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passive obedience การใช้

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  • Cameron was cordially disliked for his adherence to the doctrine of passive obedience.
  • In July 1683 he framed the Oxford declaration in favour of passive obedience.
  • Those were consistent with an extreme exponent of the High Church doctrine of passive obedience.
  • Many of his numerous printed sermons touched on the martyrdom of Charles I, and enforcing the duty of passive obedience.
  • A more subtle side to the argument is that it recognised that the oath had closed down the option of passive obedience to the king.
  • The two are seen as distinct but inseparable; passive obedience on its own only takes men back to the state of Adam before the Fall.
  • The most notable publication was Bishop George Berkeley's " A Discourse on Passive Obedience " on Christian Doctrine of not resisting the Supreme Power.
  • He resigned his fellowship at Lincoln College on 22 November 1683, devoted himself to his parish, where he preached the high church doctrine of passive obedience.
  • Another famous eighteenth-century usage appears in David Hume's 1748 essay " Of Passive Obedience ", although Hume argued that justice must occasionally be sacrificed to the public interest.
  • The Scottish theologian John Cameron's support for passive obedience at the start of the 17th century meant that he was principal of the University of Glasgow for less than a year in 1622.
  • A zealous advocate of the doctrine of passive obedience, he strongly opposed the Dantzic, 16 December 1677, which was printed along with South's " Posthumous Works " in 1717.
  • In fact Blackall was a consistent'revolution tory'and maintained the high-church doctrines of passive obedience and non-resistance to sovereign powers, while denying the Filmerian tenet of divine hereditary right.
  • In Calvinism, salvation depends on Christ's active obedience, obeying the laws and commands of God the Father, and passive obedience, enduring the punishment of the crucifixion suffering all the just penalties due to men for their sins.
  • One may view Berkeley s doctrine on Passive Obedience as a kind of  Theological Utilitarianism, insofar as it states that we have a duty to uphold a moral code which presumably is working towards the ends of promoting the good of humankind.
  • His arguments on the doctrine of passive obedience were assailed the same year by Dr . Robert Wallace, minister at Moffat, who characterises Erskine as  a venerable old man, of very great experience, and greatly distinguished for piety . 
  • But at the very heart of the bureaucracy this spiritualism turns into a crass materialism, the materialism of passive obedience, of trust in authority, the mechanism of an ossified and formalistic behaviour, of fixed principles, conceptions, and traditions.
  • Despite common perceptions and caricatures today of Arminianism, Arminius followed Calvin in being an advocate of the penal substitutionary theory of atonement as well as arguing for the active and passive obedience of Christ while diverging with Calvin and other reformed theologians on soteriology.
  • In the judgment Mrs Stuart as described as simply accepting the demands made upon her : " The evidence is clear that in all these transactions Mrs . Stuart, who was a confirmed invalid, acted in passive obedience to her husband's directions.
  • And thus public opinion ( " perfectly infallible " in questions of morality ) is not wed to any exceptionless rule of " passive obedience ", but is perfectly willing to " make allowances for resistance in the more flagrant instances of tyranny and oppression ".
  • Gerrard, like Barnes, argued against Gardiner's sermon on passive obedience, and both of them, together with another Lent preacher, William Jerome, vicar of Stepney, were ordered to publicly recant from the pulpit of St . Mary Spital in Easter week.
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