Selected quad for the lemma: nature_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
nature_n ghost_n holy_a trinity_n 3,214 5 9.7060 5 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
B21024 A voyage to Mount Libanus wherein is an account of the customs, manners, &c. of the Turks : also a description of Candia, Nicosia, Tripoly, Alexandretta, &c. : with curious remarks upon several passages re[l]ating to the Turks & Maronites / written originally in Italian by the R. F. Jerome Dandini.; Missione apostolica al patriarca de' Maroniti del Monte Libano. English Dandini, Girolamo, 1554-1634. 1698 (1698) Wing D168 76,284 146

There is 1 snippet containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Apparel serves for a second Proof They wear but a pitiful unvaluable ill-shaped Coat wherein they wrap themselves with a black Cowl upon their heads and this Vestment descends only from the shoulders to the girdle without any thing to cover their shoulders withal neither is there any other Habit cut according to the fashion of these that are used amongst all the Community of their Religious Their manner of Living furnisheth us with a third Proof They live only upon that which the Earth it self produceth and never eat any Flesh tho' they be sick and in danger of death As for Wine they very rarely drink any They have no particular Rules nor written Constitutions for to be observed by every one as may be seen in all other Religious Houses who are established to live in Community They make no express Profession of the three Vows of Religion to wit Poverty Chastity and Obedience but when they are received into the Monastery where they make Profession one holds a Book in his Hand and reads only something that belongs to them advertising them That they ought to live in Continence and adds many the like things These Advertisements are sufficient to make them keep a perfect Chastity You shall never hear any sca●dalous or ill report of them altho' they cont●●ually go alone up and down and stay oftentimes many days tog●ther out of their Monastery They have Goods and Money of their own and can dispose thereof at their death If they have no longer a Mind to stay in the Monastery they go into another without the leave of their Superiours In the fourth place They are never permitted to Exercise any Ecclesiastical Function they have no Spiritual Exercise in common for the good of their Neighbour and have no Power either to Preach or Confess so that they are only for themselves In the fifth place They give to their Superiours and Chiefs the Name of Abbot as the Hermits did of Old Finally I shall take for the sixth and last Proof the name they bear of the Monks of St. Anthor●y and 't is this that ought to make some impressions upon the spirits of those who would search out the cause why these Religious are so called Has this good Man ever founded any Religious House for to live in Community Did he not live a Solitary and Hermitical Life in the Desarts of Aegypt exercising the Function of Abbot in regard to those that lead the same Life of himself There is therefore reason to believe that this was the true Original of the Monks which are at this day in Mount Libanus and which are called the Monks of St. Anthony Many have imagined that they were reduced to that poverty they live in through the continual Oppression of the Turks who obliged them to Labour and Cultivate the Earth but I do not doubt but that was the end of their Constitution for so much as the holy Hermits and Servants of God for to shun Idleness and gain their Living by the Industry of their own hands accustomed themselves to Labour for a good part of the day these same had many Persons under them whom they employed to the hardest Labours and they contented themselves to carry on the same and render it less painful As to their Hospitality the use whereof perhaps they have preserved since their Foundation they highly exercise it especially in the Monastery of Cannubin where there is kept an open Table for all the Year round admittance being never forbid not only to the Maronites and other Christians but also to the Turks and all Comers who are welcome to eat what they please which is the cause of vast expence unto them for as 't is the ordinary Residence of the Patriarch 't is incredible what multitudes are drawn thither daily either through Necessity Curiosity Business or some other Matter CHAP. XIV Of the Errors that have been imposed upon them I Discovered with much evidence the Abuses whereof I am about to speak and some others of the same nature which made me open my eyes and apply my self with all Industry to every thing that might regard their Belief not only because these matters were of very great importance being the foundation of all Religion but also because I had learn'd that some years past they had been attributed unto them amongst other Errors 1. That there was in Jesus Christ but one Nature to wit The Divine 2. That the Holy Ghost proceeded only from the Father 3. That all the Trinity was Incarnated died on the Cross and rose again And those that attributed these errors unto them said That that was the reason why they added to the Trisagion which is Sung by the Angels Qui natus es pro nobis qui Crucifixus es pro nobis qui surrexisti ascendisti in coelum pro nobis miserere nobis as if they retained the ancient Errors condemned in the fifth Council of Constantinople 4. That an Husband might put away his Wife and take another if she committed Adultery or far other reasons 5. That there is no Original Sin 6. That the Souls that departed from their Bodies saw not Heaven for to be there rewarded nor Hell for to be there punished but that they attended for that till the Universal Judgment And that in the mean time they remained in a place where there was neither grief nor joy 7. That 't is Lawful to deny ones Belief outwardly and also by Words provided it be treasured up in the heart 8. That the Sacrament of Confirmation was not distinct from Baptism 9. That they gave the Eucharist to young Children Altho' I used all my own Industry to be informed of these Errors and imploy'd others for that purpose yet I could never discover but two of them to wit The repudiation of their Wifes and the Communion which they gave to Children I am very well satisfy'd that the first is not an error whereof the whole Nation ought to be accused as if it approved of this Divorcement but an accident that happened two or three times which had been fomented through the violence and tyranny of the Turks who favoured the designs of some Profligates who had put away their Wifes for to marry others of whom they were enamoured Those sort of People being not able to obtain the consent of the Patriarch for to marry them had recourse to the Emir who gave them for their Money permission to do it giving them his Letters to the Patriarch for to excuse them who dissembled his resentments thereof upon just considerations 'T is certain that the like case happening at the time of my being there the Patriarch would no ways consent thereto but not being able to remedy it he was obliged to pass it by In regard to the second Error 't is common to all neither can it be esteemed for an Error nor Heresie since the Church hath heretofore practised the same thing for a long time As for the other Errors