Art and skill are required to distinguish what Forms admit of intercommunion, and what Forms do not. |
All these, and all other savage peoples, believe in a kind of equality and intercommunion among all things animate and inanimate. |
It is, I say, the necessary result of the intercommunion of divine faith and human corruption. |
And so it may be with our means of locomotion and intercommunion, and what depends on them. |
The press will be everlastingly telephoning you for comments on a vast range of subjects which have nothing to do with intercommunion or sectarianism. |
While a certain anguish is frequently felt as a result of the lack of intercommunion, good ecumenical relations are furthered when the eucharistic disciplines of our churches are both understood and respected. |