How To Use Parish In A Sentence

  • A notice posted on the chapel of Carrigtwohill, calling one of those meetings, warned such as absented themselves that they would be marked men, as there was famine in the parish, and they should have food or blood. The History of the Great Irish Famine of 1847 (3rd ed.) (1902) With Notices of Earlier Irish Famines
  • The cathedral is the former Perpendicular parish church, reconstructed in 1880, with further extensions completed in 1966.
  • Dustin Archibald, 21, of Denham Springs surrendered to Livingston Parish sheriff's deputies on Thursday. Louisiana Trail-Cam Thief Says He Was Protecting Deer
  • The cost of maintenance of parish cemeteries are available at the church doors.
  • At their recent meeting the Parish Council were disturbed to find that both these bills have increased substantially.
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  • Hurling supporters in neighbouring parishes are scouring local GAA officials in the hope of getting a ticket to the September 12 Final.
  • He did not rest content with a mere strict fulfilment of the pecuniary obligations to the Church to which the Concordat had bound the State; in 1803 and 1804 it became the custom to pay stipends to canons and desservants of succursal parishes. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 10: Mass Music-Newman
  • The parish hall dates back to 1837 and was the original church for the Brentwood Parish of St Mary and St Helen.
  • Priests have appealed to all parishioners to attend the celebration to honour a lady who is a highly respected and popular member of the community.
  • It's a view the parish council holds to this day - and one with which the Highways Agency agreed.
  • Fr. Michael McManus delivered a lovely homily, reflecting on various aspects of Michael's life and his contribution to the life of the parish.
  • Hundreds of parishioners were working with bare hands, shovels and harrows, extending the church by burrowing out a crypt.
  • In the absence of either the ordinary or the parish priest, the law requires that two witnesses shall sign the sponsalia.
  • O most gentle pulpiter! what tedious homily of love have you wearied your parishioners withal, and never cried 'Have patience, good people!' As You Like It
  • He is one of the few clergy who knows everyone who lives in his parish.
  • The canon law assumed that cathedral had five or more bells, a parish church two or three, while the churches of the medicant orders, like public oratories, were originally limited to one. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 2: Assizes-Browne
  • The functions which may be exercised by parish, town and community councils are nearly all concurrent functions with district councils.
  • It came to mind recently that it might be good to once again mention the use of antependia, or altar frontals, as a consideration for our parish priests. The Vested and Robed Altar - Symbolism of the Antependium
  • But the signs, which cost the parish £215, will not be re-erected because members reversed their policy after being bombarded with complaints.
  • On the afternoon of the Saturday in Easter week, say these writers, the priests of the eighteen principal 'deaconries' -- an ecclesiastical division of the city long ago abolished and now somewhat obscure -- caused the bells to be rung, and the people assembled at their parish churches, where they were received by a 'mansionarius,' -- probably meaning here 'a visitor of houses, '-- and a layman, who was arrayed in a tunic, and crowned with the flowers of the cornel cherry. Ave Roma Immortalis, Vol. 1 Studies from the Chronicles of Rome
  • In 1540 he had licence to impark the Lyveden estate in Aldwinkle St. Peter's parish, where the "New The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner
  • Material possessions and the means of measuring them by reference to groats, shillings or florins were forbidden in the Holy Parish.
  • All farmers, landowners and parish councils in the National Park can apply for grants from the money which has come through Yorkshire and Humber Regional Development Agency.
  • Cadfael found something so significant in that arrow-straight progress towards the church that he followed, candidly curious and officiously helpful, and finding Rafe of Coventry standing hesitant by the parish altar, looking round him at the multiplicity of chapels contained in transepts and chevet, directed him with blunt simplicity to the one he was looking for. The Hermit of Eyton Forest
  • He spent 33 years as a parish councillor, 24 of them as parish council chairman.
  • Masham Parish Council wanted to add uplighters to the stone bridge over the River Ure at a cost of about £4,500, but the scheme is strongly opposed by North Yorkshire County Council whose officials say it would be illegal.
  • Oddly enough morning stars have other names as well, being called “holy water sprinklers” due to the fact that they somewhat resemble the aspergillum used by the church to sprinkle parishioners with holy water, and “goedendag” or “good day”. SciFi, Fantasy & Horror Collectibles - Part 1043
  • Anti-clerical knights of the shire who wished to disendow the Church, riotous tenants of an unpopular abbey, parishioners who refused to pay their tithes, would often be called The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 9: Laprade-Mass Liturgy
  • The Marlborough community area comprises 26 parishes in the north east of the Kennet district.
