The fiscal gave this as an instance of the contempt of the count for the censures under which he pretended that he had fallen, as the principal instigator of the first revolt.
The 2nd article commanded that an edict should be published, accompanied with censures against those who did not accuse themselves voluntarily during the term of grace.
The theological censures likewise attack works on philosophy, on civil and natural law, and on the people.
St. Augustine did not suppose that the freedom of opinion would be opposed by such theological censures as the qualifiers of the holy office have established in modern times.
Ecclesiastical censurescannot be employed to defend the said jurisdiction.
That the Inquisition should not make use ofcensures in civil affairs.
While the archbishop was at Valladolid in 1558, he demanded that the theological censures of his works should be communicated to him, that he might reply to them, and give any satisfaction required of him.
By a loyal decree the bishop of Troya was notified that he must raise the censures that he had laid upon the alcaldes-mayor, the collectors [of tribute], and the rest of the officers of justice throughout the bishopric of Cagayan.
They damn themselves; nor will my muse descend To clap with such, who fools and knaves commend: Their smiles and censures are to me the same; I care not what they praise, or what they blame.
Aristotle here cites and censures the definition of life given by a philosopher named Dionysius; he remarks that life is an equivocal term, having one meaning in animals, another and a different one in plants.
Moreover, he insists emphatically on the distinction between the intelligible and the sensible world, which distinction he censures Aristotle for neglecting.
Some of the surviving Templars retired to monasteries, others returned to the world and assumed secular habits, for which they incurred the censures of the Pope.
Dennis and Rhymer think his Romans not sufficiently Roman; and Voltaire censures his kings as not completely royal.
Lessing alsocensures this Fable on the ground of the partnership being contrary to nature; neither the cow, the goat, nor the sheep feed on flesh.
Bentley censures this line, and thinks it spurious.
Hence we’re inevitably blind, Relating to the Bag behind; But when our neighbours misdemean, Our censures are exceeding keen.
Charlotte, confronted with these two Deputies, praises the grave firmness of Duperret, censures the dejection of Fauchet.
For this reason, those passages which conveyed censures on the people of England were struck out, lest they should give them offence.
The rubric directs that the ordinary shall proceed against the offender according to the Canon, that is to say, by such ecclesiastical censuresand punishments as can be inflicted.
He justly censures Cato, for want of action and of characters; but scarcely does justice to the sublimity of some speeches, and the philosophical exactness in the sentiments.
Long ago the heaviest censures of the Church ought to have been launched upon him, and by that time he would have returned to his obedience.
Insurrection and controversy, foreign leagues, and Papal censures did not exhaust the number of his difficulties.
One has only to read thecensures of St. Bernard and of Innocent III to learn of the cupidity and the lust.
The archbishop's affection for his nephew led him to sanction the king's divorce from Ingeborg of Denmark and his marriage to Agnes of Méran, which drew on France the papal interdict, and on William of Champagne the censures of Innocent III.
A monk lapses into a sin meriting the most severe punishment, justly censures the same fault in his abbot, and thus evades the penalty.
Guglielmo Borsiere by a neat retort sharply censures avarice in Messer Ermino de' Grimaldi.
Bergamino, with a story of Primasso and the Abbot of Cluny, finely censures a sudden access of avarice in Messer Cane della Scala.
Neither have we been careful to preserve the discipline, church censuresbeing laid aside, and not impartially exercised against scandals, personal and public.
Any subsequent commands are censures upon God's omniscience, and are deserving only of contempt.
Yea, must such things as these, be the basis on which you build those heavy censures and condemnations you raise against your brethren, that cannot comply with you, because you want the word?
Hence note, that the censures of good men are dreadful, and not lightly to be passed over, whether they prophesy of evil or good; because they speak in judgment, and according to the tenor of the word of God.
The archbishop treated thosecensures as invalid, for the judge-conservator's jurisdiction did not extend to the trial of that question.
For that purpose he fulminated censures against the judge-conservator, demanding from him the prisoner, and ordering him to make no further search for the protest, as that was outside his jurisdiction.
The greatest evil was that he died impenitent, refusing to be absolved from the excommunication and censures by which he was bound, although the archbishop, as a pious shepherd, sent a priest to his house to persuade him to be absolved.
They carried the torch into that meeting, making the encounter between the governor and the archbishop a political matter; consequently, they expressed the opinion that the censures should not be raised under any circumstances.
Therefore, and because of other defects in what had been enacted, they proved that the censures did not bind the commander of artillery, or any one else.
After the arrest of the notary, the judge-conservator fulminated new censures against the archbishop, ordering him to annul the protest.
The latter continued to urge his censures against the archbishop, who, destitute of all aid, determined to surrender and withdraw the acts.
He accepted the appointment, and immediately erected a tribunal against the archbishop, issuing acts against him and fulminating censures in case he should again oppose the proceedings that had been commenced.
He absolved the governor and the auditor Zapata from the censures ad cautelam, for there were innumerable invalidities in the censures, as they did not observe the citations and legal terms.
As the judge-conservator was declared by the Audiencia to be legal, he proceeded, constraining the archbishop with censures so that he should furnish an official statement of the acts issued against the Society.
Meletians and Paulinians to concord, and prevent private persons from anathematizing or branding others with the crime of heresy or schism; censures being reserved to the chief pastors, who are very sparing in using them.
These censures were taken off when she and the king had sworn upon the gospels, in the council of Poitiers, never to live together again.
Whatever there is most awful in religion, most sacred in an oath, or most tremendous in the censures of the church, is employed in the process of canonization to elicit truth and detect falsehood.
Sulpicius suffered much from the censures of friends, who condemned his retreat, having chosen for his solitude a cottage at Primuliacus, a village now utterly unknown in Aquitaine, probably in Languedoc.
I am sorry now for having done so, though on reading my censures over again I find that in many places I was right.
That's a joke which should bring the censures of the Church upon you.
I armed her against the censures of the world, shewed her that books were sweet unreproaching companions to the miserable, and that if they could not bring us to enjoy life, they would at least teach us to endure it.
There seemed indeed something applicable to both sides in this letter, and its censures might as well be referred to those to whom it was written, as to us; but the malicious meaning was obvious, and we went no farther.
Yet he censures the Egyptian meanness and inhospitality to strangers.
For must they not have the same effect as when a man associates with bad characters, whom he likes and approves rather than dislikes, and only censures playfully because he has a suspicion of his own badness?
And we, we shall not lay it to the heart if any one censures us, because the Homeric poems contain the basis of evil things, if we ascribe to him various political, ethical, and scientific discussions.
There is another form when any one pretends to praise another and really censures him.
He at least accords us the virtues of our defects, and, among the many visitors who have censured us, he has not seen us with his censures prepared to fit the instances; in fact, the very reverse has been his method.
Many of the instances which he fits with his censures are such as he could no longer note, if he came among us again.
To be young again] The ladycensures her own levity in trifling with her jester, as a ridiculous attempt to return back to youth.
Shallow, with an old man's vanity, censures the innovation by which lighter weapons were introduced, tells what he could once have done with his long sword, and ridicules the terms and rules of the rapier.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "censures" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.