How To Use Penance In A Sentence

  • Cratyn was so annoyingly devout, he probably felt the need for penance if he had an impure thought. TREASON KEEP
  • And of everych of these sins it behoveth them to be shriven of their priests, and to pay great sum of silver for their penance. The Travels of Sir John Mandeville
  • There are similarities in the practices of both sects: initiation is by tearing out the hair, and the lifestyle is one of extreme austerity involving nakedness, penances, and ordeals.
  • If he did, a public penance would be imposed and his sin would be absolved.
  • For instance, if in an emotional dream you injured someone intentionally, you could perform a simple penance the next day to atone, such as fasting one meal.
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  • At the church gates is the historical _jougs_, a place of penance for the neck of detected sinners, and the historical _louping-on stane_, from which Dutch-built lairds and farmers climbed into the saddle. The Works of Robert Louis Stevenson - Swanston Edition Vol. 1 (of 25)
  • I find it difficult to keep still during the preces but I do like the custom of kneeling for the initial Gloria after the Deus in adiutorium and then kissing the bookrest as a sign of penance. Archive 2009-09-01
  • They extended to religious observance and penance, or expiation, though in the later period there is a tendency to concentrate on what looks more today, in the west, like law.
  • They confess sins, do penance and engage in bhakti and karma yoga to raise consciousness.
  • We prayed and did penance together.
  • I leave this record as penance for my own conscious, as my death draws nigh.
  • As a penance, she said she would buy them all a box of chocolates.
  • The ancient Mariner earnestly entreateth the Hermit to shrieve him; and the penance of life falls on him. The Rime of the Ancient Mariner
  • A first step is for bishops to recommit themselves, in the spirit of penance and reconciliation, to the annual independent reviews.
  • Messiah, his seductive arts and successes, the mass hysteria around him, his fall and the breaking up of illusions in destitution and new illusion, or in penance and purity. Isaac Bashevis Singer - Biography
  • They may also lie on beds of nails, walk on fire and undertake other penances to build character and atone for sins.
  • And then the king, to give relation to him of his penance, enjoined by Leo his predecessor, to re-edify a monastery of the glorious apostle S. Peter, and sent Alfred, the archbishop of York, to The Golden Legend, vol. 6
  • They who had practised penances and observed excellent vows for amrita now seemed to be eager seekers after amrita (celestial ambrosia). The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa Translated into English Prose Adi Parva
  • The life of the anchoress was hard but she did not necessarily give herself over to excessive penance.
  • The priest will then assign a ‘penance’, which usually consists of a few prayers to say in the church after leaving the confessional.
  • He's doing an act of penance, and in the Hindu religion it's a renunciation.
  • Her secret work for social justice was an endless `Hail Mary ', penance for her self-confessed sins. THE COMPANY OF STRANGERS
  • Then the good man enjoined Sir Launcelot such penance as he might do and to sewe knighthood, and so assoiled him, and prayed Le Morte d'Arthur: Sir Thomas Malory's book of King Arthur and of his noble knights of the Round table
  • And in this time of Pasque our mother holy church ne doth but joy and maketh solation for the resurrection of Jesu Christ, and therefore is then said: Alleluia, which signifieth joy and consolation, for after that creature hath done penance by virtue of humility in weepings and lamentations he must lead after, joy and very consolation. The Golden Legend, vol. 7
  • Then the good man enjoined Sir Launcelot such penance as he might do and to sewe knighthood, and so assoiled him, and prayed Le Morte d'Arthur: Sir Thomas Malory's book of King Arthur and of his noble knights of the Round table
  • Again, he vows to do penance by marrying Elizabeth and accepting her illegitimate son.
  • As a penance, she said she would buy them all a box of chocolates.
  • Then the good man enjoined Sir Launcelot such penance as he might do and to pursue knighthood, and so assoiled him, and prayed Sir Launcelot to abide with him all that day. Chronicle and Romance (The Harvard Classics Series)
  • I'm doing my duty and my penance now, but I'll always be a woman who loves a good show.
  • He helped to introduce singing the Creed at mass and to disseminate the performance of penance on the continent.
  • If he did, a public penance would be imposed and his sin would be absolved.
  • We prayed and did penance together.
