Synthesized answer
The provided passages do not contain any information about the book "The Burial of the Count of Orgaz" or any questions related to it. The passages discuss the Spanish Inquisition's condemnation of a scholar (likely a Bollandist) [1], the biblical figure Aaron and the priesthood [2][3], and the work of later Bollandists [4]. Therefore, no questions from that specific book can be answered.
If the question refers to unanswered questions within the passages themselves, the passages do not explicitly pose or leave any questions unanswered. They present historical and theological narratives without indicating unresolved queries.
In summary, the passages are entirely unrelated to "The Burial of the Count of Orgaz," so no questions from that book can be addressed. The passages themselves do not contain any unanswered questions.
Synthesized from the book passages below. Chat with the book on Feynman for follow-up.
From the book
planations, or secure the correction of the sentence, if his explanations were acceptable. His efforts proved fruitless. Having fallen seriously ill in 1701, and believing himself at the point of death, immediately after receiving the last sacraments he had a notary-public draw up in his presence and before witnesses a solemn protest which shows how greatly he was affected by the condemnation levelled at his head by the Spanish Inquisition. "After forty two years of assiduous toil, devoted to the elucidation of the Acts of the Saints, hoping to go to the enjoyment of their society, I ask only…
ensions of Core and the others, and, finally, the somewhat mysterious relation of his death, as it is found in Num., xx. From this analysis of the sources of his history Aaron's great personality has undoubtedly come out belittled, chiefly because of the reputation of the writer of the Priestly narrative; critics charge him with caste prejudices and an unconcealed desire of extolling whatever has reference to the sacerdotal order and functions, which too often drove him to exaggerations, upon which history can hardly rely, and even to forgeries. II. Priesthood. —Whatever opinion they adopt…
hat," said he, "has this people done to thee, that thou shouldst bring upon them a most heinous sin?" (Ex., xxxii 21). To this so well deserved reproach, Aaron made only an embarrassed answer, and he would undoubtedly have undergone the chastisement for his crime with the three thousand men (so with the best textual authority, although the Vulgate reads three and twenty thousand) that were slain by the Levites at Moses' command (Ex., xxxii, 28), had not the latter prayed for him and allayed God's wrath (Deut., ix, 20). In spite of the sin, God did not alter the choice he had made of Aaron…
o give an estimate of the work of these later Bollandists, having himself been a member of the body for too long a time. He is able, however, to cite the appreciations of the most distinguished and capable scholars in this field, who testify that the volumes published by the later Bollandists are in no wise inferior to those of their predecessors of the seventeenth an eighteenth centuries. The reservations made by certain critics in their commendation are generally due to the prolixity of the commentaries, which they think is often excessive, and to the timidity of certain conclusions, which…
17: Supplement I This work is in the public domain in the United States because it was published before January 1, 1931. This work may be in the public domain in countries and areas with longer native copyright terms that apply the rule of the shorter term to foreign works . Public domain Public domain false false