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 Lateran council - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Second Council of the Lateran (1139) declared clerical marriages invalid, regulated clerical dress, and punished attacks on clerics by excommunication.
The Fourth Council of the Lateran (1215) dealt with transubstantiation, papal primacy and conduct of clergy.
The Lateran councils were ecclesiastical councils or synods of the Catholic Church held at Rome in the Lateran Palace next to the Lateran Basilica.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Lateran_Council   (224 words)

  
 Oecumenical Councils
Lateran IV This council was convened to condemn the dualist heresy of Albigensianism.
The council issued decrees that repeated the teaching of Lyons II on the effective culpability of original sin to the extent of seeming to define this; characterized the practice of circumcision as mortal sin; and that condemned all non-Catholics to eternal damnation.
Martin’s successor, Eugene IV, convened an Oecumenical Council in Basel, Switzerland, in 1431A.D; in accordance with the decree of Constance.
www.geocities.com /pharsea/OecumenicalCouncils.html   (9175 words)

  
 AllRefer.com - Lateran Council, Second (Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: Councils And Treaties) - Encyclopedia
Lateran Council, Second, 1139, 10th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church, convened at the Lateran Palace, Rome, by Pope Innocent II.
Among the council's canons were prohibitions of clerical concubinage and marriage and of the use of bows and crossbows in fighting Christians; simony and usury were also condemned.
Lateran Council, Second, Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: Councils And Treaties
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/L/LateranC2.html   (222 words)

  
 Second Council of the Lateran - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The second Lateran, and tenth ecumenical council was held by Pope Innocent II in April 1139, and was attended by close to a thousand clerics.
The council was also significant for its outlawing the use of crossbows in wars between Christians.
Its immediate task was to neutralize the after-effects of the schism, which had only been terminated in the previous year by the death of Antipope Anacletus II (d.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Second_Council_of_the_Lateran   (180 words)

  
 Second Lateran Council - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Second Lateran Council was called by Pope Innocent II in 1139 as an attempt to reunify the church after the two papacies.
One of the purposes of the council was to remove the evils of an eight-year schism, and it seems more than merely probable that the Pope was not content with this only, but went a step farther to prevent the repetition of such a schism from that particular contributing cause.
We decree that that which was enacted in the Council of Chalcedon (canon 22) be inviolately observed; namely, that the possessions of deceased bishops be not seized by anyone, but that they remain in the hands of the steward and the clergy for the needs of the Church and his successor.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Second_Lateran_Council   (3640 words)

  
 Lateran Council
The third Lateran Council, the 11th ecumenical council, was convoked in 1179 by Pope Alexander III and attended by 291 bishops who studied the Peace of Venice (1177), by which the Holy Roman emperor, Friedrich I. Barbarossa (1123-1190), agreed to withdraw support from his antipope and to restore the church property he had seized.
The second Lateran Council, the 10th ecumenical council (1139), was convoked by Pope Innocent II.
The purpose of the council was twofold: reform of the church and the recovery of the Holy Land.
www.hfac.uh.edu /gbrown/philosophers/leibniz/britannicapages/LateranCouncil/LateranCouncil.html   (621 words)

  
 Lateran Councils
The Second Lateran Council (1139) was convoked by Pope Innocent II to reaffirm the unity of the church after the schism (1130-38) of the antipope Anacletus II (d.
This was the law enacted in a council at the Lateran in 1050, which restricted the election to the cardinals.[4a] To them alone it belongs, henceforth, to elect the pope, and a majority of their votes is essential and sufficient.
The Lateran councils were five ecumenical councils of the Roman Catholic church held during the 12th, 13th, and 16th centuries at the Lateran Palace in Rome.
mb-soft.com /believe/txs/lateran.htm   (16763 words)

  
 CATHOLIC LIBRARY: The 21 Ecumenical Councils
Summary: The Second Council of Nicaea was convoked by Emperor Constantine VI and his mother Irene, under Pope Adrian I, and was presided over by the legates of Pope Adrian; it regulated the veneration of holy images.
The Council of Constance was held during the great Schism of the West, with the object of ending the divisions in the Church.
Summary: The Third General Council of Constantinople, under Pope Agatho and the Emperor Constantine Pogonatus, was attended by the Patriarchs of Constantinople and of Antioch, 174 bishops, and the emperor.
www.newadvent.org /library/almanac_14388a.htm   (1188 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Second Lateran Council
The council likewise condemned the errors of the Petrobrusians and the Henricians, the followers of two active and dangerous heretics, Peter of Bruys and Arnold of Brescia.
The pope opened the council with a discourse, and deposed from their offices those who had been ordained and instituted by the antipope and by his chief partisans, Ægidius of Tusculum and Gerard of Angouleme.
The council promulgated against these heretics its twenty-third canon, a repetition of the third canon of the Council of Toulouse (1119) against the Manichaeans.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/09017a.htm   (540 words)

