A synod held at Hertford in 672 established the first basic canons for Church government. |
|
Lutherans have historically allowed pastors to preside at ordinations when authorized by the candidate's synod bishop. |
|
The activities at parish, classical, and provincial level would be co-ordinated by a national synod and by Parliament. |
|
It is expected that the consistory will influence the agenda for next October's synod of bishops in Rome. |
|
Sending a cash donation directly to a local church or synod may sound like a wonderful idea. |
|
At the synod a catalogue of John's crimes was presented, ranging from rape to sacrilege. |
|
The synod, like a general council, however, would have no authority over the pope and no right to reverse his decisions. |
|
The discussion of new forms for episcopal collegiality and accountability, such as a plenary council or a special synod of bishops, was put off. |
|
The current bishop still remained committed to the project, but the synod of the diocese voted against continuing construction. |
|
Suppression of the movement in Bulgaria intensified after a 1211 synod condemned the heresy. |
|
So it seems the plenary council and synod proposals have been put on a back burner. |
|
His synod was also the site of a church's unsanctioned ordination of an openly gay pastor earlier this year. |
|
Before deciding to accept, he conferred with his synod council. |
|
There is, for example, a serious move by some bishops to have the June meeting consider a proposal for convening something like an extraordinary synod of American bishops. |
|
And synod and churchwide leaders look warily toward the future. |
|
They have called for a response from Bulgaria's orthodox church synod. |
|
The synod is composed of the patriarch, metropolitans, provincial bishops, as well as the titular bishops and archimandrites appointed by the patriarch. |
|
The issues were hot topics at the Anglican synod in Brisbane last month. |
|
The alternative synod representatives said they would ask for the summoning of a church-people's council to elect a legitimate patriarch of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church. |
|
The theme of her remarks as she opened the new synod concerned the challenges of staying true to unchanging verities in a world of constant change and new challenges. |
|
|
The resulting synod in Zurich placed most of the blame on Calvin for not being sympathetic enough toward the people of Geneva. |
|
He reached out to England when Archbishop of Canterbury Thomas Cranmer called for an ecumenical synod of all the evangelical churches. |
|
In 1559, he drafted the French confession of faith, the Gallic Confession, and the synod in Paris accepted it with few changes. |
|
Each province has a synod and a mission budget, but it has no authority over its member dioceses. |
|
Within each national Church, the bishops form a holy synod to which even the Patriarch is subject. |
|
It is also sometimes used to refer to a church that is governed by a synod. |
|
The synod in the Western churches is similar, but it is distinguished by being usually limited to an assembly of bishops. |
|
However, in modern use, synod and council are applied to specific categories of such meetings and so do not really overlap. |
|
Michael Glatthaar suggested that the rubrics should be seen as Boniface's contribution to the agenda for a synod. |
|
In 664 a synod was held at Whitby, Yorkshire, and leaders of both the Celtic and Roman Church united the church throughout England. |
|
Often all members of the constituent presbyteries are members of the synod. |
|
A synod also has a moderator and clerk, and generally meet less often than the presbytery. |
|
At a regional level, representatives of the congregations assemble in a synod. |
|
Synods make many key decisions about finance, and about church property, which is usually held in trust by a synod trust company. |
|
At the synod Orosius communicated the decisions of the synod of Carthage and read several of Augustine's writings against Pelagius. |
|
Nicholas Brooks, another historian, is not so sure that there was such a synod, but does not completely rule out the possibility. |
|
The synod approved 25 of them and adopted a supplementary statement reaffirming the Augustinian doctrines of corruption, human inability, prevenient grace, and baptismal regeneration. |
|
They will be assisted at the month-long synod by Canadian theologians Margaret O'Gara of the University of Saint Michael's College in Toronto and Father Gilles Routhier of Laval University in Quebec City. |
|