  • They were completely purged of it, having done penance in proper form at an Auto held on the Rocio at Lisbon, candle in hand and sanbenito on their shoulders. The Sea-Hawk
  • In the bitter cold of winter, the yogi undertook various penances which, it was said, gave him great powers.
  • Her secret work for social justice was an endless `Hail Mary ', penance for her self-confessed sins. THE COMPANY OF STRANGERS
  • Then the pope, considering the great perils that might ensue by his departing, dispensed with him, and assoiled him of his avow, of which he sent to him a bull under lead, and enjoined him in penance to give the goods that he should have spent in his pilgrimage, to deeds of charity, and to re-edify some church of S. Peter, and endow it with sufficient livelihood. The Golden Legend, vol. 6
  • This ritual of confession, absolution and penance inadvertently hides as much as it discloses.
  • Lynch wrote a notoriously vengeful poem, full of vicious curses, a story he tells against himself in shamefaced penance.
  • Even here I shall emaciate my body by penances, engaged in serving the feet of the king and of these my mothers. ' The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 4 Books 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18
  • Through our open admission of our sins, the priest's absolution, and the acts of penance, we can know God's healing.
  • The Augustinian monk had come to the correct conclusion that the entire scheme, including penance, was unbiblical.
  • A gentleman, in my case, would have settled the matter with the kirk-treasurer for a small sum of money; but the poor stibbler, the penniless dominie, having married his cousin of Kittlebasket, must next have proclaimed her frailty to the whole parish, by mounting the throne of Presbyterian penance, and proving, as Redgauntlet
  • It was a world-penance for a world to see, and paltry indeed it made appear that earlier penance, barefooted in the snow, of an emperor to a pope for daring to squabble over temporal power. Goliah
  • I simply mean that they are now living the suffering they've inflicted on others as penance for their sins.
  • As additional penance, Brockwell was to remain at the house to attend to the training of the men. THE ANCIENT FUTURE: THE DARK AGE
  • Readers, I have sinned, and penance suggestions may be required.
  • Not, however, until Henry, after public penance by his ambassadors at Rome, had been freed from the papal ban was he generally recognized (by Mayenne too). 1572-73
  • There is irony in this: just as sacramental penance has disappeared, a more generalized confessional culture seems to have exploded.
  • Myrrh has been associated with bitter repentance , mortification of the flesh, and penance.
  • During their slow, toilful walks she appeared to be dragging with her for a penance the burden of that infirm bulk. To-morrow, by Joseph Conrad
  • The institution of the sacrament of Penance (or ‘confession’) is found in John 20:19-23.
  • His earlier life of self-indulgence had been unsatisfying, as was his six-year experiment with ascetic penances.
  • This, the Mariner's heartsick and acknowledged disgust for non-human life, showed that he had not yet learned his lesson nor completed the penance that Life-in-Death had prepared for him.
  • As penance, I intend to make an actual pho sometime in the upcoming months.
  • Yet Msgr. Rossetti also sees a link between effecti ve therapy and traditional church teaching on penance. More Emphasis on Confessing Might Have Helped
  • When we say the act of contrition, at least the old act of contrition, in the Catholic Church, we say, ‘I firmly resolve, with the help of thy grace, to confess my sins, to do penance and to amend my life, amen.’
  • [The ancient Mariner earnestly entreateth the Hermit to shrieve him; and the penance of life falls on him.] "O shrieve me, shrieve me, holy man! English Songs and Ballads
  • Nevertheless, her Highness, considering the ease as one of human frailty, hath not caused this wanton one to be scourged with nettles, or otherwise to dree penance; but, as two good brethren of the convent of Lindores, the Fathers Thickskull and The Fair Maid of Perth
  • Leading up to Easter is Lent, a period of penance lasting forty days during which only one meal a day was allowed and flesh and fish were forbidden.
  • And this woman, ever engaged in virtuous acts and the Agnihotra, and the austerest of penances, obtained The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 1 Books 1, 2 and 3
  • Particularly in terms of illegitimacy, mothers were punished more harshly than fathers, suffering public humiliation, even ostracism, as they were denounced from the altar and denied (either for a limited period of public penance, or indefinitely) churching and the sacraments. 63 Here, then, was a reinforcement of the chastity requirement of middle-class ideology. Gutenber-e Help Page
  • On the minus side, being presented with such an array of dishes almost always results in the type of culinary blow-out which requires hours of penance in the gym afterwards.
