;
—— virtue of, S.N.,
168-70;
—— forgiveness of injuries, ib., 278-82;
—— pleas for standing off from the author of an injury; 'can you
pray that you may meet him and love him in heaven?' ib., 245,
246, 284;
—— retributive justice must be admitted at least in God, G.A.,
420, 421.
Justification, certainty of,
not accorded to us, P.S.,
v., 219, 220;
—— 'no such person as a justified sinner,' ib., v., 190;
—— faith, title to justification, but baptism gives possession, P.S.,
vi., 168;
—— inward, not merely {83} outward, ib., vi, 184;
—— faith disjoined from justification, ib., vi., 172,
174-6, but never finally, ib., vi., 164, 170, 171;
—— David had faith, not justification, ib., vi., 181, 182;
—— justification inward renewal, obedience for disobedience, Jfc.,
32-6;
—— unscriptural separation of justification from 'renewal'
(sanctification), or of deliverance from guilt from deliverance from
sin, Jfc.,
39-41, 117;
—— the two are substantially one, ib., 63;
—— distinct in the order of ideas only, ib., 63-72;
—— justification takes our shame away, Jfc.,
75, 76, 157, 158;
—— God's word effects what it announces, an act external continued
to an act within us, acceptance leading to acceptableness, imputation
to participation, Jfc.,
81, 85, 98;
—— so a Sacrament is a visible sign of inward grace, both sign and
grace being included in the Sacrament: excellence of the justified
state, Jfc.,
93, 94;
—— justification active and passive, the two inseparable, Jfc.,
95-100;
—— Adam's sin both imputed and imparted to us, so is Christ's
righteousness, Jfc.,
105, 106;
—— 'neither Protestant nor Romanist ought to refuse to admit, and
in admitting to agree with each other, that the presence of the Holy
Ghost shed abroad in our hearts, the Author both of faith and renewal,
this is really that which makes us righteous, and that our
righteousness is the possession of that presence,' Jfc.,
pref., p. xii.; 137-54, 352, 353;
—— glory and power of that presence, Jfc.,
160-9;
—— justification 'the setting up of the Cross within us,' 'it
draws blood,' Jfc.,
173-8;
—— righteousness in us rather adherent than inherent, Jfc.,
187;
—— 'the glorious Shekinah of the Word Incarnate,' Jfc.,
190, 191;
—— Jewish righteousness superseded, ib., 194-201;
—— 'there was but One Atonement, there are ten thousand
justifications: God the Son atoned, God the Holy Ghost justifies,' Jfc.,
205, 206;
—— right understanding of justification by faith, Jfc.,
214, 215,—of justification by faith only, ib., 223 sq.;
justification by faith may be taken to mean merely that grace is a
free gift, Jfc.,
246-51; by faith only, not to the exclusion of baptism, ib.,
226, 227; justification by faith not before but after baptism, ib.,
237-43; by faith only in one sense, by works in another, ib.,
275, 276;
—— 'justification comes through the Sacraments, is received by
faith, consists in God's inward presence, and is lived by obedience,' Jfc.,
278;
—— justification by faith a principle, not a rule of conduct, ib.,
333-5;
—— 'formal cause,' meaning of the term, ib., 343, 344; four
views of the formal cause of justification, Jfc.,
346-8;
—— essence and effect of justification according to the Roman
view, Jfc.,
349, 350;
—— the Holy Ghost the formal cause of justification, according to
Petavius, ib., pref., p. xii., 352, 353;
—— one only form of justification, yet there may be many improper
forms, ib., pref., pp. x.-xii.: 350-4;
—— whether the righteousness which God puts into us needs to be
further eked out by His mercy in Christ, Jfc.,
354-7, 366-8;
—— Bucer's opinion, the common doctrine of the Church of England, ib.,
372, 374;
—— 'with the Roman divines I would consider justification as an
inward gift, yet with the Protestant, as not a mere quality of the
mind,' Jfc.,
389;
—— 'we are justified by Christ alone, in that He has purchased
{84} the gift; by faith alone, in that faith asks for it; by baptism
alone, for baptism conveys it; and by newness of heart alone, for
newness of heart is the sine quo non life of it,' V.M.,
ii., 283;
—— 'we know nothing of justification except as wrought through
Christ's mystical Body,' Ess.,
i., 367;
—— Evangelical views of justification, L.G.,
137-45, 149-54;
—— justification by a powerful act of charity, Mix,,
80;
—— Essay on Justification (A.D.
1837), purpose of, Apo.,
72;
—— 'justification by faith accounted (by Evangelicals) to be the
one cardinal point of the Gospel,' a position 'utterly unevangelical,'
involving unhealthy self-contemplation, P.S.,
ii., 164-73; P.S.,
v., 181-4.
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