Definitionn. a policy of supporting the influence and power of the clergy in secular or political matters
Last update: October 24, 2015
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In common with the state of Michoacan, Morelia is a stronghold of clericalism and conservatism. [Please select]
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A crisis, either in the Church or in the economic world, might enable him to break through a certain atmosphere of traditional clericalism which now rather blurs the individual outline of his soul. [Please select]
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Though Cuzco is deemed, not less than Arequipa, a stronghold of conservatism and clericalism, modern tendencies can make themselves felt. [Please select]
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One source of dissension is, however, absent,--that struggle of the church and clericalism against the principles of religious equality which has distracted the Spanish-American republics. [Please select]
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Society was saturated with clericalism, and a taint of heterodoxy was more dangerous than one of disloyalty. [Please select]
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Even Mede, though the author of _Clavis Apocalyptica_ was steeped in the soulless clericalism of his age, could not support his brother-fellows without frequent retirements to Balsham, "being not willing to be joined with such company." [Please select]
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A radical by conviction, he felt that the salvation of Mexico could never be attained until clericalism and militarism had been banished from its soil forever. [Please select]
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