  • It was first considered as a mere succursal chapel of Notre Dame parish.
  • God-forsaken parish on a Government job, and I happen on a whole shopful of ancient remains. News from the Duchy
  • Rob leads prayers twice a month at Greenfield Baptist and Congregational Church in Urmston, Trafford, because the parish can't afford a vicar of its own.
  • Here also there was an ambitious programme of church building in the twelfth century, as favoured churches and chapels were transformed into parish kirks.
  • The banns were published in their local parish church.
  • In Britain many were based on parish churches or, especially, Nonconformist chapels; the celebrated Huddersfield Choral Society was founded in 1836.
  • Chairman Alex Carder told the parish council that a carol service had been held in the chapel at Christmas.
  • Tom was particularly captivated by the children of the parish, who seemed so joyful despite their poverty and despite the war.
  • The Cardinal was greeted on arrival 46 years ago by a great concourse of parishioners who had gaily decorated the roads leading to the new church with bunting and scrolls, many of which were Irish.
  • Only if ye could compass a harmonious call frae the parish of Skreegh-me-dead, as ye anes had hope of, I trow it wad please him weel; since I hae heard him say, that the root of the matter was mair deeply hafted in that wild muirland parish than in the Canongate of Edinburgh. The Heart of Mid-Lothian
  • The priest visited all the old people in the parish.
  • The vicar of the parish, Banks, is excessively sentimental about the church and is constantly importuning Stannard with hesitations and objections.
  • At the parish level, the fear of schism ensured that the church remained a militant one, committed to the policies of Catholic reform first promulgated by the council of Trent.
  • Over one million people (about 43% of the total) live in Kingston, Saint Andrews, and Saint Catherine, the main urban centers, while Trelawny Parish has the lowest density with 83 inhabitants/km2. Water profile of Jamaica
  • The name also appears repeatedly in the parish registers from 1562 onwards.
  • That that personage now in possession of the bishop of Bristoll Deane of Yorke (it being an indowment of the said Deanerie) such slender care hath bene had by him for the preaching of the Gospell unto the said parishioners, and giving them that Christianlike and necessarie instru [~c] on which is fitting, as for a long time they scarce had any sermon at all amongest them. The Evolution of an English Town
  • The success of the parish draw depends on the support of the community.
  • Set on a hilltop, it is the northernmost of the the four churches in the parish.
  • He is suddenly appointed rector of a wealthy, old-established and very beautiful parish in the heart of rural Wiltshire.
  • This was a heavily populated region of numerous towns and nucleated villages, with dispersed patterns of landholding, small parishes and manors, and political power shared between the nobles, rich merchants, and a prosperous gentry.
  • Congratulations to all the children from the parish who received their first Holy Communion.
  • Priests have appealed to all parishioners to attend the celebration to honour a lady who is a highly respected and popular member of the community.
  • There is also a third tier of parish councils, with minimal powers.
  • The activities at parish, classical, and provincial level would be co-ordinated by a national synod and by Parliament.
  • The Parish Council have asked me to express their grave concern that such an incident could have occurred at all.
  • Now, Jerry, my throoper, do you think I'm come to this time o 'day, not to know that there's no man in Ballykeerin, or the parish it stands in -- an' that's a bigger word -- that could be called a betther man that Art Maguire? Phelim Otoole's Courtship and Other Stories Traits And Stories Of The Irish Peasantry, The Works of William Carleton, Volume Three
  • Passing over the parish boundary at Sunderlandwick, the old toll bar is on the right, and Bar Farm opposite.
  • The conference sought support for the creation of a new network of parishes within the church.
  • District council deputy leader Chris Humphries from Aldbourne is one of the few councillors who sits as a member of all three local authorities at parish, district and county level.
  • Thereafter, Hopesay Parish Council has maintained the tree dressing custom, which is unique in Britain.
  • Archbishop Neary recalled that the men and boys of the surrounding parishes had carried stones, timber and cement to the summit during the construction of the oratory in the early 1900s.
  • An unfair apportionment limited upcountry representation in the legislature and gave the parishes more power than their population warranted.
  • We country bumpkins are older and wiser and financially poorer now because of increased parish rates.
  • Such demographic changes wrought by industrialism meant the decline of rural parishes and the creation of a new urbanised and industrial poor.
  • Amazingly no one was killed, and the parish priest then led the children and adults of the village in a kind of exorcism, imitating the noises of the helicopters.
