Difference between revisions of "John Barnes"

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John Barnes <ref name="term_23115" />  
 
<p> a Methodist Episcopal minister, was born Jan. 16, 1812. He became a [[Christian]] at the age of eighteen; soon after began a course of study at the Oneida [[Conference]] Seminary, and in 1840 entered the Oneida Conference. After several years of faithful labor, failing health obliged him to retire from active work, and he died March 24, 1847. See Minutes of Annual Conferences, 1847, p. 146. </p>
John Barnes <ref name="term_23122" />
==References ==
<p> an Englishman, who entered the Benedictine order at Douai partly from fear of the Inquisition. In 1625 he published at [[Paris]] a Dissertatio contra Equivocations, which received the approbation of the faculty at Paris. In 1630 his Catholico-Romanus [[Pacificus]] appeared at Oxford. His works gave great offense to the ultramontane party, and, at the request of [[Pope]] [[Urban]] VII, Barnes was sent to Rome by Louis XIII in 1627. He was at once confined in the Inquisition, and, after thirty years of imprisonment, died there. In his Catholico-Romanus Pacificus his design was to induce the pope to receive Anglicans to his communion, without requiring them to acknowledge dependence on the [[Holy]] See, until such time as a free and oecumenical council could be convoked to settle all differences '''''—''''' Biog. Univ. 3, 394; Landon, Eccl. Dict. s.v. </p>
 
== References ==
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<ref name="term_23115"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/barnes,+john+(2) John Barnes from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_23122"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/barnes,+john John Barnes from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
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Latest revision as of 09:05, 15 October 2021

John Barnes [1]

an Englishman, who entered the Benedictine order at Douai partly from fear of the Inquisition. In 1625 he published at Paris a Dissertatio contra Equivocations, which received the approbation of the faculty at Paris. In 1630 his Catholico-Romanus Pacificus appeared at Oxford. His works gave great offense to the ultramontane party, and, at the request of Pope Urban VII, Barnes was sent to Rome by Louis XIII in 1627. He was at once confined in the Inquisition, and, after thirty years of imprisonment, died there. In his Catholico-Romanus Pacificus his design was to induce the pope to receive Anglicans to his communion, without requiring them to acknowledge dependence on the Holy See, until such time as a free and oecumenical council could be convoked to settle all differences Biog. Univ. 3, 394; Landon, Eccl. Dict. s.v.

References