How To Use Diocesan In A Sentence
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A good deal has been written about the need for accountability and transparency in diocesan transactions, financial and managerial.
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Besides this diocesan system of priestly pastoral care, there are two other administrative bodies of crucial importance.
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All 44 diocesan bishops and 10 suffragans were asked to attend the meeting to discuss October's Windsor Report, a document produced to examine the crisis.
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Besides this diocesan system of priestly pastoral care, there are two other administrative bodies of crucial importance.
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The lack of civility is very disturbing," said Terrence C. Donilon, the archdiocesan spokesman.
Catholic Blogs Aim To Purge Dissenters
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Among the Catholic institutions surveyed (including congregations of religious women and men, healthcare systems, and archdioceses and dioceses), the archdiocesan and diocesan responses were the weakest.
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In 1980 there were 44,000 students attending 30 archdiocesan high schools.
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The so-called diocesan process of his beatification was begun on 11
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 12: Philip II-Reuss
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While clergy and lay members of the national church voted to hand the question of blessing same sex relationships to a theological committee, the Diocese of Toronto is set to debate the matter at its diocesan synod this fall.
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At the same time, diocesan leaders must work especially hard to make clear the differences between a Mass and a Communion service.
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And in a recent column in the Catholic New World, the archdiocesan newspaper, he called for a renewed civility in debates in the church and in the wider culture.
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He called the diocesan office in search of a supply priest.
Archive 2006-03-01
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The archdiocesan plan for the city of Utrecht is to fuse all the current parishes into a single, multiple-location parish served by a pastoral team by 2010.
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The plea came from Lincoln cathedral succentor - the priest responsible for singing at the ancient minster - who is also warden of Edward King House, the Lincoln diocesan conference centre.
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The official charged with the execution of these duties is known as the diocesan chancellor.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
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A two day non-residential workshop designed to help you celebrate who you are will be held at the Diocesan Pastoral Centre, Bandra on June 14-15.
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It seems to me that it's been a long time since that was a working metaphor among diocesan clergy.
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Soon came the facsimile machine, and if there was not a machine at diocesan headquarters in Kenya, Ghana, or South Africa, there usually was one not far away.
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a diocese, which are called diocesan synods rather than councils.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
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When, as occurs at times, a priest of the prelature's clergy is called by the Holy Father to the episcopate, the same thing happens as with any diocesan priest: He ceases to be incardinated in the ecclesiastical circumscription from which he comes, although he continues to receive spiritual assistance from the prelature.
Archive 2008-03-30
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Besides this diocesan system of priestly pastoral care, there are two other administrative bodies of crucial importance.
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The spiritual peerage consists of the archbishops and diocesan bishops of the Church of England.
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An added point of interest, and a circumstance of which we were espacially glad, was that a seminarian friend of mine had brought some of his fellow alumni of the Bamberg archdiocesan seminary.
Mass at My Parish II - Reminiscere with German Seminarians
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Also during the summer months, one of the Diocesan students for the priesthood came to Lartington on placement.
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He has now been appointed a diocesan curate in Allen, County Kildare.
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The election has to be confirmed, or could be rejected, by diocesan bishops and diocesan standing committees.
Times, Sunday Times
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This new form was provided by the mendicant orders, the friars - mobile missionaries whose international organization cut clean through diocesan and parochial boundaries.
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There are already meetings scheduled to choose the bishops to fill six diocesan vacancies next year.
Times, Sunday Times
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The documents issuing from Rome and diocesan offices come across as totally abstract and divorced from real life.
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Few diocesan bishops can have met local Methodist leaders so often.
Times, Sunday Times
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Even today, diocesan regulations are as clear as they are widely ignored, e.g. this from Chicago: "A eulogy is never appropriate where a homily is prescribed (Order of Christian Funerals), but examples from the person's life may be used in the homily.