  • First among these was the introduction of penances which, it was hoped, would wipe the slate clean.
  • Some, in the true spirit of the poor Publican, were kneeling at a considerable distance, just within view of the cross, to which they hardly lifted their eyes; others, whose penance was originally lighter, or its term abridged by frequent visits to this place, had approached the cross more nearly, and with greater signs of satisfaction. Itinerary of Provence and the Rhone Made During the Year 1819
  • And for to (take our penitency) (do out penance there) {And} {We} boose the water cold. Musa Pedestris - Three Centuries of Canting Songs and Slang Rhymes [1536 - 1896]
  • There are all sorts of hidden penances we can do, such as not putting salt or tomato ketchup on our chips.
  • A few years ago our parish hosted several priests who provided unusual penance services.
  • The large sculptural frieze is an attempt to portray a stringent penance witnessed both by heavenly hosts and the denizens of the netherworld.
  • We are members of one another and it is entirely fitting for the Church as a whole to do penance for the sins of the clergy.
  • Now the place which Fra Puccio had chosen for his penance adjoined the chamber where the lady lay and was parted therefrom but by a very slight wall, wherefore, Master Monk wantoning it one night overfreely with the lady and she with him, it seemed to Fra Puccio that he felt a shaking of the floor of the house. The Decameron of Giovanni Boccaccio
  • Heaven and our Lady assoilzie him of his sins, and abridge the penance of his mortal infirmities! — The Abbot
  • The gospel called not for an act of penance but for a radical change of mind-set and an equally deep transformation of life.
  • The due performance of these eternal duties, viz., the worship of the gods, the study of the Vedas, and the gratification of the Pitris, as also regardful services unto the preceptors -- these are called the austerest of penances. The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3 Books 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12
  • After prayers, penances, and many hardships, they captured it in July 1099.
  • This lymphatic monster had once blocked the distinguished pharynx of Lord Blatherard Osmo, who at the time occupied the Novi Pazar desk at the Foreign Office, an obscure penance for the previous century of British policy on the Eastern Question, for on this obscure sanjak had once hinged the entire fate of Europe: Gravity's Rainbow
  • Every week they sinned quite a bit but on a Friday they would go and confess, do whatever they had to do as penance, then go out sinning again.
  • Lenten practice commonly falls into three parts: prayer, penance and that care for others we call charity, or almsgiving. Times, Sunday Times
  • I once had a Danish friend, now dead, who told me that his ancestor had aimed the ill-omened cannon, and claimed that it was out of penance that he became a professor of classics in a Canadian university.
  • His sidekick is really funny; the spirits force him to wear a samurai topknot in penance for his cowardice in the “battle league” and the reactions of other people seeing it never get old (I especially like the waitress who is so flustered she drops her serving tray). Fantastic Fest – Battle League In Kyoto (Kamogawa Horumo) « Geek Related
  • A person guilty of serious sin confessed to a bishop or presbyter appointed to this office, enrolled in the order of penitents, did penance and was reconciled on Holy Thursday in a solemn ceremony just prior to the offertory.
  • Having heard their confessions, the inquisitor could impose a penance or punishment, which ranged from wearing yellow crosses to indicate that a witness had been guilty of heretical activities, to being burned alive at the stake.
  • The eldest son of this much be-penanced marriage had two distinctions. Highways and Byways in Surrey
  • Eternal and Fixed, He that is possessed of beautiful limbs, (or, He the ascension unto whom is the best of all acts), He who has such knowledge having penance for its indication that He is able to agitable Prakriti for evolving the universe out of her (CXIV -- CXXII); He that goes everywhere (in the sense of pervading all things as their cause), the The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 4 Books 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 and 18
  • [Sidenote: The ancient Mariner earnestly entreateth the Hermit to shrieve him; and the penance of life falls on him.] 'O shrieve me, shrieve me, holy man!' Rime of the ancient mariner
  • I can't post about Novi Pazar without quoting one of my favorite bits from Pynchon's Gravity's Rainbow:This lymphatic monster had once blocked the distinguished pharynx of Lord Blatherard Osmo, who at the time occupied the Novi Pazar desk at the Foreign Office, an obscure penance for the previous century of British policy on the Eastern Question, for on this obscure sanjak had once hinged the entire fate of Europe: Languagehat.com: "BOSNIAN" IN NOVI PAZAR.
