Philip Hughes
Born
in Gorton, Manchester, The United Kingdom
May 11, 1895
Died
October 06, 1967
Genre
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The World In Which The Church Was Founded (History of the Church: Volume 1)
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published
1948
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9 editions
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Popular History of the Catholic Church
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published
1935
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30 editions
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The Church in Crisis: A History of the General Councils, 325-1870
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published
1961
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11 editions
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A Popular History of the Reformation
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published
1957
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15 editions
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The Church In The World The Church Created: Augustine To Aquinas (History of the Church: Volume 2)
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published
1935
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9 editions
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A History of the Church to the Eve of the Reformation I, II, & III
by
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published
2012
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The Revolt Against The Church: Aquinas To Luther (History of the Church: Volume 3)
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published
1947
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7 editions
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The Reformation in England: The King's Proceedings
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published
1993
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2 editions
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Síntesis de historia de la iglesia
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The Faith in Practice
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“What kind of thing is the religion those writings describe? The first difficulty before the enquirer is that the writings do not profess to describe any religion at all, but are supplementary to the basic knowledge which they presuppose. The collection is made up of a variety of things. There are short accounts of the life and death of Jesus Christ; there is an account of the spread of His teaching in the first generation after His earthly life ended; there is a book of mysterious prophecy; and a number of letters written by His principal lieutenants explaining particular difficulties or correcting special errors in belief or practice. The New Testament can thus in no sense be regarded as a systematic exposition of the religion taught by Jesus Christ. It provides, none the less, a wealth of information about this new religion and its Founder sufficient for the historian's purpose, sufficient, that is to say, to make clear the new thing's nature.”
― A History of the Church to the Eve of the Reformation I, II, & III
― A History of the Church to the Eve of the Reformation I, II, & III
“in studying these systematic aberrations we have to remind ourselves at every turn that their bizarre extravagance covers a discussion, and an offered solution, of the most fundamental of all problems. The nature and origin of evil, of man, of God, the purpose of life and its attainment through living -- these are the problems, theoretical and practical, which the Gnostic interpretation of Christianity claimed to answer. Nor was Gnosticism a mere academic discussion. It offered itself as a religious system. It had its ritual and its observances, its regulations and its officials. It was a formidable competitor to traditional Christianity, and to Gnosticism the Church lost some of its best minds and most energetic spirits. Nor did the influence of the movement end with the second century. That century witnessed a life and death struggle between the Church and the Gnostics which ended in the Gnostics' expulsion from the Church, but the defeated theories survived outside the Church to provide, for centuries yet to come, an undercurrent of influences which never ceased to irritate and disturb the development of Catholic thought.”
― A History of the Church to the Eve of the Reformation I, II, & III
― A History of the Church to the Eve of the Reformation I, II, & III
“Nothing in this latest development of Paganism brought it nearer to the chance of giving the world what the Gospel promised to give. It was no rival gospel that the Church had to fear in the mystery religions, or in these new cults from the East. The danger was more simple -- that the mixture of charlatanry and sensuality would find so ready a response in the weakest parts of human nature that there would not even remain a beginning of natural virtue to which the super-natural could make an appeal.”
― A History of the Church to the Eve of the Reformation I, II, & III
― A History of the Church to the Eve of the Reformation I, II, & III