Bring Back Dies Irae
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His arguments have to do with a reading of the Constitution of the Episcopal Church, the fact that the forming bodies of the Episcopal Church were state conventions (later called diocesan conventions) and that the first dioceses, like the first states, were present before the union called the General Convention and never gave authority to a supra-diocesan entity.
PRELUDIUM
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It would be reassuring if a sample of these diocesan reports could actually be audited by outsiders, and a closer look taken in cases that seem to be statistically unlikely.
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Others suppose a particular church to be such a one as is now called diocesan, though that name in its first use and application to church affairs was of a larger extent than what is is now applied unto, for it was of old the name of a patriarchal church.
A Discourse concerning Evangelical Love, Church Peace, and Unity
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He's the diocesan bishop and he has three suffragan bishops to help him.
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A high-ranking archdiocesan official who oversaw priests was also charged with child endangerment over allegations he transferred accused clergy among parishes.
Catholic bishops keep abuse prevention policy
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Their vocational and pastoral activities formed an integral and intimate part of diocesan life.
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Historically, periods of upheaval in the church have always seen a recovery led first by the religious or monastic orders; the diocesan clergy and episcopal hierarchy then follow suit, returning to orthodoxy.
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Parish and diocesan pastoral councils, like presbyteral councils, are in place, but they do not seem to work very well.
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The local diocesan bishop is charged with enforcement of all these requirements.
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He had been due to appear before a diocesan Consistory Court on 21 charges of conduct unbecoming a clerk in holy orders and one of serious, persistent or continuous neglect of duty.
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At the same time, a life of dedicated celibacy would be properly respected and maintained in religious life and among those diocesan clergy who freely choose it.
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The remainder of the diocesan and archidiaconal records are held at the Lincolnshire Archives, which is the Diocesan Record Office.
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The reburials of the bones are to be take place with ‘a very low key service’ with prayers and blessings, said the diocesan spokesman.
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There are eleven eparchies or dioceses in the country, each administered by a metropolitan with a diocesan council; one diocese has also a suffragan bishop.
Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th Edition, Volume 4, Part 4 "Bulgaria" to "Calgary"
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He was ordained as a diocesan priest in the year 1984.
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Next to an official archdiocesan fundraising brochure, I found, early on a weekday morning, a small, homemade stack of leaflets in Spanish with a prayer to Saint Jude, ‘patron of work’
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He recognized the need for decentralized administration in the dual-titled diocese and was instrumental in gaining the approval of the diocesan synod in 1884 for two archidiaconal councils, a step towards the establishment of a separate coastal diocese thirty years later.
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Many of these lay candidates are already deeply involved in church ministry: in parishes, on diocesan staffs, as chaplains on campuses, in hospitals, and in jails.
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In August, O'Malley blocked access from archdiocesan headquarters to one of the critical blogs, the anonymously penned Boston Catholic Insider.
Catholic Blogs Aim To Purge Dissenters
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- stunning vestments, vessels and reliquaries from the diocesan museum
A Piece of Heaven on Earth: Bamberg
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On demanding an explanation of this unapostolic alliance, the diocesan received an indignant reply from the priest that he had mistaken his character, for he was incapable of aiding or abetting the sin of bigamy, and that all he had done was to pronounce a blessing for their living happily together until her husband should return.
Glimpses of Life and Manners in Persia
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In the 1960s I wrote a Catholic column syndicated to ten diocesan newspapers.
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In his archdiocesan magazine in early March 2010 the Cardinal said that the question of priest celibacy and the question of personality development needed to be looked at by the Vatican.
Christopher Brauchli: Papal Critics
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He combines his pastoral work at diocesan and national level with a keen interest in gardening.
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The teacher alerted the diocesan chancellor, Fr Alec Stenson, who referred him to Bishop O'Mahony.
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In order to assure that a priest has the rubrical and linguistic ability to celebrate the extraordinary form of Mass within the Diocese of Altoona-Johnstown, acknowledgement of such is to be obtained from our Diocesan Office of Liturgy.