  • At no other time was the pulse of prayer so powerful in his parish.
  • Bishop Donal McKeown administered the sacrament of confirmation to children in the Parish on Thursday.
  • By mid-February the archdiocese had yet to release its report on the parish, and he was beginning to worry.
  • As she was trying parishilton and britney spears regain her composure he pulled her up on her knees and pressed his semi-hard cock to her serrate lips. on January 29, 2007 at 6: 54 pm | Reply Demi Moore desnuda gratis With Friends Like These….. « POLICE INSPECTOR BLOG
  • An introductory meeting will be held in the sacristy of the Parish Church, tonight Tuesday 1st October at 8.00 pm, and all are welcome.
  • From the late 14th century until the early 16th century woolmen based in Northleach collected the wool from Turkdean for sale to London merchants and the agents of European wool buyers whose appreciation of the quality of Cotswold wool percolated into significantly increased prosperity for the Northleach merchants and the sheep-based farmers of the surrounding parishes.
  • Neil Parish, Conservative MEP for the South West, said the case was sad and politically motivated.
  • Evangelicals claim to contribute more than 40% of the £400 million raised for the church by parishes each year.
  • Commemorative wall plaques and mugs in celebration of 150 years of St. Conleth's Church are available in the Parish Office.
  • William Jefferson, known to be less than scrupulous (the FBI found $90,000 in cash in his freezer, and the intimation is that he is connected to some shady individuals from South America), re-elected to Congress in a landslide, primarily due the rantings of the autocratic sheriff of Jefferson Parish. Think Progress » Chertoff Learned of Levee Failure 36 Hours After Mayor Nagin?
  • He noted the incidence of barrows reused as Saxon cemeteries and other Saxon burials on or near parish boundaries in Wessex.
  • 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.
  • One of the joys of being a rural county councillor is online access to the 1880 and 1905 OS maps which can be overlaid on the current OS map; thus arguments over should it be ‘the Strand’ or ‘Strand’ have been resolved for a parish council, and old street names have been resurrected and given to new developments on the site where they ran. Satnav, democracy and dumbing down
  • There will be more music in the gardens of All Saints Church in the Market Place with traditional jazz in the parish church gardens.
  • Landowners in Winterbourne Monkton had an Act of Parliament passed in 1813 to enable them to enclose common land in the parish.
  • It was a large tent, as big as a parish marquee, and though both its wide entrances had been brailed back there was no wind to stir the damp air trapped under the high ridge. Sharpe's Tiger
  • If anyone has a problem about transport they are advised to get in touch with any member of the parish pastoral council or phone the parochial house.
  • The next in the series of annual novenas to Our Lady of Perpetual Help will be held in the parish church on the June 9.
  • Twentieth-century blue-blood decorator Sister Parish, America's version of Ms. Castaing, was asked once why she had put a worthless giltwood curtain finial atop a lovely antique clock in her entrance hall. The Decorator's Decorator
  • Certainly the name Borrow appears in Parish records as early as 1690.
  • Those deeply entrenched in parishes are seeking to upgrade their abilities by attending workshops and colloquia on chant and its stylistic descendants. How to Hire a Parish Musician
  • On another front renewal too for the Ballina Parish Council to cope with the unprecedented growth in the parish population.
  • The next morning, parishioners lucky enough to attend churches not downsized by pedophilia payouts, consulted freshly plasticized pew cards for the new wording of their Mass. Kate Clinton: Et Cum Spirit Two Two Oh
  • On 27th June 1665 he left London to escape the Great Plague and settled at Hersham, having been appointed churchwarden at the parish church of Walton-upon-Thames.
  • Michael "clotheshorse" Brown may consult for Da Parish! Your Right Hand Thief
  • Congratulations to all the children of the parish who received their first Holy Communion on Saturday.
  • In addition to offering many opportunities for individual auricular confessions, twice or three times a year the parish offered the opportunity for communal services of forgiveness.
  • Everybody in the parish who was not a boatman was a quarrier, unless he were the gentleman who owned half the property and had been a quarryman, or the other gentleman who owned the other half, and had been to sea. The Hand of Ethelberta
  • In a September 11 article in the leading French newspaper Le Monde, titled "Sarah Palin, a funny kind of parishioner" (Sarah Palin, une drôle de paroisienne) sociologist Yannick Fer gives a competent overview of the Charismatic movement to which Palin belongs, but his conclusion is widely off the mark: Scott Atran: Religion in America: Why Many Democrats and Europeans Don't Get It
  • The country of Luxembourg is covered by one diocese that contains 13 deaneries and 265 parishes in total.
