[f. UBIQUIT-ARY + -ISM.] The doctrine of the omnipresence of Christ’s body.

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1617.  Collins, Def. Bp. Ely, II. x. 413. Vnles you wil be so wood now, as to adde brutish Ubiquitisme to your barbarous Cyclopisme.

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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.

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1728.  Chambers, Cycl., s.v. Ubiquists, G. Hornius will only allow Brentius to be the first Propagator of Ubiquitism.

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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.

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