Compilation of recent analyses of AJ TLM policy
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According to a diocesan official, the cost of installing new bronze bells has become prohibitive.
Times, Sunday Times
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Bureau dioc ‚ sain de d ‚ cimes (Diocesan Board of Tithes) was authorized to settle ordinary disputes.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 1: Aachen-Assize
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An apostolic adminisration, which is no: can be quasi-diocesan, normally would be.
Motu Proprio "Ecclesiae Unitatem" - in English
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Pamiers, by Jacques Fournier in 1318, for the extirpation of the remnants of Albigensianism in the Foix region; this document is most important for the history of the Inquisition, representing as it does, and perhaps in this instance only, that particular tribunal in which the monastic inquisitor and the diocesan bishop had almost equal power, as decreed in 1312 by the Council of Vienna.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 11: New Mexico-Philip
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In ten years, diocesan leaders have shrunk the number of parishes from 194 to 175.
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Although the financial arrangements are kept under constant review, it is expected that the diocesan's obligations will continue for many years.
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Diocesan bishops can dispense men from the obligations that go with the diaconate and suspend priests from the exercise of their order for a long or short period, but only the bishop of Rome can expel them from the priesthood.
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Very few men took clerical orders in the hope of devoting themselves to pastoral work at parish or diocesan level.
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He remained in Worcester for the rest of his ministry, working with three diocesan bishops.
Times, Sunday Times
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A diocesan spokesman, however, said neither man was on the track for the priesthood.
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Law announced ten days ago that the archdiocesan finance council had voted not to approve the deal.
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As I look back on decades of chairing parish and diocesan meetings, the book's purpose hits home.
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Each local context requires creative action that enables parish and diocesan leaders to promote a sense of belonging and ownership among Latinas and Latinos.
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It is the duty of each diocesan bishop to administer that law.
Times, Sunday Times
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There is a large diocesan college at Violet Hill near Newry which is under the patronage of St. Colman.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
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The courses themselves are run by the church, with significant participation by the diocesan bishop.
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Now Bishop David wants the fullest participation in formulating the Leeds diocesan response.
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These were the products of intellectuals, bishops, and churchmen who were nevertheless still connected with the diocesan and imperial courts, in some cases as chancellors.
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But in the present climate, his testimony and that of diocesan attorneys just won't suffice.
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He advised me to do what many others have done: to study secular law with the thought of, perhaps, eventually serving as a diocesan chancellor.
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Although the parish priest has no faculty from the law to confirm these people, he could seek from the diocesan bishop the concession of the faculty to confirm them.
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A diocesan bishop does not take on the role of father to fellow priests as an abbot does to monks.
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Teilo returned to Wales, and is said to have been elected to the archiepiscopate vacant by the death of St. David, and to have transferred it from Menevia (q.v.) to Llandaff (q.v.); but the more general modern opinion seems to be that in Wales at that epoch the episcopate was not yet diocesan.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
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As news about the archdiocesan report began to circulate, the pressure increased on Ray McGovern to abandon his protest.
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Since 1704 the chief bishop of the Anglican church, designated the Primus, is elected from among the Scottish diocesans.
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Thus, before his death, which occurred five years later, Theodore saw the diocesan system of the English Church fully organized under his primatical and metropolitical authority.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
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Bishop Patrick Walsh concelebrated Mass and performed the re-dedication ceremony on Sunday accompanied by the Diocesan Choir.
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The London diocesan synod was one of just two in the country that voted against the ordination of women bishops.
Times, Sunday Times
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Archer also writes: 'What is clear is that the diocesan is unable to consult over names (except presumably with the primate of his province), which makes his role in the process unnecessarily difficult.'
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He pointed out that by letting off most of the glebe land and pretermitting David's "pocket-money" he might secure a young and energetic Welsh-speaking curate, the remainder of whose living-wage would -- he felt sure -- be found out of the diocesan funds of St. David's bishopric.
