Occasional Papers
Occasional Papers
Selected from The Guardian, The Times, and The Saturday Review, 1846-1890
Book Excerpt
ission of the private
conscience to Christianity--when the Church placed her power of
self-regulation under the guardianship of the State, and the State
annexed its own potent sanction to rules, which without it would
have been matter of mere private contract, then jus or civil
right soon found its way into the Church, and the respective
interests and obligations of its various orders, and of the
individuals composing them, were regulated by provisions forming
part of the law of the land. Matter ecclesiastical or spiritual
moulded in the forms of civil law, became the proper subject of
ecclesiastical or spiritual jurisdiction, properly so called.
Now, inasmuch as laws are abstractions until they are put into execution, through the medium of executive and judicial authority, it is evident that the cogency of the reasons for welding together, so to speak, civil and ecclesiastical authority is much more full with regard to these latter branc
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