id author title date pages extension mime words sentence flesch summary cache txt _005195632 Riley, Elihu S. (Elihu Samuel), 1845- The national debt that American Protestants owe to their brethren of the Roman Catholic church 1914 .txt text/plain 23414 978 62 “If we be out of this Realm, our Chief Justices shall send our Justicers through every County once in the year ; which with the Knights of the Shires shall take the said Assises in those Counties ; and those things that, at the coming of our aforesaid Justices being sent to take those Assises in the Counties, cannot be determined, shall be ended by them in some other place in their Circuit ; and those things, which for difficulty of some Articles cannot be determined by them, shall be referred to our Justices of the Bench, and there shall be ended.” “A freeman shall not be amerced for a small fault, but after the manner of the Fault, and for a great Fault, after the greatness thereof.” “No freeman shall be taken or imprisoned, or be disseised of his Freehold, or Liberties, or Free Customs, or be outlawed, or exiled, or any otherwise destroyed; nor will We not pass upon him, nor condemn him; but by lawful judgment of his Peers, or by the Law of the Land, We will sell to no man, we will not deny or defer to any man either Justice or Right.” These are shining examples of a legion of inalienable rights that the Roman Catholic clergymen, Roman Catholic barons, and Roman Catholic laymen forced unwilling King John to grant and certify to his English subjects—privileges that all American citizens enjoy, in their kind and suitability to their situation today, in free America, and which is one of the prime factors in the sum total of the debt of gratitude they owe their Roman Catholic brethren. The Roman Church condemned in the counsel of Ephesus in the Fifth Cen- tury, the errors of Nestorios, who held there were two separate persons in the Saviour ; it opposed the fraud of Mahometism ; in the same century it attacked the doctrines of the Monothelites, who denied the dual nature of the Saviour; it opposed and refused to accept the belief of the Greek Church that the Holy Spirit proceeds alone from the Father. cache/_005195632.txt txt/_005195632.txt