Angels of the church, bishops, 75. Ark of Noah, name of church, 140.
angels addressed in prayer, 206. | Armenian church, origin and pro- Annulus sponsalitius, pronubus,
Annunciation, festival of, 440.
Ante-chambers of churches, 184. Ante-legomena, not read in pubiic, 229.
Assinaeii, Christians so called by their enemies, 45.
Aspersion, baptism by it, 276: term of reproach for Christians,
45. Attendamus, 112.
"Aios, ȧvažios, mode of taking a Attitude in devotion, 222, 24.
"Aɛo, term of reproach for Chris-
Augustine, a catechumen, 52.
Aurum tironicum, 143.
Bells, first used, 191: tolling of bells, 191, 412: baptism of them, 269.
Bema of a church, 182.
Bakers, Christians so called by Benediction and consecration by
Βιοθάνιτοι, Christians so called by
their enemies, 44: Christians de- nominated by their enemies, 44. Bishop, a universal hierarch, 79: his influence in the church government, 80: name of bish- op an honorary distinction, 98, 102: his duty to baptize, 270: to confirm, 290: to administer the Lord's supper, 307: import of the term, bishop, 74: official title of a presbyter, 74: bishops, their official duties, 77, 81, 238 -40 their badges of office, 81-4 several orders of, 84: their civil and ecclesiastical ju- risdiction, 81: the same as presbyters, 94-103: and pres- byters, their titles, 100: em- ployed as referees to settle dis- putes, 144. Bispilliones, 125.
Banns of marriage, 403. Baptism, ceremonies after, 105: names of it, 255: sketch,256: when instituted,256: Christian baptism, when intro- duced, 257: publicly adminis- tered, 257: in connection with the sacrament, 257: adminis- tered to the candidates naked, 257: custom of re-baptizing, baptism of heretics, 258: infant baptism, 52, 258-66: univer- sality of christian baptism, 259: views of German scholars,- Baumgarten-Crusius, Hahn, De Wette, Neander, Rheinwald, Gieseler, and Siegel, 259, 60: testimony of the fathers, 261— 66: Augustine and Cyprian,261: Origen, 262: Tertullian, 263: Irenaeus, 264: Justin Martyr, 266: household baptism, 266: baptism of the living for the dead, 267: persons to whom baptism was not administered, 267-9: by whom administered, 269 preparation for adminis- tering it, 271: by laymen, 271: time of administering it, 271: of bells, 269: place of baptism, 273: elements for it, 274: mode and form, 275: form of words, 277: preliminaries of baptism, catechetical instruction and cov- enant, 278: exorcism, 279: ceremonies after baptism: kiss of peace, chrism, clothing in white, burning tapers, washing of the feet, wearing of garlands, Candlemas, a festival, 440. etc. 281: baptisteries, 188, 273. | Canon, catalogue of clergy, 68. Βάπτω, βαπτίζω, Βαπτισμός, βαπ-| Canonici regulares, 64.
Black used in mourning, 415. Blood-baptism, 55. Boat of Peter, 180. Boots, badge of the bishops, 82, Bowing the head in prayer, 223. Bread of the eucharist, quality, 314: form, 315.
Burying of the dead, 408: burial places, 409.
Candidi, name of catechumens, 49. Calendar revised by Julius Caesar, 423.
Caligae, badge of bishop, 82, 148. Canons, apostolical, see Apostolical
Campanarii, campanatores, bell
Capellanus, 129. Cappellani, occasional offices in the
church, chaplains, 127. Cardinals, order of bishops, 87: origin and import of the term, 88: their different orders, their number, authority and power, 88-90.
Catholics, name of Christians, 42. Catechist, office of the bishop, 78 : an occasional officer in the church, 127: catechetical in- structions, 252: in baptism, 278. Catechumens, learners, 49: im- portance of this order, 50-56 : reason for their institution, 50, 56: age of admission, 51: term of instruction, 53, 57: different classes, 53, 57: mode of admis- sion, 54, 56: exercises, 54, 56
-7: place in church, 187. Catholico, an ecclesiastic of the Armenian church, 468. Celibacy of the clergy, 400. Cemeteries, 409, 421, 423. Chancel, cancelli, 183. Chant Gregorian, 124.
