Chapter 35

undertakes to reconstruct society,11,37,38;his first dogma,31;his jubilee of priesthood,190;his sayings previous to the Council,231,232;his liberality,239;speech against the Opposition,391;refuses to receive address of 130 bishops,406;writes against bishops,429;excites their clergy against them,458;his chat,472;self-importance,476;further letters,481;forbids a High Mass for Montalembert,487;gives no access to the minority,530;approves of Saldanha for rebelling against his king,564;severity to bishops as to health,576;his tergiversation,612;offers to mediate between France and Prussia,650;how he likes to be addressed,651;appeals to King William for help,656;hoists white flag,659;foretells his restoration,699;re-opens the Roman question,706.Placet, royal, Tarquini's doctrine of,24ff.Plantier, Bishop of Nimea; favours an acclamation and dogmatising of the Assumption of the Virgin,204.Politics included in morals,17.Pope, sitting as supreme judge of princes and of laws,38,41,203,298;the Word of God,238;Abraham, Moses, and Christ,266;Cæsar,389,644;head of statesmen,456;intercessor between God and the world,582;continues the work of Christ on earth,591;head of both spiritual and temporal power,41,42;head of the human species,86;fountain of water of life,651;has the authority of God,651.Press, is Satan,315;correspondents of, lampooned,352;contradictions of,355.Priests, disfranchised,184.Procedure, Method of, in the Vatican Council,344,362,363,398,467,596,605,615,629.Pro-synodal congregations,249.Protestantism not a negation,602.Protestants, letters of invitation to,149.Pusey, Dr., valued as an ally by continental priests,218,430.Quatrebarbes, Bernard, the Crusader,622.Quélen, Count, the Crusader,139.Rauscher, Cardinal, opens discussion,359;laughed at by the majority,533;his argument on infallibility,534-536,582.Reconstruction of Society,37,249.Reform of Church in Head and Members,171.Regulars, uses of, to Papacy,77,78.Reisach, Cardinal, head of commission, for ecclesiastico-political affairs,131;his proposed code,132;appointed President of Council,250;death,348.Renan, his view of intolerance as essential to the Church approved at Rome, as against that of the Liberal Catholics,153,159,163.Rome, changes in,84;street lighting a ceremony,84;midday in,84;as seen by Veuillot,85;city of the saints,106;moral condition of,107;is modern to Orientals,149;is the city of three devotions,494.Rosary, its military virtues,243;it destroyed the Albigenses,243.Saints, new,117.Segesser, his plan of reform,331.Senestrey, Bishop of Regensburg, speech of, at Schwandorf,188;tales of,420;Manning's comrade on the deputation to harden the Pope's heart,614.Schoolmen, their methods for all time,44.Schrader, Father, the Jesuit, his propositions,713.Schwarzenberg complains of the theologians selected,181;his reception of Sepp,205;interrupted while speaking,496;on infallibility,547.Sibour, Archbishop of Paris, on new Ultramontanism,74.Society, the Pope the saviour of,145,190,456,647.Soglia, his doctrine according to Newman,126;his real doctrine,129.State, subordinate to Church,40,41,42,46,88,340,439,451.Stimmen aus Maria Laachon religious liberty,193.Strossmayer, attempts to speak on the Rules,333;called to order,362;extract of speech,363;on the official reports,364.Stumpf on religious liberty and on the freedom of the lawgiver from the command of the priest,210-213.Subjects more the subjects of the Pope than of their own sovereign,191.Sunbeams, doctrinal value of,3,264.Sword, doctrine of,244;seealsoCrusade of St. Peter.Syllabus, issue of,8;contents of43ff.;summary of its effects,51;confirmed by Pope,110;accepted by collective episcopate,114;Manning's account of its confirmation,121;cited byCiviltá,101;not the work of the Pope according to Dr. Newman,124.Table-talk, during the Council,417.Taigi, Anna Maria, the new guardian of the Capitol,247.Tarquini, Cardinal, a Jesuit, when a Professor hailed by Pius IX.,22;his doctrine of king and Pope,23ff;his doctrine of the sword,244ff.Temporal power of Pope necessary to his spiritual office,35,115.Theiner, Augustine, Prefect of the Vatican Archives, forbidden to show documents to bishops or theologians,377;his unsuccessful attempt to see Lord Guildford's MSS.,id.;his dismissal,340.Theocracy, contrast between the Mosaic and the Papal,21.Theologians, excluded from Vatican Council,311;forbidden to meet or consult together,313;attainments of Roman,344.Third party, attempt to form,459.Toleration, when to be allowed,31.Tribunals, the internal, external, and supreme,38,544,675.Ultramontanism, difference between old and new,74,75.Unitá Cattolica, abuse of Italy,188.Unity, Romish notion of,189.Veuillot, Louis, editor ofUnivers, a layman, on the grand results to be expected,85,86;on the press,86;wants bishops for Prefects of Provinces,267;sees in the future only 'the Pope and the People,'268;would not have ancient aristocracy restored,352,353;abuses correspondents of papers,353;lays down a policy for France,393;gives glory to M. Ollivier,460;histrueaccount of the scene between the Pope and the Patriarch of Babylon,462;watches the minority,625.Vicar of Christ, the office described,591.Virgin, the letter of, on infallibility,547.Vitelleschi, origin of his book,356;attacked in vain by theCiviltá,356;his view of the practical scope of infallibility,509.War, anticipations or threats of,82,208,210,341,349,389,445,454,500,539,610,669.Watts-Russell, the Crusader,588.Youth, Catholic, manifestoes of,354,441.


Back to IndexNext