Mrs. Warren's Daughter A Story of the Woman's Movement
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But you can't artificially bolster the numbers of men truly called to it by "bootstrapping" it to what is really a separate vocation the diocesan priesthood.
The "homosexualization" of the clergy in Latin America
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The particular aim of this present symposium was to help illuminate the image of the diocesan priest as "spiritual physician."
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The canonisation is the culmination of a detailed protocol after Cardinal Tisserant commenced the diocesan process for her beatification in 1953 and declared her a Servant of God.
The Hindu - Front Page
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Apostolic of the Western District, proposed to the community that they should abandon the monastic state and become a kind of diocesan seminary under himself.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
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This too may have its drawbacks, but at least a local appointee will have a fair knowledge of clergy and people and a sense of diocesan needs.
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A diocesan insider said: ‘They have come to the conclusion that the only way that peace can break out at the cathedral is for the dean to resign.’
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According to Haines, some 50 people followed Dixon, who was accompanied by several diocesan officials.
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His decision also didn’t get the backing of all members in his diocese, including Coadjutor Bishop Peter Jin Lugang and almost half the 21 diocesan priests.
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Verastique's study is, at best, a broad text-book like survey of pre-Hispanic religion and culture and of the Christianization programs of mendicants and diocesan clergy.
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Its Diocesan is Archbishop Gregorios, who resides in London.
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Due to the fact that the reorganisation of dioceses in the East had been considered since 1945 as a provisory structure, the Catholic Church envisaged from 1990 a new diocesan map, which would not concern itself exclusively with the East.
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A sum of over 800 was raised, which means that the committee will be able to send two invalids from the parish on the diocesan pilgrimage in May.
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Delegates from diocesan councils shall be elected to a national assembly of Roman Catholics empowered to oversee the well-being of the church in Canada.
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So who insures compliance with diocesan policies?
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Yet others, founded by kings or bishops as their own, were later known as ‘peculiars’, withdrawn from ordinary diocesan jurisdiction.
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12 (St Gregory must have taken a turn in his tomb) where the idea of diocesan autonomy is more clearly linked to the litigation taking place (or due to take place) in a number of dioceses - a topic bruited upon in the email thread gone public.
Undefined
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In 416 Augustine and his African bishops convened two diocesan councils to condemn him and Celestius, another Celt.
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Eddie was a member of the De La Salle order before joining the Diocesan priesthood.
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The Archbishop's comments have been made with the backing of at least two senior diocesan bishops.
Times, Sunday Times
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Yet a link was sometimes provided by music, where the cathedral organist was involved with diocesan music festivals and other events.
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Admitting the fact that in the West at any rate this is an unusual thing and that the ordinary normal method of extending the Episcopate is in the diocesan system, we must not forget that other methods have been used and have not been condemned by the Church as uncatholic.
Memorial of the Convocation of the Colored People in the Diocese of North Carolina Presented to the Diocesan Convention of 1916
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There he also had the responsibility of installing the diocesan bishops in Southern Province.
Times, Sunday Times
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A railroad baron then donated his property on Nob Hill for a diocesan cathedral.
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You that pictural of consolidation angelically with you and it voidance your own, eurocentric your blending for the screwbean. may be pathogenically archdiocesan for its compelling bazar, but its use of murkily fur is clammyweed the drug hectometer upturned with freebee to smolder.
Rational Review
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According to the convention between the Holy See and the Government, the diocesan bishops should have 22 auxiliaries: 3 for the metropolitanate of Mohileff; 3 for the Diocese of Kovno; 3 for Lutzk, Zhitomir, and Kamenetz; 3 for Vilna; 2 for Tiraspol; 2 for
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 13: Revelation-Stock
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Diocesan newspapers do not broadcast weaknesses in diocesan procedures or policies.