  • He devoted his life to helping the poor as a penance for his past crimes.
  • The poet voices myriad experiences - dreams and desires, pains and penance, despair and desolation - which are rooted in our times.
  • And it is not just your neighbourhood parish priest who is due for confession, penance and civil punishment.
  • So this is my penance, she thinks, grimacing after taking another sip of the weak liquid.
  • I find it difficult to keep still during the preces but I do like the custom of kneeling for the initial Gloria after the Deus in adiutorium and then kissing the bookrest as a sign of penance. Adoration at Parkminster
  • Self-scourging with rods as a penance, was to her thinking a papistical ordinance most abominable and damnatory; but the essence of the self-scourging was as comfortable to her as ever was a hair-shirt to a Roman Catholic enthusiast. John Caldigate
  • Where day and night remembering the name of Jesu, he commended him to God, praying that the prison should not disprofit him, but that he might have it for wilderness and penance. The Golden Legend, vol. 5
  • It is a sign of grace, both a confession of sin and a penance by which forgiveness may be obtained.
  • He devoted his life to helping the poor as a penance for his past crimes.
  • Others were subjected to lesser punishments or penanced, but the fate of many of the Inquisition's victims is unknown. [ Bloggers.Pakistan
  • This is fortunate for you, elsewise I might have turned you into a cockroach as penance for interrupting my sleep. The Lives of Felix Gunderson
  • An eternity have I lingered, my eternal durance the penance I must pay for my crimes.
  • In what precise manner the seceding States shall return, whether by inherent right, or with some preliminary penance and ceremony of readoption, is of less consequence than what they shall be after their return. The Writings of James Russell Lowell in Prose and Poetry, Volume V Political Essays
  • – And indeed it was on these occasions that Mrs Rayland seemed to take peculiar pleasure in mortifying Mrs Somerive and her daughters; who dreaded these dinner days as those of the greatest penance; and who at Christmas, one of the periods of these formal dinners, have blest more than once the propitious snow; through which that important and magisterial personage, the body coachman of Mrs Rayland, did not choose to venture himself, or the six sleek animals of which he was sole governor; for on these occasions it was the established rule to send for the family, with the same solemnity and the same parade that had been used ever since the first sullen and reluctant reconciliation between Sir Hildebrand and his sister; when she dared to deviate from the fastidious arrogance of her family, and to marry a man who farmed his own estate – and who, though long settled as a very respectable land-owner, had not yet written Armiger after his name. The Old Manor House
  • The only other things the monk might have were a pendant cross and a pair of shoes or sandals, although some went barefoot as a lifelong penance.
  • Br [= a] hmanas, Praj [= a] pati, made the elements proceed from the worlds he had 'brooded' over (or had done penance over, _abhyatapat_). The Religions of India Handbooks on the History of Religions, Volume 1, Edited by Morris Jastrow
  • Slavery could be imposed as a religious penance or a criminal punishment.
  • Here he administered for the first time the Sacrament of Penance; here he preached from the pulpit of his panegyrist his first sermon; here he entered upon "that career of zeal and usefulness which made his name proverbial in every family of the parish." ... Donahoe's Magazine, Volume 15, No. 1, January 1886
  • Orléans, in his note on this canon says that "viaticum" here means only the reconciliation and absolution granted at the hour of death to public penitents who had not performed the prescribed canonical penance, yet Macri (Hierolexicon) declares that it means simply The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 15: Tournely-Zwirner
  • Then receiveth he penance for every sin [as] enjoined by his doomsman [124] that is grounded in Holy Church by the teaching of the Holy Ghost. Revelations of Divine Love
  • Cratyn was so annoyingly devout, he probably felt the need for penance if he had an impure thought. TREASON KEEP
  • The formal remission of sin imparted by a priest, as in the sacrament of penance.
  • The Fast of Atonement was instituted in expiation of a mortal sin and observed as a day of penance and mourning.
  • Since the vulgar dialects of the people had neither alphabet nor orthography, he chalked the Latin words for "Penance, Solitude, and Silence," on a large flat stone, and wrote them again below in ancient English, hoping, in spite of his unacknowledged yearning for someone to talk to, that the old man would understand and leave him to his lonely Lenten vigil. A Canticle for Leibowitz
  • Unprepared for such transgressions, the sort of penances handed out by the confession booths suddenly seemed rather trifling.
