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"spiritualty" Definitions
  1. SPIRITUALITY
  2. CLERGY
"spiritualty" Antonyms

9 Sentences With "spiritualty"

How to use spiritualty in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "spiritualty" and check conjugation/comparative form for "spiritualty". Mastering all the usages of "spiritualty" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Throughout you become newly aware of themes of rootlessness, isolation, disenfranchisement and — beyond that — an upward-reaching spiritualty in the music of Dylan, and you remember he was indeed a child of the Depression.
The two acts for the pardon of the spiritualty and temporalty were passed concurrently.
If we be of the spiritualty, there would be in us anothergates manifestation of the Spirit than is ordinarily to be found in the temporalty.
Abbot Francis Michael Stiteler and Prior Fr. Anthony Delisi meeting with one of several Lay Cisterican groups affiliated with the monastery. The Lay Associate movement began with a small group of people associated with Monastery of the Holy Spirit and led by Fr. Anthony Delisi, former abbott and current prior. These are groups of lay people who form a prayerful community that forms its members in Cistercian spiritualty. These groups make annual retreats to the Monastery.
Disillusioned with the Christianity practiced by his fellow Anglicans, he left the Mission quarters and took up residence in a little hut in Krishnagar where he devoted himself to the study of Bengali and Gaudiya Vaisnavism. His life of simplicity and seeking endeared him to his Indian neighbours. His contact with Bengali Hindus led him to the opinion that Protestant spiritualty was inadequate to meet the needs of his deeply spiritual Vaisnava friends. After serving seven years in Bengal, he returned to Ireland on home leave.
Moreover, Agrarianism usually links working the land with morality and spiritualty and links urban life, capitalism, and technology with a loss of independence and dignity while fostering vice and weakness. The agricultural community, with its fellowship of labor and cooperation, is thus the model society. Agrarianism is similar but not identical with back-to-the-land movements. Agrarianism concentrates on the fundamental goods of the earth, communities of more limited economic and political scale than in modern society, and on simple living—even when this shift involves questioning the "progressive" character of some recent social and economic developments.
In 1532, St. Germain published the Treatise Concerning the Division between the Spiritualty and Temporalty, a pamphlet purporting to mediate between the laity and the clergy, but, as Thomas More argued in a response, his Apology, actually interested in increasing the divide. St. Germain responded to More's Apology with the dialogue Salem and Bizance, to which More responded with his Debellation of Salem and Bizance in 1533. The following year St Germain published his Additions of Salem and Bizance, the final text in the dispute between St. Germain and More. A number of anonymous pamphlets, very likely written by St. Germain, appeared in the 1530s, before his death at the age of eighty in 1540.
In the same year he made an exchange of lands with the priory of Leeds in Kent, and appointed Lord De la Warr and others trustees for the execution of his will. Next year (1529) he was one of the witnesses called to prove the consummation of the marriage between Prince Arthur and Catherine of Aragon; he said that he was not then twelve years old. In the parliament of 1529 he was knight of the shire for Kent, and it was he who gave point to the complaints of the commons against the spiritualty with regard to probates of wills by the statement that he had paid to Wolsey and Archbishop Warham a thousand marks as executor to Sir William Compton. On 1 December he signed the articles brought against Wolsey in parliament.
King Henry VIII of England The historian of the Tudor period, Geoffrey Elton, has asserted that the "Tudor revolution in government" under King Henry VIII and his chief minister Thomas Cromwell has as its chief ingredient a concept of "national sovereignty".G. R. Elton, England under the Tudors. Third Edition (London: Routledge, 1991), p. 160. The Act in Restraint of Appeals 1533 famous preamble summarised this theory: > Where by divers sundry old authentic histories and chronicles it is > manifestly declared and expressed that this realm of England is an > empire...governed by one supreme head and king having the dignity and royal > estate of the imperial crown of the same, unto whom a body politic, compact > of all sorts and degrees of people divided in terms and by names of > spiritualty and temporalty, be bounden and owe to bear next to God a natural > and humble obedience.

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