Similar words: energy, allergic, clerk, ruler, emerge, gallery, killer, dealer. Meaning: ['klɜːdʒɪ] n. in Christianity, clergymen collectively (as distinguished from the laity).
Random good picture Not show
151. Without stimulation and vision, church musicians, clergy and congregations easily settle into the rut of the familiar.
152. A number of women were quite bitter about their futile attempts to get clergy to help.
153. Ann Landers always suggests to see your clergy or therapist.
154. It must recognise and rejoice that many of its clergy and thousands of its members are Christians first and Anglicans second.
155. Edwards throughout seemed to be doing little more than the droning clergy in sleepy towns did all along.
156. The role of defending the Church was assumed by the lower clergy, their chief spokesman being Francis Atterbury.
157. There had been a determined attempt to root out abuses among the clergy and to raise their intellectual calibre.
158. The clergy did not only minister word and sacraments; they also performed social roles for their flock.
159. The clergy, bigots and hypocrites, stirred up the people, he charged.
160. This was suspended during the Long Parliament in the middle of the seventeenth century but was restored by the Clergy Act 1661.
161. A January Party report in Roslavl' noted with glee that the local clergy were divided, even before the February decree.
162. For a time, none the less, the Congregationalist clergy closed ranks around the Suspect Mayhew against the great enemy that Caner represented.
163. In this case there was widespread support and sympathy from the overtaxed gentry and clergy.
164. Today, it continues its ministry of spiritual renewal of the church, attracting both clergy and laymen from home and abroad.
165. How do ministers and clergy approach the difficult task of coping with bereavement and funerals?
166. At all large services of a community nature he tried to ensure that both Protestant and Catholic clergy took part.
167. In between, the in-service education of the clergy continues apace with sabbaticals and reading weeks and retreats and the good-natured summer schools.
168. The Catholic clergy is sincere in its opposition to all abortion, by whatever procedure.
169. They are living together without benefit of clergy.
170. The clergy were sacred beings in Miss Ainley's eyes.
170. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and build good sentences.
171. A member of the clergy, especially a military chaplain.
172. After several weeks, when Abba and episcopal etc clergy attend a meeting, housekeeper rushed very alarmedly.
173. And Ireland's political class, once so priest-ridden, now distances itself from the clergy.
174. The large, redbrick vicarage was built in the days of more fecund clergy.
175. The clergy, on the other hand, were now claiming exemption from lay taxation.
176. John Wesley, when he saw the rising tide of patriotic fervor in America and the trend towards revolution, expressed his strong disapproval. So did the Anglican clergy.
177. The entire kingdom is ruled by the clergy, with the closest devotee or disciple of Set having the single most influential hand throughout the Stygian territory.
178. It is impossible that your own observation can have given you much knowledge of the clergy.
179. It was these exceptional privileges enjoyed by the clergy that brought King Henry into collision with Thomas Becket, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
180. America's Evangelical Lutheran church voted to allow gays and lesbians in long-term relationships to serve as members of the clergy, the largest mainline Protestant denomination to do so.