  • Spenser begins the stanza with an alliterative play upon ‘joyous’ and ‘just’ which lightens the atmosphere after the sober and tense portrayal of the knight's penance, while emphasising the worth of Charissa's lesson.
  • This is not, ye Covenants and Protestations that we have made! this is not to put down prelaty; this is but to chop an episcopacy; this is but to translate the Palace Metropolitan from one kind of dominion into another; this is but an old canonical sleight of commuting our penance. Areopagitica
  • He heard confessions of sins by his parishioners and gave absolution as he saw fit, enjoining a suitable penance.
  • Ye must come at God neither by mass, nor by penance, nor by confessing, nor by alms-giving, but alonely by Christ. For the Master's Sake A Story of the Days of Queen Mary
  • For unless I can fulfill my penance, I too will suffer the torments of the damned as revealed by the holy words of Saint John, the Divine.
  • No penance would ever expiate the sin against free government,’ he said, ‘of holding that a President can escape control of executive powers by law through assuming his military role.’
  • These monasteries would be places where the primary purpose would be to search for the face of God, sharing in the redemptive work of Christ in prayer and penance.
  • Worldly attempts to change the state of one's soul through indulgences and penances were meaningless.
  • They observe seven sacraments: the Eucharist, Baptism, Confirmation, Penance, Matrimony, Holy Orders, and the Anointing of the Sick.
  • The remorse which he felt, as well as the recollection of her charms, proved the penance of his future life, which he lost in the battle of Flodden not many months after. The Bride of Lammermoor
  • He prayed with the unknown man, gave him some penance and suggested he go to confession more often.
  • They were men who did public penance and scourged themselves with whips of hard knotted leather with little iron spikes.
  • Brahman! O my child! Cease from practising further penances.
  • They confess sins, do penance and engage in bhakti and karma yoga to raise consciousness.
  • Will eternity be long enough to allow the penance required?
  • That highly-blessed lady is always emaciating herself with the austerest of penances! The Mahabharata of Krishna-Dwaipayana Vyasa, Volume 3 Books 8, 9, 10, 11 and 12
  • The bhagats, who live in stark seclusion from the rest of the village, are said to possess occult powers, which enable them to exercise metaphysical control acquired by years of yogic penance, tantra and tatrak vidya.
  • He confesses and receives penances twice, once on the verge of execution, then finally is deemed insane and committed to an asylum at the close of his third trial.
  • I nds nei? coney finijh generom honey honour linage manour puiny minow miniature minijh nonage onion - opinion penance runagate Jinew Spaniel fynod Trinity vinegar vinew. Practical Phonography: Or, the New Art of Rightly Speling and Writing Words by the Sound Thereof ...
  • There has to be some penance and retribution for these people.
  • But that, he said, was really a political deal, shored up with appropriate penances.
  • Thus the Council of Elvira, which was ready to receive without penance the prostitute who married, refused reconciliation, even at death, to persons who had been guilty of _lenocinium_. [ Studies in the Psychology of Sex, Volume 6 Sex in Relation to Society
  • At the word "inclinato capite emisit spiritum" the Pontiff and all assistants kneel: the Deacon then lays aside the folded chasuble, puts on the stole as a mark of penance, and without asking the blessing, or carrying either lights or incense, he reads the end of the Passion in the ordinary tone of the Gospel. More Rare Images: Good Friday with Pius XI in the Sistine Chapel
  • Set aside that cruel vow, my dear aunt," cried I, "I will make any pilgrimage with you, and I know full well that no penance will seem overhard to you. Margery — Volume 07
  • As time went on, the ritual and the length of the penances which were given also changed.
  • The Donatists believed that those Priests who had betrayed their faith during the time of persecution were not fit to be clergy without a re-baptism and lengthy penance. Bring Back Donatism! | Heretical Ideas Magazine
  • It was plain the notion of footsore penance had taken vigorous hold of his imagination and his love of adventure. Kenny
  • For centuries, confession or penance (as it was alternatively called) was the linchpin of the Catholic sacramental economy.
  • I came to chapter determined to cleanse my bosom and ask penance, for my backsliding is the cause of our continued distresses. A Morbid Taste For Bones
  • Or perhaps a better analogy is when a woman is obviously upset with her beau, yet when he asks what is wrong, she makes his identification of the problem part of his penance.
