irreformable การใช้
- Some time after this, the Broederbond declared apartheid an irreformable failure and began work to dismantle it.
- :Banning is a drastic and extraordinary measure, and should be reserved for those who are both unambiguously disruptive and who have shown that they are irreformable.
- Brian Harrison argues that a censure of an unspecified nature is potentially subject to future clarification or reform, unlike an ex cathedra definition which is by nature irreformable.
- Their conduct in this respect is the more noteworthy because the Sixth General Council acted throughout on the assumption that the doctrinal definitions of the Roman Pontiff were irreformable.
- :Cardinal Poupard has also reminded us that the sentence of 1633 was not irreformable, and that the debate which had not ceased to evolve thereafter, was closed in 1820 with the imprimatur given to the work of Canon Settele . . ..
- {{ cquote | We teach and Divine Redeemer willed that his Church should be endowed in defining doctrine regarding faith or morals, and that therefore such definitions of the Roman pontiff are of themselves and not from the consent of the Church irreformable.
- When there is question of canons in the ordinary ecclesiastical sense ( namely, that which obtained before the Council of Trent ), as they refer principally to matters of discipline, it must be borne in mind that they are neither immutable nor irreformable.
- These include " irreformable " decisions on controversial topics, such as women's ordination, and canonizations and beatifications of controversial figures, such as recently beatified Pius IX . But the boldest strategy for binding the church's future has been to make public dissent increasingly unlikely.
- When that council declared that the pope has in the Church the plenitude of jurisdiction in matters of faith, morals discipline, and administration that his decisions " ex cathedra " are of themselves, and without the assent of the Church, infallible and irreformable, it dealt Gallicanism a mortal blow.
- And therefore his definitions, of themselves, and not from the consent of the Church, are justly styled irreformable, since they are pronounced with the assistance of the Holy Spirit, promised to him in blessed Peter, and therefore they need no approval of others, nor do they allow an appeal to any other judgment.
- Its existence prior to his time is proved by the intercalation of the Thursdays which interrupt the continuity of an harmonious arrangement, to which Gregory II paid no attention, though possibly he may rather have wished to respect it as a work thenceforward irreformable, as a traditional deposit which he refused to disturb and re-order.
- Wendy McElroy, an individualist feminist, wrote in 2001 that some feminists " have redefined the view of the movement of the opposite sex " as " a hot anger toward men [ that ] seems to have turned into a cold hatred . " She argued it was a misandrist position to consider men, as a class, to be irreformable or rapists.