Chapels, court-churches, private oratories, 127. Chaplains, 127.
Chaplets, not worn in sacred mar- riages, 407.
Charitable contributions, 149. Xnga, widows, 45.
Children baptized at an early age, 52: church, 81. Choir of a church, 182. Chrism, 281.
Christian, name of, supposed to
prevent all sectarian divisions, 41: implies every blessing, 41: origin and import of the name, 40, 41. Christians, their rites, customs, and steadfastness of faith, 30: vene- ration for the Scriptures, 34: scriptural appellations, 39, 40: their various names, 40, 42: not so called as a religious sect, 42: numerous at Rome, 72.
Christians primitive, purity of the ir character, 40: held meetings before daylight, 30: worshipped Christ as God, 30, 34: their charity to the poor, 72: their places of worship, 177: how seated in church, 184: how summoned to worship, 191: met daily for worship, 248: con- stant attendance on the Sabbath, 248: their domestic and social character, 367: mode of life, 367: their dress and furniture, 369 their diet, and mode of taking their meals, 371: their daily devotions, 375: religious education of their children, 378: efforts to remind themselves of Christ, 380: their deportment in the business and recreations of life, 382: their mutual love, 384 their mode of salutation, 385, 394: their benevolence, care of the poor, 386: their at- tention to the sick, 387: their charities to their persecuted brethren, 390: their love for the souls of men, 392: their hos- pitality, 394: their patience un- der injuries, 307: encomium upon their virtues, their care for the dead, 408: their affection for the dying, 411. Christ, worshipped as God, 30: mystical names, 35: recognized as divine, 34 divine worship paid to him, 205, 206. Christmas, instituted in fourth cen- tury, 434: observed on different days, 434: reasons for celebra- ting Christmas eve, 435: mode of celebration, 435: veneration in which it was beld, 436. Xoiтogógot, name of Christians, 43.
Chorepiscopi, country bishops. ori- gin, name, 92: their office and influence, 93. Church, christian, its origin, 32:
derived from the Jewish, 33:
freedom of its worship, 33: claimed the right of solemnizing marriages, 400: organization from synagogue service, 45 : af- fairs of it not tried before judi- cial courts, 144: patronage, ori- gin of, 138.
Churches, their history, 176, 180: form and site, 180: position or aspect, 181: arrangement and constituent parts, 181: their names, 176, 177: origin of the name, 177: began to be built in second and third centuries, 177: seats for the sexes, 184: ante- chambers, 184: aisles, 185: nev- er used as market-places, or for courts of justice, exemption from taxation, 198: all levity and noise forbidden in them, 199: at Constantinople, ministers of, 73: extravagance in building them rebuked, 196, 197: ven- eration manifested for them, 197, 199 place of refuge, 198: bu- rial place, 195, 201: place of refuge for criminals, 200: vo- tive offerings in them, 195: erec- ted over over the graves of mar- tyrs, 208. Church-yard, a burial-place, 188: a place of refuge, 200, 201. Chrysargyrum, 143.
Chrysostom, remarks on dignity of ministerial office, 162: on duty of watchfulness in a minister, 162, 164: of hospitality, 163 : of study, 166, 168: on public preaching, 170: on private ad- dresses, 171: on duty of com- municants 311.
Cibus Dei, angelorum, coelestis, viatorum, mortalium, 296. Cimeliarchs, 129. Clergy, guardians of public morals, 142: subject to the bishop, 80: different orders, 73: superior and inferior, 68: their privileges and privations, 143: exemptions
from taxation, military duty, etc. 143: their costume, 144: their white dress, 145: their profes- sional garb first assumed by the monks, 146: their maintenance, 148, 152 derived from volun- tary contributions, 149: non- resident clergy not tolerated, 157 their ordination, 153, 161: disqualifications, 156, 158: mode of ordaining, 158, 159: prayer at their ordination, 160: their celibacy, 400: their responsible duties, 161, 173: the punish- ments of the clergy, 173, 176: suspension, 174: degradation, 174: exclusion from commu- nion, 175: imprisonment, cor- poral punishment,andexcommu- nication, 176: clergy and laity supposed not to have been dis- tinguished until the second cen- tury, 49, 67: derivation of the term, 66.
