Grey's anatomical studies follow the precedent set by Michelangelo, who risked excommunication to secretly study anatomy in a morgue. |
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He tells of growing up a model Mormon man, excommunication from the church, divorce, a life as a high priced call boy and drug abuse. |
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Finally, in 1258 a bungled deal with the Papacy threatened Henry with excommunication. |
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His condemnation of violence and wealth, of government repression and church hypocrisy, brought him administrative pinpricks and excommunication. |
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The threat of excommunication hangs over anyone tempted to break the vow of silence. |
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The excommunication that the Beth Din is now free to implement contains, among others, these restrictions. |
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Midlife, he was unchurched, and his excommunication placed him in a state of dejection. |
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Its excommunication banished the unfaithful and unbelieving to the horror of outer darkness forever. |
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The Church attaches the canonical penalty of excommunication to this crime against human life. |
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No canonical or civil penalties, much less automatic excommunication, are attached to its violation. |
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Each cardinal will be required to take solemn oaths not to disclose any of their discussions on the pain of excommunication from the Church. |
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In 1278 Palmerio Berardi, canon and obedientiary, is responsible for executing the bishop's and chapter's warning of excommunication. |
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The Church reciprocated by forbidding membership in the Masons under pain of excommunication. |
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Dehlin believed the decision to threaten him and Kelly with excommunication came from high within the LDS Church. |
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The Ordain Women website posted some of Harrison's email to Kelly informing her of her excommunication. |
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All the pro-lifers I know would agree you need a debate on abortion, not on excommunication! |
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Formal and informal religious sanctions were still imposed, ranging from excommunication and disinheritance to censure and shunning. |
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Those who are officially recognized as being members of the Army of Mary and who really go there regularly, they also can incur excommunication. |
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Doesn't this whole thing about excommunication contradict the very words of Jesus? |
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Coerciveness has long been used for social control in rituals such as union blackballing, college hazing, excommunication and corporal punishment. |
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Cue multiple palms to foreheads from party whips, for whom abstention on a three-line whip is usually a matter of disgrace, excommunication and internal exile. |
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Philip was unwilling to face excommunication, for that could easily give his enemies within France the excuse they needed to foment open rebellion. |
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If you are a man, and therefore a priesthood holder, it takes a council of 15 men to agree on excommunication. |
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Pius V published the bull of excommunication of Elizabeth in 1570 to aid the Rebellion of the Northern Earls, but deliberately without informing Philip first. |
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Contact with excommunicated persons automatically entailed excommunication for the offender. |
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Luther was ordered to recant on the threat of excommunication. |
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The lifting of the excommunication does not affect penalties for other offences. |
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The church was not happy with his views, and there was talk of excommunication. |
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After the excommunication of Elizabeth I in 1570, the purpose of legislation changed from securing royal supremacy to defeating the new recusant missionary campaign. |
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And for those that are left behind, they say, mourning is treated as an extreme weakness, punishable by excommunication. |
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If he continued to resist the church's demands, church officials would be forced to consider a range of sanctions, the most serious of which would be excommunication. |
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Dissent is disloyalty and punishable by either the threat of excommunication or electoral execution. |
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But the threat of something as severe as excommunication was completely unexpected to her. |
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The Republic paid no attention to the interdict or the act of excommunication, and ordered its priests to carry out their ministry. |
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Summoners were Church officers who brought sinners to the Church court for possible excommunication and other penalties. |
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For this reason King Edward of England wrote to the Pope and asked for his excommunication of Robert Bruce. |
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Anselm threatened excommunication, and in July 1105 the two men finally negotiated a solution. |
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He was ordered, on pain of excommunication, to make amends by building this lighthouse. |
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Charles, who in 732 was on the verge of excommunication, instead was recognised by the Church as its paramount defender. |
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Although Sverre forged letters to show that his excommunication had been lifted, he in fact remained excommunicated until his death. |
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But the event itself, the excommunication of the patriarch Michael Cerularius by Cardinal Humbert in Constantinople, symbolized an irreconcilable difference in ideology. |
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The four bishops, even though they have been released from excommunication, have no canonical function in the Church and do not licitly exercise any ministry within it. |
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Lefebvre and the priests Bernard Fellay, Bernard Tissier de Mallerais, Richard Williamson and Alfonso de Galarreta, have incurred the grave penalty of excommunication envisaged by ecclesiastical law. |
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It is interesting to note that, at the time Garrick was buried in Westminster Abbey, French actors, under penalty of excommunication, still had to be buried in unconsecrated ground. |
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Canon law states that excommunication is valid if it follows a mortal sin. |
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In 2009, Pope Benedict ignited controversy by lifting the excommunication of the four bishops and even promised the rebel group autonomy from bishops they considered too liberal. |
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If you are excommunicated, then for the excommunication to be lifted, you need to publicly repent, and reject those errors which you used to adhere to. |
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Petr Chelcicky, the fifteenth-century Bohemian reformer, also taught baptism at a later age, and even the excommunication of someone in the Church who refused to confess Christ even if they had been baptized as a child. |
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Given our ever increasing excommunication of beloved and well taught brethren and their home assemblies, could it possibly be that the assembly principles as we practice them, are in some way defective? |
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The support given to him by the church in spite of his excommunication was of great political importance. |
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Kirk sessions were able to apply religious sanctions, such as excommunication and denial of baptism, to enforce godly behaviour and obedience. |
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In one of the accounts, Saint Columba, in this period of excommunication, goes to a meeting held against him in Teilte. |
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Following the news of her excommunication, Kelly has stood by her words. |
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For many years Philip maintained peace with England, and even defended Elizabeth from the Pope's threat of excommunication. |
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Originally, the court had the power to mete out sentences, with excommunication as its most severe penalty. |
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He had always insisted that the Consistory retain the power of excommunication, despite the council's past decision to take it away. |
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Calvin protested that the council did not have the legal authority to overturn Berthelier's excommunication. |
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This body reversed the council's decision and stated that the final arbiter concerning excommunication should be the council. |
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Shortly after, the Vatican congregation notified him he had incurred a latae sententiae, or automatic, excommunication for his participation. |
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In the same year he was told that he had incurred a latae sententiae excommunication and his status within Maryknoll was in jeopardy unless he recanted. |
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He severely threatens such with the thunderbolt of excommunication. |
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The king's contention was that flogging, fines, degradation, and excommunication, beyond which the spiritual courts could not go, were insufficient as punishment. |
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Since the time of the apostles, the term anathema has come to mean a form of extreme religious sanction beyond excommunication, known as major excommunication. |
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The former involves willful and persistent adherence to an error in matters of faith and is a grave sin for which the church applies the penalty of excommunication. |
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When the Archbishop of Canterbury, Hubert Walter, died on 13 July 1205, John became involved in a dispute with Pope Innocent III that would lead to the king's excommunication. |
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Edward resisted, but finally acquiesced, agreeing to send Gaveston to Aquitaine, under threat of excommunication by the Archbishop of Canterbury should he return. |
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They also practiced a form of excommunication from the assembly of worshippers, which in ancient Gaul meant a separation from secular society as well. |
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It was only then that Pope Clement took the step of excommunicating Henry and Thomas Cranmer, although the excommunication was not made official until some time later. |
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