See also: Nonjuror Nonurgent Nanjing Nonjudgmental Nonjusticiable Non Nonjudicial Nonjudgement
1. Definition of Nonjuring : not swearing allegiance —used especially of a member of a party in Great Britain that would not swear allegiance to William and Mary or to their successors First Known Use of Nonjuring 1691, in the meaning defined above
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2. Nonjuring (adj) not swearing allegiance; -- applied to the party in Great Britain that would not swear allegiance to William and Mary, or their successors Etymology: [F
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3. Nonjuring (not comparable) (historical, Anglicanism) Describing the bishops, clergy and congregations that refused to swear allegiance to William III of England
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4. Nonjurancy definition is - the state of being a nonjuror : Nonjuring principles.
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5. Nonjuring meaning Describing the bishops, clergy and congregations that refused to swear allegiance to William III of England.
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6. The last Nonjuring bishop was Charles Booth, who died in 1805
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7. What does nonjurant mean? Nonjuring
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8. Nonjuring definition: (of a member of the clergy , etc) refusing the oath of allegiance Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples
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9. The enactment of a law on October 21, 1793 making all Nonjuring priests and all persons who harboured them liable to death on sight
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10. Jacobite and Nonjuring Principles Freely Examined in a Letter to the Master-tool of the Faction at Manchester with Remarks on Some Part of a Book Lately Published, Intitled, a Christian Catechism, &c
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11. Thenceforth there were two classes, the Nonjuring or refractory priests, who were faithful to Rome and refused the oath, and the jurors, sworn, or Constitutional priests, who had consented to take the oath
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12. The last Nonjuring bishop was Charles Booth, who died in 1805
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13. Bishop Thomas Ken (1637-1711), one of the original five nonjurors, wrote the famous doxology, “Praise God, from whom all blessings flow.” William Law (1686-1761), a Nonjuring priest, wrote the devotional manual, A Serious Call to a Devout and Holy Life (1728).
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14. Even in London, though Nonjuring "churches" were reckoned in 1716 at over fifty, the prologue to The Nonjuror mocked their furtive character: Each lurking pastor seeks the dark, And fears the Justices inquiring clerk
Nonjuring, Nonjuror
15. What is the definition of Nonjuring? What is the meaning of Nonjuring? How do you use Nonjuring in a sentence? What are synonyms for Nonjuring?
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16. Jacobite and Nonjuring Principles, Freely Examined in a Letter to the Master-Tool of the Faction at Manchester: With Remarks on Some Part of a Book to Be Wrote by Dr
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17. Jacobite and Nonjuring Principles, Freely Examined in a Letter to the Master-Tool of the Faction at Manchester: With …
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18. The Nonjuring schism was yet another of those great debates
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19. The Nonjuring secession was a grievous blow to the English Church
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20. The last ever Nonjuring publication, published as late as 1797 by Bishop William Cartwright (1730-99), who wrote its foreword
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21. The Nonjuring priests have sown division within almost all of the cantons of our department
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22. BRETT, THOMAS (1667–1743), Nonjuring divine, was the son of Thomas Brett of Spring Grove, Wye, Kent
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23. Download Image of Nonjuring - Free for commercial use, no attribution required
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24. Readings in Modern European History: A Collection of Extracts from the by James Harvey Robinson, Charles Austin Beard (1908) "Decree which the Nonjuring clergymen are constantly making to over- The deportation of Nonjuring ecclesiastics shall take place Definition
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25. The theology of the Nonjuring schism has been the subject of several insightful studies
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26. 1 Relatively little attention, however, has been devoted to the theological engagement of the Nonjuring laity
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27. 2 The theological contributions of Nonjuring women remain particularly neglected, despite the burgeoning literature on the role played by women in
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28. The Orthodox Church of the East in the eighteenth century : being the correspondence between the eastern patriachs and the Nonjuring bishops with an introduction on various projects of reunion between the Eastern Church and the Anglican Communion by Williams, George, 1814-1878
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29. The Orthodox Church of the East in the Eighteenth Century: Being the Correspondence Between the Eastern Patriachs and the Nonjuring Bishops With an the Eastern Church and the Anglican Communion [Williams, George] on Amazon.com
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30. English Nonjuring clergyman and author Works
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NONJURING [nonjuring]
A non-juror is a person who refuses to swear a particular oath: In British history, non-jurors refused to swear allegiance to William and Mary and their heirs or abjure the Stuarts; see Nonjuring schism In French history, non-jurors were clergy members who refused to swear an oath of allegiance to the state under...
'Non-Juror' is the term used for those who refused to take the 1688 Oath of Allegiance to the new monarchs, William III and Mary II. It also covers Non-Abjurors, who refused the Oath of Abjuration in 1701 and 1714, requiring them to deny the Stuart claim.
When George I became king in 1714, the majority of its members refused to swear allegiance to the Hanoverian regime, creating a split that lasted until the death of Charles Stuart in 1788. The Non-Juring movement in Ireland was insignificant, although it produced Jacobite propagandist Charles Leslie.
The schismatic Non-Juror Church was formed in 1693 when William Sancroft, former Archbishop of Canterbury, appointing his own bishops. His action was opposed by the majority of English Non-Jurors, who remained within the Church of England and are sometimes referred to as "crypto-Non-Jurors'.