How to use in-sentence of “excommunication”:
+ But a new conflict followed because Henry IV thought the end of excommunication meant he was king again.
+ An interdict against a country was the equivalent of excommunication against an individual.
+ The rebellious German nobles used the excommunication of Henry to set up a rival king, Duke Rudolph of Swabia.
+ With excommunication and a revolt by his dukes, Henry apologized and was forgiven, though the conflict continued.
+ This was after Luther’s excommunication by Pope Leo X and his refusal to give up his beliefs at the Diet of Worms.
+ In some churches, excommunication includes the belief that the person who was exocommunicated is going to Hell.
+ After “Anna Karenina”, Tolstoy concentrated on Christian themes, and his later novels such as “The Death of Ivan Ilyich” develop a radical Christian philosophy which led to his excommunication from the Russian Orthodox Church in 1901.