The Neustrian Council of Soissons in 744, the third synod under Boniface's direction, discussed the heresy of Aldebert. |
|
Perhaps surprisingly, the synod also signalled that it was accepting a proposal from a rival church organisation, the Kiev Patriarchate, for a dialogue between Ukraine's Orthodox church bodies. |
|
|
They did the synod wrong to make this distinction of contraremonstrants and remonstrants. |
|
A council of Tours in 813 and then a synod of Mainz in 848 both declared that homilies ought to be preached in the vernacular. |
|
One of Bede's sources was the Life of Wilfrid itself, but he also had access to people who knew participants in the synod. |
|
King Oswiu presided over the synod and acted as the final judge, who would give his royal authority in support of one side or the other. |
|
The College of Bishops constitutes the episcopal synod, the supreme court of appeal. |
|
Boniface does not explicitly suggest to Cuthbert that he, too, should hold a synod, but it seems clear that this was Boniface's intent. |
|
It has been suggested that this synod was the same gathering as the second council held by the legates, but historians are divided on this issue. |
|
In 321, Arius was denounced by a synod at Alexandria for teaching a heterodox view of the relationship of Jesus to God the Father. |
|
His attempt to get the synod to reject the Augsburg Confession in favor of his compromising Definite Platform failed. |
|
During the provincial synod, the proposal did not receive enough votes and was not passed. |
|
Each congregation elects churchwardens and delegates who, together with the clergy, constitute the diocesan synod and annual convocation. |
|
In April 2016, the diocesan synod voted to dissolve the diocese due to its small size and merge with ACNA's Missionary Diocese of All Saints. |
|
A national synod, the Synod of Dort, was convened to settle the dispute and in 1619, it outlawed Arminianism. |
|
Parent of gods and men, propitious Jove! And you, bright synod of the powers above. |
|
The Emperor reminded Nerses that he had promised to convoke the synod for discussing the unity of the church. |
|
Drumbeating for Pope Francis' first synod or meeting of bishops on Oct 1 is already getting controversial. |
|
This legislation had to be approved by the Ecclesiastical Committee of the Parliament before it could be finally implemented at the November 2014 synod. |
|
These gatherings, subject to presidency by higher ranking bishops, usually make important decisions, though the synod or council may also be purely advisory. |
|
Diocesan synods elect lay and clergy delegates to provincial synod. |
|
The most recent general synod was in 2016 and met in Richmond Hill. |
|
|
Orosius had a confrontation with the Archbishop of Jerusalem, John II at the synod, in which Orosius was accused of heresy in front of the entire conclave. |
|
A number of synod delegates reported that at synods in the past, curial cardinals would go around telling the bishops what topics could not be discussed. |
|
The creation of chrism may be accomplished by any bishop at any time, but usually is done only once a year, often when a synod of bishops convenes for its annual meeting. |
|
The two ministers were unwilling to follow Bern's lead and delayed the use of such bread until a synod in Zurich could be convened to make the final decision. |
|
In the Presbyterian system of church governance the synod is a level of administration between the local presbytery and the national general assembly. |
|
However some other churches do not use the synod at all, and the Church of Scotland dissolved its synods in 1993, see List of Church of Scotland synods and presbyteries. |
|
The celebration of the Eucharist may form a part of services for weddings, funerals, retreats, the dedication of a church building and annual synod conventions. |
|
The Primus of the Scottish Episcopal Church, the presiding bishop of the Scottish Episcopal Church, is elected by the episcopal synod from among its members. |
|
This was the recommendation of a 1999 synod committee on sectarianism. |
|
The district was divided and extended to include areas in the then Gold Coast and Nigeria by the synod in 1878, a move confirmed at the British Conference. |
|
It must also be noted that with regard to ecclesial discipline and oversight, national and synod presidents typically function similarly to bishops in episcopal bodies. |
|
In addition also there are a number of Presbyterian Churches in north Africa, the most known is the Nile Synod in Egypt and a recently founded synod for Sudan. |
|