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Example sentences for "church and"

  • And, therefore, they were a danger to Church and State.

  • He objected, like Wycliffe, to the union of Church and State.

  • He accused them of holding immoral principles dangerous to Church and State.

  • They have turned everything to account in Church and in Christendom for their own impious purposes.

  • At the same time, they were loyal to Church and State, had a great love for the Church of England, regarded that Church as the bulwark of Protestantism, detested Popery, and sometimes spoke of the Pope as the Man of Sin.

  • Mr. Saltonstall said the war did not a little demoralize the people, and that since the soldiers cause back, there had been much trouble in Church and State.

  • This was the mistress of the hospitable house of the country knight, whose chief traits were loyalty to church and state, a love of festivity, and an ardent attachment to field sports.

  • I suppose all other days were but a preparation for this golden autumn day on which we went to church and returned to the wedding-breakfast.

  • The Jesuits had, by commissions under the seal of their society, appointed Roman Catholic clergymen, noblemen, and gentlemen, to all the highest offices in Church and State.

  • He declared himself resolved to maintain the established government in Church and State.

  • He was resolved to maintain the established government both in Church and State.

  • Or why should he not come to church and hear?

  • Nothing could be further from his thoughts than to give any heed to the magistrates' order to go to church and pray "after the form of men's inventions.

  • The public mind was still in an excitable state, agitated by the wild schemes of political and religious enthusiasts plotting to destroy the whole existing framework both of Church and State, and set up their own chimerical fabric.

  • The highest place was naturally assigned to him, both in church and at table.

  • In 1461 he was made dean of Westminster, and henceforward his promotion was rapid in church and state.

  • Of higher literary value is the didactic and satirical Buch von der Tugend und Weisheit (1550), a collection of forty-nine fables in which Alberus embodies his views on the relations of Church and State.

  • The new birth of learning in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries had been followed by the strengthening and centralization of government, both in church and state.

  • Yet he did not propose to apply the only true remedy for this condition of things, which is the complete separation of church and state, combined with liberty of speech both for the clergy and the laity.

  • Again to church and so home, and all alone read till bedtime, and so to prayers and to bed.

  • In the morning at church and heard Mr. Mills.

  • To church and heard a good sermon at our own church, where I have not been a great many weeks.

  • Did Mistrust and Timorous run back for fear of the persecuting lions, Church and State?

  • All these were bitterly persecuted by the two lions-Church and Sate.

  • In Bunyan's time, under the monopoly of church and state, they were full of typographical errors, and at a high price.

  • I say, therefore, a church and a profession are not places where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves from God that seeks for fruit.

  • It was fought out in bed and at board, and in church and at market.

  • When any of the men tried to sass us we told them they'd tried for two years to build a church and it was our turn now.

  • But Sundays he'd drive his family to church and sit by that dog's grave and read his Bible all the time service was going on.

  • He said they all went to church and chapel.

  • Without any effort they struck out a distinction, which has puzzled learned men in church and state, the difference between serving a man and being his property.

  • The suppression of ten Irish Bishoprics, in defiance of Church opinion, showed how ready the Government was to take liberties in a high-handed way with the old adjustments of the relations of Church and State.

  • Doubtless, many thought and felt like them about the perils which beset the Church and religion.

  • Development of the idea of democracy in Church and State.

  • Connecticut's individual experiment in the union of Church and State is separable neither from the New England setting of her earliest days nor from the early years of that Congregationalism which the colony approved and established.

  • Practical working of the theory of Church and State in Connecticut.

  • The first, "Church and State in Connecticut to 1818," was presented to Yale University as a doctor's thesis.

  • When one of them owns a whole village, church and all, he is generally called "the Squire," but most of them are squired without the definite article.

  • Here is a man who cultivates a space which thirty Connecticut farmers would feel themselves rich to own and occupy, with families making a population of full two hundred souls, supporting and filling a church and school-house.

  • Here centre some of the richest rivulets of Scotch history, ecclesiastical and military, of church and state, cowl and crown.


  • The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "church and" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.


    Some common collocations, pairs and triplets of words:
    being now; church again; church and; church clerk; church communion; church fellowship; church life; church members; church membership; church music; church organization; church wedding; church work; conical form; economic value; future existence; how can; hundred dollars; hydrous silicate; international commission; invitation from; love them; opposite the; our old; our voyage; waxed paper