  
 Pope Innocent II
By the Second Lateran council of 1139, at which Roger of Sicily, Innocent's most uncompromising foe, was excommunicated, peace was at last restored to the church.
www.eurofreehost.com /po/Pope_Innocent_II_2.html   (150 words)

  
 Second Lateran Council- WordWeb dictionary definition
The second council of the Western Church in 1139 which put an end to the dogmatic errors of Arnold of Brescia
www.annlewis.net /en/SECONDLATERANCOUNCIL   (21 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Fourth Lateran Council
The long interval between the convocation and the opening of the council as well as the prestige of the reigning pontiff, were responsible for the very large number of bishops who attended it, it is commonly cited in canon law as "the General Council of Lateran", without further qualification, or again, as "the Great Council".
The fathers of the council did little more than approve the seventy decrees presented to them; this approbation, nevertheless, sufficed to impart to the acts thus formulated and promulgated the value of ecumenical decrees.
The council did in fact meet on 11 November, and its sessions were prolonged until the end of the month.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/09018a.htm   (832 words)

  
 To Tell You The Whole Truth - The Church: The 21 Ecumenical (General) Councils of the Church
This Council declared the infallibility of the Pope, and reaffirmed the teachings of the Church.
Declared that the teachings of the Council of Pisa were invalid since it did not have the Pope's approval.
It declared the authority of the Pope to be superior to that of a General Council.
www.scborromeo.org /truth/c2.htm   (545 words)

  
 Under Gregory X - Lyons-2
Since it neither was nor is our intention that prelates in coming to the council should associate the virtue of obedience with the oppression of their subjects, we admonish prelates one and all with great firmness, that none may presume to use the council as a pretext for burdening his subjects with taxes or exactions.
With the approval of the sacred council {8}, we decree that if the pope dies in a city where he was residing with his curia, the cardinals present in that city are obliged to await the absent cardinals, but for ten days only.
The pope promulgated a collection of the council's constitutions on 1 November 1274, sent this to the universities with the bull Cum nuper, and informed all the faithful in the encyclical Infrascriptas.
www.ewtn.com /library/COUNCILS/LYONS2.HTM   (8950 words)

  
 Second Lateran Council - 1139 A.D.
In Lent of 1139 a general council was summoned by Pope Innocent II and held in the Lateran basilica {1}.
The pope and the council fathers, following the example and mind of Pope Gregory VII, took up a good many canons which had been established by previous councils, with a view to restoring ecclesiastical discipline to an unblemished state.
However, there is a doubt as to its ecumenicity for the same reasons that affect Lateran I. The Roman church, which for a long time had been divided in its obedience between Innocent II (1130-1143) and Anacletus II (1130-1138), seems to have overcome schism and factionalism, and indeed to have recovered its peace.
www.dailycatholic.org /history/10ecumen.htm   (2857 words)

  
 Medieval Sourcebook: Medieval Legal History
Second Ecumenical: Constantinople I, 381 canons and commentary on the First Council of Constantinople from Volume XIV of Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers.
Council of Altheim: Bequests of the Clergy, 916
The Quinisext Council (or Council in Trullo), 692, canons and commentary on the Council in Trullo from Volume XIV of Nicene and Post Nicene Fathers.
www.fordham.edu /halsall/sbook-law.html   (4132 words)

  
 Christian Heresies of the Twelfth Century
These errors were all condemned by the Second Council of the Lateran in 1139.
They soon fell into error an were condemned as heretics by numerous synods and councils, but especially by the Third Council of the Lateran in 1179.
Condemned by the Third Council of the Lateran in 1179.
www.religion-cults.com /heresies/twelfth.htm   (281 words)

  
 Lateran Council
Lateran Council can refer to one of several ecumenical councils:
This is a disambiguation page; that is, one that points to other pages that might otherwise have the same name.
pedia.newsfilter.co.uk /wikipedia/l/la/lateran_council.html   (66 words)

  
 The Not So Diabolical Crossbow: A Re-Examination of Innocent II’s Supposed Ban Of The Crossbow at the Second Lateran Council by Monte S Turner (Book) in Books > Humanities > History & Geography > Medieval Studies
Historians have for years declared that Innocent II banned the crossbow at the Second Lateran Council because the weapon struck terror into the upper crust of European society.
The Not So Diabolical Crossbow: A Re-Examination of Innocent II’s Supposed Ban Of The Crossbow at the Second Lateran Council
The Not So Diabolical Crossbow: A Re-Examination of Innocent II’s Supposed Ban Of The Crossbow at the Second Lateran Council by Monte S Turner (Book) in Books > Humanities > History & Geography > Medieval Studies
www.lulu.com /content/59220   (218 words)

  
 elequipodelpueblo.com :: tournaments :: Jousts And Tournaments
The History of Protestantism - Volume Second - Book Seventeenth...
Book 17 of Wylie's works covering Protestantism in France from the death of Francis I (1547) to...
www.elequipodelpueblo.com /tournaments/jousts_and_tournaments.html   (207 words)

