| Albert Henry Newman - 1894 - 550 sider
...off1ce or place of teaching, educating, or instruction of youth or child, in the college or school, that have manifested themselves unsound in the faith,...due satisfaction according to the rules of Christ." A few weeks later (June 10, 1654) .Dunster offered his resignation in the following form: " I here... | |
| Philip Schaff, Henry Codman Potter, Samuel Macauley Jackson - 1894 - 542 sider
...office or place of teaching, educating, or instruction of youth or child, in the college or school, that have manifested themselves unsound in the faith,...due satisfaction according to the rules of Christ." A few weeks later (June 10, 1654) Dunster offered his resignation in the following form : " I here... | |
| Daniel Wait Howe - 1899 - 476 sider
...for the Uneversety." The selectmen in each town were admonished to see that no teachers were employed "that have manifested themselves unsound in the faith, or scandalous in their lives & have not given satisfaction according to the Rules of Christ."2 The General Court in 1636 "agreed... | |
| United States. Bureau of Education - 1899 - 1384 sider
...ordinance was passed forbidding the continued employment of teachers who had manifested themselves " scandalous in their lives and not giving due satisfaction according to the rales of Christ." More than one hundred years later, in 1789, an act was passed making it the duty... | |
| 1902 - 758 sider
...of the boys and girls whom thev educate. The early New Kngland school was founded on tin* Kihle aud the catechism. Education was to be "not only in good...In 1717 Connecticut schools became parish schools aud in New Hampshire they were permissive. The reading books were the Psalter, the Testament, aud the... | |
| Maximillian Alfred Bussewitz - 1902 - 138 sider
...instructing of youth or child in the college schools, that have manifested themselves unsound in fayth, or scandalous in their lives, and not giving due satisfaction according to the rules of Christ."* The colonial grammar school accordingly taught Latin and a little Greek. Instruction was given in religion,... | |
| 1902 - 874 sider
...literature, but in sound doctrine ; consequently the Selectmen must see to it that none should be teachers that have manifested themselves unsound in the faith or scandalous in their lives. The duellist and the suicide were to be denied a Christian burial, the former to be buried without... | |
| Great Britain. Board of Education - 1902 - 662 sider
...forbidding the continued employment of teachers who had manifested themselves ''scandalous in thuir lives, and not giving due satisfaction according to the rules of Christ." More than one hundred years later, in 1789, an Act was passed making it the duty of instructors to... | |
| Edwin Grant Dexter - 1904 - 712 sider
...office or place of teaching, educating, or instructing of youth, or child, in the college or schools that have manifested themselves unsound in the faith...due satisfaction according to the rules of Christ." In 1671 the court for weighty reasons increased the fine for towns that failed to keep a grammar school... | |
| Columbia University. Teachers College - 1908 - 196 sider
...office or place of teaching, education, or instructing of youth or child in the college or schools that have manifested themselves unsound in the faith...due satisfaction according to the rules of Christ." <•*> This act is directed to the selectmen : and probably for three reasons, (i) They were as the... | |
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