  • But the vicar, whose former parishes include Rochdale and Ashton under Lyne, did not let the incident put him off his marathon ride.
  • At the time, the main parish was founded in Macao and the Society of Jesus, the Franciscan Order, the Agostinho Order and Dominican Order came to Macao in succession.
  • In both cases, the rights of the patron and of the presentee were challenged peremptorily; that is to say, in both cases, parishioners objected to the presentee without reason shown. Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine — Volume 55, No. 340, February, 1844
  • The parish clergy had to give up their concubines and accept a higher degree of accountability for performance of their duties.
  • The organizational structure of parishes and dioceses is not a divine formula.
  • Mr. Samuel Parish: Tailor—1,200 pounds six ensembles for Lady Castlemaine, gloves and corsetry included Exit the Actress
  • It was within the community of the parish that ordinary people received Christian teaching and the sacraments of the church; baptism, confirmation, marriage, and burial.
  • I should be sorry to have to advise the Parish Council to look elsewhere for banking services.
  • The newly re-born legend soon featured as the centrepiece of a series of patriotic sermons preached in parish churches across England.
  • He said that these same parishioners would eventually turn around and lick him with some big stones.
  • At first glance, one might expect a study of the deposition books of the consistory court of the diocese of Canterbury and the marriage-related provisions of wills from five sample parishes to be essentially a work of consolidation.
  • a going to 'prentice' you: and to set you up in life, and make a man of you: although the expense to the parish is three pound ten! Oliver Twist
  • To each of the churches of this diocese a parish school is attached, where instruction is given in Catholic doctrine, music, English, and Portugese, as well as, in some instances, Guzerati and Mahratti. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery
  • Jacques Berry of Thibodaux, Louisiana reports that Pedro is extremely popular in Lafourche and Terrebonne parishes in southern Louisiana, almost to the exclusion of other card games.
  • She sat in the churchyard of the ancient parish church of Ruthven; and when she lifted up her eyes, there she saw, in the half-ruined belfry, the old bell, all but hidden with ivy, which the passing wind had roused to utter one sleepy tone; and there beside her, stood the fool with the bell on his arm; and to him and to her the _wow o 'Rivven_ said, "_Come hame, come hame_! The Portent & Other Stories
  • After the two minutes silence we adjourned to Wetherspoon's for a coffee before the parade left for the parish church.
  • It is now on display in the sacrarium of the Catholic parish church of Neu-St Heribert.
  • The see was afterwards known as the bishopric of Lismore, and contained the following deaneries: Kintyre, with twelve parishes; Glassary or Scottish Cathedrals and Abbeys
  • It recognizes the validity of all Evangelical orders, confirmed in the laying on of hands of the presbytery; and holds communion with, and exchanges pulpits with, all Evangelical Protestant Churches, and receives from them by letters dimissory, clergy and laity without reordination or reconfirmation, and dismisses to them, as to parishes in her own communion.
  • Until a generation ago it was not uncommon for a successful parish church organist to be appointed to a cathedral post.
  • I'll ask the parish priest and the nuns to tell the women you can dressmake. Love of Brothers
  • Two: I have caused there to be cleanly disposal of wastes that threatened the health of our parish. THE LAST REPORT ON THE MIRACLES AT LITTLE NO HORSE: A NOVEL
  • Female curates are acceptable in many parishes but not as vicars and that has to change.
  • Readings and Prayers of the Faithful were done by parishioners from all churches in the parish.
  • He became a rector of a small parish where he ministered for several years.
  • In 1800, the building was re-roofed and converted into the parish church.
  • He looks and sounds like the second curate in a three-priest parish, and his speciality was killing silently.
  • For the past twelve years, I served as the pastor of a large parish in the heart of Chicago.
  • Here, the unrecorded deeds of long-dead city dwellers come to light; the brewers, tanners, cabinet makers, printers and bakers are all to be found in the records of the city's ancient parishes.
  • They are compiling a list of skating no-go areas around the parish - and a blanket ban on skateboarding in unsociable hours is also being put forward.
  • The father of two, whose parish has the wide brew of amicable conditions, said his recommendation to people in apocalyptic circumstances is that 'they should not hurt anybody as well as cope as most appropriate they can'. Poor? Go ahead and steal. - Shoryuken
  • Worthy of note too was the altar arrangements beneath the gable end of what was once the Parish Church of Monasterevin.