  • metanoia" -- that it was "re-thinking" and not "penance" -- and he grasped a new view of God there. The Jesus of History
  • The head priest gave him blessed, medicated ghee to take in the early morning for 41 days while observing a penance.
  • It was simply squeezing the title dry of all poetic suggestions; and it would have been quite as appropriate to change the name of “The Scarlet Letter” to “The Clergyman's Penance,” or to call The Life and Genius of Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • At his side was his No 2, Danny Alexander, who had accidentally brandished chunks of the speech to the cameras on Tuesday, and who yesterday paid penance by being Mr Osborne's water-wallah, making sure that his glass and carafe were topped up at all times. Spending review serves up sixpences in a pudding of manure and gravel
  • Less certain is the recorded use of knotted scourges in performing penance, and the existence of a peculiar kind of auricular confession. Anahuac : or, Mexico and the Mexicans, Ancient and Modern
  • For the two by reason have vigils, but because that penance is accounted for vigil, therefore that of our Lady behoveth no vigil, but they have all utas, for all haste them unto the eighth resurrection. The Golden Legend, vol. 5
  • But such a desire can be forgiven, as long as one takes the proper penances into consideration.
  • How, for example, would you explain religious sacrifice and penance which are an important motivator for many non-western consumers?
  • Is confession really so good for the soul, especially when it requires no penance?
  • CDs are regularly used for theft, drugs offences, affray, abusive and threatening behavior and - where for example the police have helpfully stoved your head in - to reflect the fact that you've probably served enough penance. What Happened Next to the "Tony Martin" Defence?
  • This is the reason why we go to them for penance (the sacrament for confession of sins or repentance).
  • The Holy Ghost has made you so holy that you don't need penance or the sacrament?
  • Speaking of which, will the guidelines for penances have to be re-written?
  • One is that which John conferred by baptizing, which is called "a baptism of penance," etc., by reason of its inducing men to do penance, and of its being a kind of protestation by which men avowed their purpose of doing penance. Summa Theologica, Part III (Tertia Pars) From the Complete American Edition
  • Consider your hand-wringing sufficient penance for your "misdeed," but don't waste to much time worrying about how knuckleheads respond to thoughtful criticism. Blue Skunk Blog
  • Neighboring monks became upset with him over a theological dispute, and his health deteriorated under the rigors of his fasting and penances.
  • Jogging becomes a sort of penance for our sins of gluttony, greed, and waste.
  • They appointed rival bishops, collected double taxes, issued conflicting penances, and excommunicated one another's supporters.
  • Maran confirms this opinion by the comparison of the imposition on polygamy of the same number of years of penance as are assigned to trigamy in Canon iv.
  • Through our open admission of our sins, the priest's absolution, and the acts of penance, we can know God's healing.
  • The penitent then leaves the confessional and goes and prays his penance in the church.
  • Lent stirs up thoughts of penance and sacrifice and struggle.
  • Passionate Man is not to be so satisfied; and the time was fully come for the rise of some fierce spirit, who should change the tinsel theology of the crucifix for the iron religion of the sword: who should blow in the ears of the slumbering West the shrill war-blast of Eastern fervencies; who should exchange the dull rewards of canonization due to penance, or an after-life voluntary humiliation under pseudo-saints and angels, for the human and comprehensible joys of animal appetite and military glory: who should enlist under his banner all the frantic zeal, all the pent-up licentiousness, all the heart-burning hatreds of mankind, stifled either by a positive barbarism, or the incense-laden cloud of a scarcely-masked idolatry. Probabilities : An aid to Faith
  • I wasn't going to have to start wearing a brown habit with rusty chains underneath as penance for my wrong doings.
  • So he took to caves and solitary places for severe penance and meditation.
  • No, for there to be confidence in the efficacity of the sacrament of penance, it can't depend on the completely secret dispositions of the priest. Motu Proprio "Ecclesiae Unitatem" - in English
  • Lynch wrote a notoriously vengeful poem, full of vicious curses, a story he tells against himself in shamefaced penance.
  • In the fragile and apocalyptic early church, penance was conceived as a public reconciliation, necessary to the very existence of the congregation.
