[f. UBIQUIT-ARY + -ISM.] The doctrine of the omnipresence of Christs body.
1617. Collins, Def. Bp. Ely, II. x. 413. Vnles you wil be so wood now, as to adde brutish Ubiquitisme to your barbarous Cyclopisme.
1630. Donne, Serm., Easter-day (1640), 253. For he is risen; And if this be a good reason, there is no Transubstantiation, no Ubiquitisme, for then Christ might have been there, though he were risen.
1728. Chambers, Cycl., s.v. Ubiquists, G. Hornius will only allow Brentius to be the first Propagator of Ubiquitism.
1857. Pusey, Real Presence, i. (1869), 122. The Formula Concordiæ admitted very little of the Ubiquitism of Breur; but it retained the original Ubiquitism of Luther.