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Father Altier, a diocesan priest, but also a Carmelite Tertiary, was discalced.
You wouldn't believe what I saw this morning!
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Consequently many cathedral organists find themselves occupied increasingly with diocesan work.
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One of his prints also graces the entire back cover of the current issue of ‘Harvest’ - the Diocesan quarterly magazine.
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In occasional diocesan synods, they harangued their clergy and issued reforming regulations.
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Carlson's licentiate thesis (written at CUA in 1979*) was entitled The mission of the diocesan priest to preach in light of the Second Vatican
Insight Scoop | The Ignatius Press Blog:
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Many chapters have opened lines of communication with diocesan officials in an effort to find common ground but, in many ways, the rifts have only grown deeper.
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Priests from religious orders and the diocesan priests both ministered in that part of Down.
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The archbishops, 42 diocesan bishops and 69 suffragan or full-time assistant bishops cost the church a grand total of £14.3m during 2003, the figures show.
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The remaining cause of diocesan impecuniousness is put down to a “loss of investment income”.
The Diocese of Niagara: Passion for Justice and appeal for $750,000 « Anglican Samizdat
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Now, she spends her time gardening -- her meticulously maintained back yard is filled with hydrangeas, forsythia, spirea, lilacs and roses -- and attends the Greek Orthodox Archdiocesan Cathedral of the Holy Trinity in Manhattan when she feels up to it.
Nancy Ruhling: Astoria Characters: The Classic Educand
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He enjoys the same honorific privileges (with a few exceptions, viz. throne, cappa magna, mozzetta, and rochet worn without mantelletta, and crosier), pontifical ornaments, and titles, as does the diocesan.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne
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Father Cattaneo: Between institution and charism there cannot be contraposition -- as there is not between Christ and his Spirit -- but rather complementarity, the putting into action of which corresponds in a particular way to the diocesan bishop.
Archive 2008-05-18
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How do we strive for justice and peace in our work with these minority groups in our seminary and diocesan community?
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As in many other dioceses, there is no structured prison ministry at the diocesan level.
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Bishop Valentine strove to strengthen the ancient Faith among his people by calling a diocesan synod in 1539, at which he promulgated a number of decrees; but in vain.
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability
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The spiritual peerage consists of the archbishops and diocesan bishops of the Church of England.
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This week, we bring you an exclusive interview in which Jeremy Halcrow asks Dean of Sydney, and director of Ministry, Training and Development, Phillip Jensen about the implications of the new long-term diaconate and its relationship with the goals of the Diocesan Mission.
SA Latest News
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For more information on NFP classes, call the archdiocesan Office for Family, Laity, Youth and Young Adults at 651 291-4489.
Natural family planning classes offered in August
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If the dioceses were reorganised it might lead to fewer diocesan bishops.
Times, Sunday Times
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Aymond said he inquired and learned that despite archdiocesan prohibition, corporal punishment was and is expressly authorized in St. Augustine's handbook, administered with a piece of wood at the front of a class.
Archbishop wrestles with doubts on school paddling
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In the 1960s I wrote a Catholic column syndicated to ten diocesan newspapers.
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Over both parish and monastery were set the diocesan bishops, who were themselves subject to archbishops, archbishops to primates, and primates to the pope who stood at the apex.
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As came entirely naturally to him, the Bishop tapped as his resource person the chancellor of the diocesan marriage tribunal.
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Catholicism asks diocesan priests and any priest who serves as a pastor for obedience to their bishop.
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Two of that group subsequently became diocesan bishops, and the others fulfilled equally significant ministries.
Times, Sunday Times
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Diocesan bishops can dispense men from the obligations that go with the diaconate and suspend priests from the exercise of their order for a long or short period, but only the bishop of Rome can expel them from the priesthood.
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In all likelihood there will be no universal template for diocesan statements, but they could all comply with a certain set of standards for intelligibility.