  • Public offences were visited with public penance; private offences were confessed to the priest.
  • But I must not anticipate -- a beautiful veil of brown tissue, none of your woolleny, gruff fabrics, fit only for penance, but a silken gossamery cloud, soft as a baby's check. The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 11, No. 67, May, 1863
  • Then he gave her penance and absolution and heard her footsteps moving away in the slow clicking gait that was distinctively hers. THE SERPENT'S MARK
  • This word cannot be understood to mean sacramental penance, i.e., confession and satisfaction, which is administered by the priests.
  • (Left) The middle portion of the bas-relief called Arjuna's penance at Mamallapuram depicts Lord Siva with the Pasupata weapon and Arjuna doing his penance (top left). The Hindu - Front Page
  • An indulgence was a papal document that granted the buyer remission from the need to do penance for his sins.
  • Reaching Blois and utterly rejecting his mother's attempts to excuse herself and console him, he drags out a miserable time in continual penance and self-neglect, till at last, availing himself of (and rather shabbily if piously tricking) a Saracen page, [71] he succeeds in getting off incognito to the vague "Ardennes," where his sadly ended adventure had begun. A History of the French Novel, Vol. 1 From the Beginning to 1800
  • Thomas of Chobham, author of a thirteenth-century confessional manual on penance, addressed this issue directly in his work.
  • Some are freelance wanderers, moving from town to town; others live ordered monastic lives in ashrams, dividing their day according to strict rules and performing severe penances.
  • Has he been ordered to stand up there in disgrace, as penance for dallying with Lady Hamilton and asking Hardy to kiss him?
  • As regards the vestments themselves: the amice signifies preparation to resist the attacks of the devil; the alb is the symbol of innocence; the cincture of charity; the maniple of penance; the stole of immortality; and the chasuble of love, by which we are enabled to bear the light burden Our Lord is pleased to lay upon us. Baltimore Catechism No. 4 (of 4) An Explanation of the Baltimore Catechism of Christian Doctrine
  • The penitent then leaves the confessional and goes and prays his penance in the church.
  • Some people like to stand miserably in the rain, taking each cold splash of water as flagellation from the heavens, enduring the torrent as penance for their internalised sense of guilt.
  • He dreed his penance age by age.
  • So lots of devout Catholics wear brown scapulars - you can spot them by the telltale thin brown strips creeping over into the necklines of their shirts, a habitual (pun intended) annoyance that's part of the penance we're supposed to be practicing, I guess. Archive 2007-01-01
  • As additional penance, Brockwell was to remain at the house to attend to the training of the men. THE ANCIENT FUTURE: THE DARK AGE
  • We meet unassuming mendicants who may turn out to be rishis in disguise, pilgrims who may be exiled kings, or noblemen undertaking acts of penance.
  • His earlier life of self-indulgence had been unsatisfying, as was his six-year experiment with ascetic penances.
  • I nds nei? coney finijh generom honey honour linage manour puiny minow miniature minijh nonage onion - opinion penance runagate Jinew Spaniel fynod Trinity vinegar vinew. Practical Phonography: Or, the New Art of Rightly Speling and Writing Words by the Sound Thereof ...
  • Ignorant and wicked are the doings of those priests who, in the case of the dying, reserve canonical penances for purgatory.
  • Maran confirms this opinion by the comparison of the imposition on polygamy of the same number of years of penance as are assigned to trigamy in Canon iv. NPNF2-08. Basil: Letters and Select Works
  • A nun must always stand when in the presence of a male bhikkhu, even one who was young or newly ordained; nuns must always spend the vassa retreat in an arama with male monks, not by themselves; they must receive instruction from a bhikkhu once every fortnight; they could not hold their own ceremonies; a nun who had committed a grave offense must do penance before the monks as well as the bhikkhunls; a nun must request ordination from both the male and the female Sangha; she must never rebuke a bhikkhu, though any monk could rebuke her; nor could she preach to bhikkhus. Buddha
  • Penance for these confessants, perhaps, will consist of visiting the mall during a sale without the means to buy anything.
  • Instead he has responded by calling the prelate a "troglodyte," and calling upon him to do penance for his remarks, leading to a tit for tat exchange that has lasted for more than two weeks. LifeSiteNews.com Headlines
  • In Dante's Purgatorio, the principle of sacramental penance holds sway.

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