Conciliarism - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Conciliarism , or the conciliar movement , was a reform movement in the 14th and 15th century Roman Catholic Church which held that final authority in spiritual matters resided with the Roman Churc...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conciliarism
Encyclopedia article about Conciliar Movement. Information about Conciliar Movement in the Columbia Encyclopedia, Computer Desktop Encyclopedia, computing dictionary. ... More to the point, it suggested the eventual solution with the emergence of a conciliar movement that triumphed at Constance.
encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Conciliar+Movement encyclopedia2.thefreedictionary.com/Conciliar+Movement
Lectures for A Medieval Survey ... The Great Schism ... Lynn H. Nelson...
www.the-orb.net/textbooks/nelson/great_schism.html
The Conciliar Movement was a Christian reform movement in the 14th and 15th centuries in the Roman Catholic Church which held that final authority in spiritual matters resided with the Church as corporation of Christians, embodied by a general church council, not with the Pope.
simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conciliar_movement simple.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conciliar_movement
The conciliar movement of the late fourteenth and early fifteenth centuries was an attempt to modify and limit papal control over the Church by means of general councils.
histories.cambridge.org/extract?id=chol9780521243247_CH... histories.cambridge.org/extract?id=chol9780521243247_CHOL9780521243247A021
Hutchinson encyclopedia article about conciliar movement. conciliar movement. Information about conciliar movement in the Hutchinson encyclopedia. ... Whereas the present conciliar movement as characterized by the World Council of Churches functions more in the tradition of the Oxford Faith and Order Conference of 1937,
encyclopedia.farlex.com/conciliar+movement encyclopedia.farlex.com/conciliar+movement
Eventually causing the schism and conciliar movement, the corruption of those leaders of the Catholic Church was caused by a question of who had more power, the king or the pope? ... The Conciliar Movement begins in order to create a church council to regulate power of the papacy, end the abuses, and end the schism.
www.essays.cc/free_essays/c4/cay131.shtml
The Conciliar movement is connected with the nature of the relationship between the papacy and the bishops of the Roman Catholic Church. At its heart has been the conviction that an ecumenical or general council, representative of the whole body of the church, is superior to the Pope.
protestant-truth.org/protestantism/romancatholicismarti... protestant-truth.org/protestantism/romancatholicismarticle6.html
by this present council of Constance", i.e. of the one convoked on 4 July 1415. The intent of the words "in a conciliar way" is, on my reading, to distinguish the true [ecumenical] council from the false one.
www.piar.hu/councils/ecum16.htm
Interesting quote on Reformed Catholicism, from Paul Avis’ new book: Beyond the Reformation? Authority, Primacy and Unity in the Conciliar Tradition.
heraldsandperegrines.wordpress.com/2008/03/04/the-conci... heraldsandperegrines.wordpress.com/2008/03/04/the-conciliar-tradition/