  • Alban, protomartyr of Britain and patron of my parish church. Archive 2005-06-01
  • This year's concert is dedicated to a parishioner's daughter who recently died.
  • I have contacted the clerks of both the parish and town councils which will be affected.
  • Church steeples in parish kirks were used as jails.
  • A provost is the head of the cathedral chapter in a number of the Church of England's more recently created dioceses in which the cathedral is also a parish church and the provost is the incumbent.
  • The smaller parish or community council may prefer to carry out all business through the full council instead of appointing committees.
  • Just think o 'Sim gettin' the dirty gae-bye frae a glaikit lassie hauf his age; and no 'his equal in the three parishes, wi' a leg to tak 'the ee o' a hal dancin'-school, and auld Knapdale's money comin 'till him whenever Knapdale's gane, and I'm hearin' he's in the deid-thraws already. Doom Castle
  • The men who were as willingly pewed in the parish church as their sheep were in night folds.
  • Following the Mass, parishioners will march in procession as one body to the Convent of Mercy where Benediction will be imparted.
  • The former moderator of the Church of Scotland has now given up the parish he tended for 13 years to take on a new challenge.
  • Their needs are met to varying degrees by the home, parish or deanery.
  • Manning began the attack on Russell, calling on all the churches in his bishopric to rouse their parishioners in opposition.
  • And you dare not write off people who pen moaning letters to parish newsletters or local papers as cantankerous curmudgeons.
  • In this case the judge says we should not enforce the parish law and therefore we won't.
  • He appears in the cartulary of the Holy Trinity, Aldgate, as an alderman in 1249 and 1250, was associated with the parish of St John, Walbrook and had an estate in Bishopsgate.3 But little is known of his origins; indeed, his mysterious background evokes Bedes comparison of the passage of a mans life with the flight of a single sparrow through a chieftains banqueting hall. Bedlam
  • Nevertheless, the parish priest, Fr. Tiago Roney Sanxo, decided to begin celebrating in Latin once a month, at first only according to the Missal of Paul VI (Ordinary Form), but with a view to eventually alternating between that and the usus antiquior (Extraordinary Form). Reform of the Reform in São Paulo, Brazil
  • Meanwhile, the Guild will be holding it's annual door to door collection in the parish next month to help fund the sending of sick parishioners on the Pilgrimage.
  • To territorialize the whole South, and place a satrap over every parish and county of it -- saying no word for freedom -- would be a gentle and conciliating procedure compared with the most innocent utterance of a mere sentiment in behalf of emancipation and the elevation of the negro to the status of a man. The Continental Monthly, Vol. 5, No. 3, March, 1864 Devoted to Literature and National Policy
  • With the help of parish priests they gathered blood samples, often in sacristies after Sunday mass. The Genetic Archaeology of Race
  • Visitation of Yorkshire records the coat of arms of Wodde (argent, three fleurs de lis, between cotises sable, a border engrailed with the last) in a north window of Almondbury Parish Church.
  • He explained that he was in fact on indefinite exile from the Parish for committing the unforgivable and irredeemable sins of garrulity, irreverent laughter, vile thoughts and oversleeping.
  • When the latter were realigned or made anew they often met the earlier roads at a sharp angle on the parish boundaries.
  • She was a regular worshipper at the parish church.
  • The need of this division, according to Young, was to give three parishes to each of the newly formed southern sheadings in the 14th Century.
  • Now, eight months after their dramatic birth, they are in good health and have been christened at Bury Parish Church.
  • It marks the boundary of the parish of Langtom Matravers.
  • It is hard to underemphasize the tension between autocratic church structures and the everyday expectations of most parishioners.
  • Veronica is an ardent supporter of community action in the parishes of Kilfian and Moygownagh.
  • That wise pastor responded in a way that still has the parishioner thinking.
  • Pastors have seen entire parishes change simply by teaching their people to give their lives to Jesus each morning and each night.
  • But in the bocage country of the west, where the new local authorities were townsmen already disliked for having done too well out of the Revolution, priests preferred solidarity with their parishioners.
  • And then follow it up with Eucharistic adoration and benediction services in every parish.
  • In other local parish and town council elections many are uncontested because there are more seats than candidates, or the same number.
  • There's national encouragement to meet that commitment, but it's for each parish to decide if it wants a formal scheme.
  • But you have to understand, inside the parishes of Louisiana, most of those city governments were victims.
  • This was published in a U.K. paper just before a long-ago census: ‘During the week the local enumerator has visited every house in the parish.’
