首页 > 题库 > 考研考博 > 考博英语 > 哈尔滨工业大学 > 单选题

Though English was on the whole prosperous and hopeful, though comparison with her neighbors she enjoyed internal peace, she could not evade the fact that the world of which she formed a part was tom by hatred and strife as fierce as any in human history. Men were still far from recognizing that two religions could exist side by side in the same society; they believed that the toleration of another religion different from their own, and hence necessarily false, must inevitably destroy such a society and bring the souls of all its members into danger of hell. So the struggle went on with increasing fury within each nation to impose a single creed upon every subject, and within the general society of Christendom to impose it upon every nation. In England the Reformers, or Protestants, aided by the power of the Crown, had at this stage triumphed, but over Europe as a whole Rome was beginning to recover some of the ground it had lost after Martin Luther’s revolt in the earlier part of the century. It did this in two ways, by the activities of its missionaries, as in parts of Germany, or by the military might of the Catholic Powers, as in the Low Countries, where the Dutch provinces were sometimes near their last extremity under the pressure of Spanish arms. Against England, the most important of all the Protestant nations to reconquer, military might was not yet possible because the Catholic Powers were too occupied and divided: and so, in the 1570’s Rome bent her efforts, as she had done a thousand years before in the days of Saint Augustine, to win England back by means of her missionaries.
These were young Englishmen who had either never given up the old faith, or having done so, had returned to it and felt called to become priests. There being, of course, no Catholic seminaries left in England, they went abroad, at first quite easily, later with difficulty and danger, to study in the English colleges at Douai or Rome: the former established for the training of ordinary or secular clergy, the other for the member the Society of Jesus, commonly known as Jesuits, a new Order established by St. Ignatius Loyola some thirty years before. The seculars came first; they achieved a success, which even the most eager could hardly have expected. Cool-minded and well-informed men, like Cecil, had long surmised that the conversion of the English people to Protestantism was far from complete; many-Cecil thought even the majority-had conformed out of fear, self-interest or-possibly the commonest reason of all -sheer bewilderment at the rapid changes in doctrine and forms of worship imposed on them in so short a time. Thus it happened that the missionaries found a welcome, not only with the families who had secretly offered them hospitality if they came, but with many others whom their first hosts invited to meet them or passed them on to. They would and at the ports in disguise, as merchants, courtiers or what not, professing some plausible business in the country, and make by devious ways for their first house of refuge. There they would administer the Sacraments and preach to the households and to such of the neighbors as their hosts trusted and presently go on to some other locality to which they were directed for from which they received a call.
1.The main idea of this passage is (  ).
2.The religious strife mentioned in the passage is between(  ) .
3.What was Martin Luther's religion?
4.Through what way did the Rome recover some of the lost land?
5.What did the second paragraph mainly describe?

问题1选项
A.the continuity of the religious struggle in Britain in new ways
B.the conversion of religion in Britain
C.the victory of the new religion in Britain
D.England became prosperous
问题2选项
A.Reformers and Protestants
B.Catholic pours and Jesuits
C.Catholic powers and protestants
D.Martin Luther and St. Augustine
问题3选项
A.Buddhism
B.Protestantism
C.Catholicism
D.Orthodox
问题4选项
A.Civil and military ways
B.Propaganda and aback,
C.Persuasion and criticism
D.Religious and military ways
问题5选项
A.The activities of missionaries in Britain.
B.The conversion of English people to Protestantism was far from complete.
C.The young in Britain began to convert to Catholicism.
D.Most families offered hospitality to missionaries.
参考答案: 查看答案 查看解析 下载APP畅快刷题

相关知识点试题

相关试卷