2019 Cinderella’s innocent colloquies with her all-knowing birds never failed to crack me up.
Peter Coy,, Of course, any congressman-law professor colloquy risks breaking the logorrheic scale.
2020 An additional 10,000 have since listened to the recording of the colloquy with Joyce Barnathan, president of the International Center for Journalists. 2020 Leach said during a news conference colloquy with this New York Times reporter, drawing some Mississippi State faithful to Twitter’s ramparts.Īlan Blinder, New York Times, 2 Oct.
2021 Milius concentrates on conservative patriots, yet her colloquy of all those involved in creating or fighting the coup highlights the varied countenances, plus their camera-ready expressions, that reveal an unexpectedly broad, adversarial America.Īrmond White, National Review, 9 Dec. Joan Acocella, The New York Review of Books, While there is inevitably a performative dimension to the colloquy between these two figures who have spent so many years on the public stage, Obama and Springsteen are also both deeply introspective.ī, 25 Mar. 2021 And the superb Baryshnikov somehow turns his body to stone, ending the colloquy. Retrieved December 24, 2016.Recent Examples on the Web Charlie and Joanie’s colloquy in the thoroughfare is also a mutual reassurance that the other’s dream has value. Christian History Institute (originally in Christian History Issue 81, 2004). Turning Point: Luther’s Lost Opportunity.
The colloquy took place from October 1–4, 1529. Because the theological disagreement over the Eucharist among Protestants, which had existed since 1524, was preventing such alliances, Philip called the colloquy in order to resolve the issue and clear the way for an alliance. Philip, the landgrave of Hesse, believed this to be a threat to survival of Protestantism and believed a Protestant political alliance was necessary to protect against any threats. In the second Diet of Speyer in April 1529, a Roman Catholic majority passed a resolution against the Reformation. Political impetus and initiation of colloquy Others, such as Ulrich Zwingli believed that communion is a memorial and a sign, and that Christ is spiritually-but not physically-present in the elements. Some Reformers, such as Martin Luther believed that Christ's body is present in and with the elements, but not physically. Despite this, however, they were not united on the issue. Due to the lack of a biblical basis for this doctrine, it was rejected by the Reformers.
By the time of the Reformation, the Roman Catholic Church adhered to the doctrine of transubstantiation, which teaches that the bread and wine of communion would literally become the body and blood of Jesus Christ.