This library is built in the open.
If you spot an error, have a suggestion, or just want to say hello — we’d love to hear from you.

Primitive Church: why and when its ministers collected tithes 16.1.
Primitive Church: its splendor 38.2.
Primitive Church: its usage does not apply to Monks 49.1.
Private church built at Rome 38.1.
Roman Church: its most ancient canons are trampled and crushed underfoot 68.1.
Roman Church: its liberality in the time of Cornelius 95.1.
Roman Church: lead referring to the leaden seals on papal documents 101.2.
Church revenues should not be spent on excessive splendor of temples and sacred furnishings 37.2.
Church revenues: how they were distributed in ancient times 75.2.
Church revenues: on what things they should be spent 77.1.
Church revenues: by what reason they can be attributed to boys and infants 137.2.
Church: its most useful expenses 38.1.
Church: dangerous times 33.1.
Union of the vacant Church of Terracina with the Church of Fondi 131.1.
Treasury of the Church 37.2.
Treasury of the Church: how it should be guarded 67.1.
Vacant churches: to whom they were commended in ancient times 130.1.
Precious vessels of the churches 38.1.
Administration of churches: most fortunate 127.1.
Fruits of churches are burdened with pensions 137.1. 2.
Rights of churches pertain to the Bishop's ordination 62.1.
Pomp of churches must be diminished 77.2.
Church property: from where it was enriched at the beginning 4.1.
Vacant churches: the ancient method of providing for them, while good, opened a wide path for frauds, craftiness, and deceit due to human malice 130.2.
Ecclesiastical goods: to be alienated for the benefit of Clerics, captives, and pilgrims 66.1.
Ecclesiastical goods: how they should be cared for 63.2.
Ecclesiastical benefices: to whom they should be given 121.1.2.
Ecclesiastical stipends: to be granted to those deserving of the Church through a request precariam a temporary grant/request 66.2.
Ecclesiastical distinction between leprosy and leprosy metaphorical: distinguishing between degrees of corruption 111.1.
Ecclesiastical man: what was his goal and his means in former times 9.2.
Ecclesiastical errors: those who should correct them imitate them 42.1.
Ecclesiastics should not demand the entire tithe of all revenues from the Laity 40.1.
Many ecclesiastics look back with the wife of Lot a reference to those who long for worldly goods they have ostensibly renounced 9.2.
Ecclesiastics emerge from the pallium the ecclesiastical vestment to the Diadem 41.1.
Ecclesiastics make themselves venerable by act, not by pride 40.2.
Avarice of ecclesiastics 35.1.
Avarice of ecclesiastics: restrained in vain by laws 43.2.
Gulfs of ecclesiastical goods 120.2.
A great crowd of idle and undisciplined ecclesiastics 128.2.
Disease of ecclesiastics 43.2.
Property of ecclesiastics 7.2.
Superfluous household of ecclesiastics eats the patrimony of the Church 126.2.
Efficacy of the divine word 34.1.
Ecclesiastical alms: how they were administered 4.2.
Alms: owed by justice 16.2.
Liberality of alms 38.2.
Almoners of ecclesiastical goods 82.2.
Decree of the Council of Mérida regarding the division of ecclesiastical revenues 76.2.
A Bishop cannot accept or promote another's Cleric 124.2.
A Bishop is fed from the goods of the Church and feeds the poor 62.2.
The Bishop was elected from the Clergy in ancient times 85.2.
A Bishop has the power in his own diocese to alienate ecclesiastical goods 64.1.
If a Bishop consumes superfluities for profane uses, he is obligated to restitution 82.1.
In three cases, it is permitted for a Bishop to break and sell the vessels of the Church 67.2.
Bishops lack priestly virtues 39.1.
Bishops must distribute tithes justly 62.2.
Bishops were elected with the consent of the people and the Laity 88.1.
Bishops should have dispensers of ecclesiastical goods 63.1.
Bishops should not exchange ecclesiastical possessions without the subscription of the Clerics 64.2.
Bishops have adopted the customs of heretics 29.2.
In the primitive Church, Bishops were not sustained by the goods of the Church, as they were rich from their own 8.1.
In the primitive Church, Bishops succeeded the Apostles in every duty 61.2.
Bishops have the power to found monasteries of Monks 66.1.
Ambition of the Bishop of London 99.1.
Bishops take great care of the least things, and little of the greatest 64.1.
Modern Bishops, occupied with delights, do not care for the damages to the Lord’s flock 30.2.
Modern Bishops are like roaring lions 30.2.
Bishops should not live like other Magnates 39.2.
Bishops should not walk in the manner of princes 41.1.
Bishops should not found churches without Monks to magnify their own burials 66.1.
Bishops are procurators of the things of others 75.1.
What Bishops take away from churches 77.2.
How Bishops should preserve ecclesiastical things 37.1.
How Bishops should rule their dioceses 37.1.
How Bishops are to be kept in office 65.1.
How Bishops should use ecclesiastical goods 62.1.
How Bishops now hunt for favor in the Roman curia 95.1.
By whom Bishops are to be corrected regarding the bad administration of ecclesiastical goods 63.1.
Bishops, or the provincial synod, should not make remunerations to those well-deserving of the Church 66.2.
Bishops are most like guests at a feast 82.1.
Bishops are the collators those who bestow/grant of ecclesiastical benefices 84.2.
Bishops are the ordinary collators of all benefices in their own diocese 86.1.
Bishops are the true and proper administrators of ecclesiastical goods 63.1.
How the superfluities of Bishops should be subdivided and distributed 81.2.
From where and how Bishops should live 6.2.
Bishops should not yearn for temporal gain and sacred ministries 29.1.
When a Bishop's testament can be held valid 146.2.
Avarice of Bishops has contracted the hands of the faithful 22.1.
Guards of the Bishops 41.2.
It is the duty of Bishops to examine Papal Bulls 71.2.
It is the duty of Bishops to distribute all ecclesiastical offices 85.1.
Happiness of Bishops 34.1.
Poverty of the Bishops of the earlier Church 7.2.
Ambition of Bishops 35.1.