  
 Medieval Sourcebook: Twelfth Ecumenical Council: Lateran IV 1215
In the Lateran Council regulars were forbidden to receive churches and tithes from the hands of laymen without the consent of the bishops, and under no circumstances to admit ad divina those excommunicated or nominally under interdict.
With much foresight it was prohibited in the Lateran Council that no one should, contrary to the sacred canons, accept several ecclesiastical dignities or several parochial churches; otherwise the one receiving should lose what he received, and the one who bestowed be deprived of the right of collation.
The council approves the existing order of the patriarchal sees and affirm, three of their privileges: their bishops may confer the pallium and may have the cross borne before them, and appeals may be taken to them.
www.fordham.edu /halsall/basis/lateran4.html   (12630 words)

  
 First Epistle to Timothy
The epistle consists mainly (1) of counsels Timothy regarding the worship and organization of Church and the responsibilities resting on its members; and (2) of exhortation to faithfulness maintaining the truth amid surrounding errors.
The First and Second Epistles to Timothy and the Epistle to Titus
The First Epistle to Timothy is a book of the Bible New Testament.
www.freeglossary.com /1_Timothy   (180 words)

  
 MAJOR COUNCILS OF THE CHURCH: (councils.htm)
The Second Council in Constantinople condemned the "Three Chapters" which was a collection of statements by three deceased disciples of the deposed Nestorius.
Lateran IV also condemned as anathema once more the heresies of Albigensianism, which taught marriage and the sacraments were not needed, and Waldensianism, which taught that the laity could perform the same duties as a priest when said priest was in mortal sin.
This Council's main docket was the attempt to reunite with the Eastern Church, but it was only temporary and the schism grew wider after the solidification of the Dogmatic Filioque in which it was reaffirmed emphatically that the Holy Ghost proceeds from both the Father and the Son.
www.dailycatholic.org /history/councils.htm   (2468 words)

  
 The Fourth Lateran Council - Dr. Herb Samworth
The Fourth Lateran Council was the twelfth ecumenical council recognized by the Church and the most important one before the Council of Trent that met from 1545 to 1563.
To understand the importance of this council, it is necessary to note the conditions under which it met, the person who called it, the decrees of the council, and their results.
That council was known as the Fourth Lateran and was convened by Pope Innocent the Third.
www.solagroup.org /articles/historyofthebible/hotb_0008.html   (1818 words)

  
 Lateran Councils
The Second Lateran Council (1139) was convoked by Pope Innocent II to reaffirm the unity of the church after the schism (1130-38) of the antipope Anacletus II (d.
This was the law enacted in a council at the Lateran in 1050, which restricted the election to the cardinals.[4a] To them alone it belongs, henceforth, to elect the pope, and a majority of their votes is essential and sufficient.
The Lateran councils were five ecumenical councils of the Roman Catholic church held during the 12th, 13th, and 16th centuries at the Lateran Palace in Rome.
mb-soft.com /believe/txs/lateran.htm   (16763 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Second Lateran Council
The pope opened the council with a discourse, and deposed from their offices those who had been ordained and instituted by the antipope and by his chief partisans, Ægidius of Tusculum and Gerard of Angouleme.
The council promulgated against these heretics its twenty-third canon, a repetition of the third canon of the Council of Toulouse (1119) against the Manichaeans.
The council likewise condemned the errors of the Petrobrusians and the Henricians, the followers of two active and dangerous heretics, Peter of Bruys and Arnold of Brescia.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/09017a.htm   (540 words)

  
 Second Lateran Council - 1139 A.D.
In Lent of 1139 a general council was summoned by Pope Innocent II and held in the Lateran basilica {1}.
The pope and the council fathers, following the example and mind of Pope Gregory VII, took up a good many canons which had been established by previous councils, with a view to restoring ecclesiastical discipline to an unblemished state.
However, there is a doubt as to its ecumenicity for the same reasons that affect Lateran I. The Roman church, which for a long time had been divided in its obedience between Innocent II (1130-1143) and Anacletus II (1130-1138), seems to have overcome schism and factionalism, and indeed to have recovered its peace.
www.geocities.com /Heartland/Valley/8920/churchcouncils/Ecum10.htm   (2855 words)

  
 The Ecole Initiative: Early Church Documents
Lateran Council II, 1139: Dealt with Arnold of Brescia's attempt to refound the Roman Republic, and with his theological views.
SECOND ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Constantinople, 381: Completed the Nicene Creed; defended the divinity of the Holy Spirit, opposing Macedonius.
Council of Basle, Ferara, and Florence, 1430s: An attempt to reform the Church and to reunify East and West; the great Byzantine theologian Mark of Ephesus was present, and later led Eastern opposition to the reunion.
www2.evansville.edu /ecoleweb/documentscou.html   (860 words)

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