Clerical dress, always worn in offi- cial duties, 145. Clerici seculares, regulares, 63. Clericorum tabula, 68. Clinic baptism, 55, 268. Coena, sacra, Domini, 292. Collatio superindicta, 143, Comministri, 104.
Communio peregrina, laica, 175. Communion, see Lord's Supper. Commatres, 285. Concilia, conciliabula, conventicu- la, churches, columba, corpus Christi, 177.
Confession of faith taught, 253. Confirmation of baptized persons, duty of bishops, 78: whether derived from apostolic usage, 288: its connection with bap- tism, 289: by whom adminis- tered, 290: mode of administra- tion, 291. Consecration of the elements, ex-
clusive right of the bishop, 77: of clergy, duty of bishop, 79.
Constantine, zeal in building Dead buried facing to the East,
Constitutions, apost. see Apostoli- cal Constitutions. Convivium Dominicum, 292. Copiatae, grave-diggers, 125. Corpus Christi, 296.
Corpse, mode of laying it out, 411. Costume of the clergy, 144: white, 145, 147: fashion and color ofteu changed, 146, 147: derived from Greeks and Romans, 147. Councils, their origin and design, 356: extent of their jurisdiction, 359: their organization, 361: the members of them, 363: oe- cumenical, 365. Covering of the head in prayer,224. Creed, of Irenaeus, 252. Cross, worn by bishop, 83: car-
ried in gestatoria, 83. Crouch-mas-day, 424. Crowning parties at their espou- sals, 404 at their marriage, 406. Culdei, 64.
Custos, Custor, 126. Cure of souls, duty of presbyters, 106 of the bishop, 77.
Deacon, derivation of the office, 71: deacons seven in number, 72: rank and duties, 107: first ap- pointment, 108: two officers in the N. Testament of this name, 108-9: deacons, adjutants of the bishop, 109: their arrogant pretensions, 109: readers in the sacrament, 111: monitors of public worship, 112: occasional preachers, 112: their right of suffrage, 113: guardians of the morals both of the clergy and the laity, 113: received and dis- bursed the charities of the church, 113: ordination, 159. Deaconesses, 29, 45: ceased in the fifth century, 65, 118: their names, 115: duties, 116-18: their requisite age and qualifi- cations, 116-17.
415: commemorated by festi- vals, 416: prayers for the dead, 417.
Dean, origin of the name, 107. Death, a joyful event, 413, 414. Decalogue taught, 253. Sendõuer, 112, 220. Degradation of clergymen, 174. envα noixada of the primitive Christians, 31. Δεῖπνον κυριακὸν, 292. Aidaoxalia, 237.
Aidάozaλoi, teachers, 45, 69, 70. Demoniacs, class of Christians, 61: place in church, 188: not bap- tized, 267. Διάκονος, διακονία, 107-8: δικόνσ σαι, 115.
Diaconicum magnum, 189. Δικανικον, 82.
Dies Solis, Lunae, etc. 425: man- dati, mysteriorum eucharistiae, panis, indulgentiae, 437. Dignitas, 68.
Diocese governed by bishop, 80. Diognetus, description of early Christians, 43.
Disciplina arcani, system of secret instruction, 34. Disciplina, 338.
Discipline of the church, right of its members, 61: administered by presbyters, 105. Discipline of the ancient church, Preliminary remarks, 330: se- verity of it, 347: impartiality of it, 352.
Divinity of Christ, 29, 30, 34, 205. Divine rules of the christian church, 402.
Dogmatics, name of Christians, 43. Dogmatists, name of the clergy, 68. Dominicum, domus Dei, 177. Doors of the church, number,
form, inscriptions upon them, etc. 194 closed in time of ser- mon, 243. Door-keepers, their rank and du-
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