  • He was baptized in his own parish church of Arbory, 20 November 1774.
  • Elsewhere in the gallery a high security case contains the town council's silver, with extra silverware from St Andrew's parish church.
  • Local people, who want to turn the church into a museum, have criticized what they termed the confrontational approach to the issue in the past few days by Rev. Ed Keeping, the parish rector. Canada.com Top Stories
  • A call has gone out for every resident of Ilmington to get involved in the creation of a parish plan, a document which will form a blueprint for the future of the village.
  • On a day when young and old enjoy the fun and frolics, Deen Celtic Soccer Club and the Parish Development Committee join forces to provide the entertainment.
  • He retired at Christmas, 1990, as parish priest of St Ignatius, Ossett, suffering from a chronic chest complaint.
  • Phil Hughes, a district councillor and parish councillor, who lives in Bowes parish.
  • Growing up he was tall and good looking and could be described as the most handsome man in the parish.
  • That Holy Trinity is different from most Catholic parishes is evident at a glance.
  • Bishop Murray's Pastoral Letter acknowledges the difficulty that many parishioners have found at this time of change for the Church in Limerick.
  • It may be guessed by some that I had a certain parish in my eye, and this makes it proper I should add a word of disclamation. A Lowden Sabbath Morn
  • I work in the beautiful new Cathedral, evangelizing and catechizing the children of two recently merged parish communities (one English, one Spanish).
  • But it does the zilla parishad chief no harm locally.
  • A broadway parish councillor is urging his fellow members to rethink a controversial new rule, which he feels limits a villager's opportunity to be heard.
  • Jakov Kalynik, a firefighter at Parishev station, about nine miles from the ruined plant, said: I know when I am fighting a fire on radioactively contaminated ground – you get the heat just like an ordinary fire, but you get a tingling sensation too, like pins jumping all over your body. Forest fires around Chernobyl could release radiation, scientists warn
  • At a graduation ceremony of Yale University, a local parish pastor was called in to pinch-hit , as the invited guest speaker failed to show up.
  • I never had the opportunity of knowing Martin because I am new to this Parish, but all who did know him regarded him as a friendly, outgoing, happy person with a bubbly personality.
  • So the old parish churches, with their graveyards, are a precious heritage.
  • Proximity to the parish brought conventuals closer to the everyday concerns of churchgoers.
  • Eventually, that somewhat democratic procedure was restricted to the pastors of Roman parishes and the heads of the city's seven diaconal stations.
  • Mar 17: Bajrang Dal, Muslim Yuva Parishat, and the Vishwa Hindu Parishat (VHP), have called for a 'bundh' in the city on Wednesday March 18.. Undefined
  • He was a curate, new to the parish, and a newcomer to St Ursula's College, my first year in High School.
  • No assortment of programs, activities or diversions will fill the void if a relational context is missing in a parish.
  • There are the parish vestry, the parish infirmary, the parish surgeon, the parish officers, the parish beadle.
  • Those seeking an excellent introduction either to the thought of the mature Augustine or those needing material for catechetical instruction in the parish would do well to consult this timeless classic.
  • From 1541 to 1701 the parish registers, with remarkable consistency, show just how important the long-established families were.
  • At present we have four Masses, in the parish divided equally with two on Saturday and two on Sunday.
  • The Teerlincs resided in more than one London parish and Levina, for a painter, enjoyed an unusual degree of social status.
  • This parish, St. Bernard, which is to the east and southeast of the city of New Orleans. CNN Transcript Sep 6, 2005
  • For at the core of its success lies a willingness to trust the spiritual integrity and moral judgment of its parishioners.
  • But it was an entirely different matter to attempt a communal discernment in a large and already polarized parish.
  • The parish council has suggested that an off-road cycle path is provided alongside the road separated from the road by a small hedge or grass verge.
  • Both children were recently baptized in the parish.
  • A beadle was appointed to remove drunk and disorderly people from the streets, particularly on Sundays and he acted as an official presence to maintain order in the parish.
  • It was his good fortune that two of the more respected women in the parish were active in the antiabortion movement.
  • Glasthule, homy old parish, on the lip of Dublin Bay. At Swim, Two Boys
  • He with concern witnessed the sectaries daily springing up, but he never beheld those schisms where the minister of the parish was active and vigilant in his duty. The Curate and His Daughter, a Cornish Tale
  • But another attack, which took place on Easter Sunday, saw a second window shattered, outraging local people and parishioners.

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