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Catholic and Encyclopedia
* The Catholic Encyclopedia ( general article )
According to the Catholic Encyclopedia, an Allocution is a solemn form of address or speech from the throne employed by the Pope on certain occasions.
* Catholic Encyclopedia: Arianism
* Catholic Encyclopedia on André Marie Ampère
* Catholic Encyclopedia article about Angilbert
* Catholic Encyclopedia article
The Catholic Encyclopedia places him in its List of Popes, but with the annotation: " Considered by some to be an antipope ".
* Catholic Encyclopedia article
* New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia, Amos
* Catholic Encyclopedia entry for Antonio Canova
* The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume I. Ark of the Covenant
* The Catholic Encyclopedia, Robert Appleton Company, 1907, Online Edition, K. Night 2003: article Arabia
The 1910 Catholic Encyclopedia remarks that " Undeniably secular and ambitious, his moral life was not above reproach, and his unscrupulous methods in no wise accorded with the requirements of his high office ... the heinous crimes of which his opponents in the council accused him were certainly gravely exaggerated.
* Apostolicity in the Catholic Encyclopedia
The Catholic Encyclopedia ( 1909 ) called this confusion a " distortion of the true facts " and suggested that it arose because the " Liber Pontificalis ", which at this point may be registering a reliable tradition, says that this Felix built a church on the Via Aurelia, which is where the Roman martyr of an earlier date was buried.
The Catholic Encyclopedia remarked that " the real story of the antipope was lost and he obtained in local Roman history the status of a saint and a confessor.
" At that time ( 1909 ) the Roman Martyrology had the following text: This entry was based on what the Catholic Encyclopedia called later legends that confound the relative positions of Felix and Liberius.
* Catholic Encyclopedia: Felix II
Extreme Unction was the usual name for the sacrament in the West from the late twelfth century until 1972, and was thus used at the Council of Trent and in the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia.
The form used in the Roman Rite included anointing of seven parts of the body while saying ( in Latin ): " Through this holy unction and His own most tender mercy may the Lord pardon thee whatever sins or faults thou hast committed deliquisti by sight hearing, smell, taste, touch, walking, carnal delectation ", the last phrase corresponding to the part of the body that was touched ; however, in the words of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia, " the unction of the loins is generally, if not universally, omitted in English-speaking countries, and it is of course everywhere forbidden in case of women ".
* " Extreme Unction " in Catholic Encyclopedia ( 1913 )
* Catholic Encyclopedia: Carracci
" The Catholic Encyclopedia.
* Adoptionism in Catholic Encyclopedia
* Catholic Encyclopedia entry

Catholic and Gabriel
In Roman Catholic tradition, it marks the site where the Archangel Gabriel announced the future birth of Jesus to the Virgin Mary ( Luke 1: 26-31 ).
* Catholic Encyclopedia: Solomon entry by Gabriel Oussani ( 1913 )
* October 8 – Gabriel Marcel, French Catholic existential thinker ( b. 1889 )
The Mission San Gabriel Arcángel is a fully functioning Roman Catholic mission and a historic landmark in San Gabriel, California.
* Catholic Encyclopedia: St. Gabriel the Archangel
St. Gabriel Roman Catholic Church is perhaps one of the oldest churches in the Louisiana Purchase Territory.
In the Roman Catholic, Anglican, Eastern and Oriental Orthodox Churches, the archangels Michael, Raphael and Gabriel are considered saints.
The archangels Michael, Gabriel and Raphael are venerated in the Roman Catholic Church with a feast on September 29 ( between 1921 and 1969 March 24 for Gabriel and 24 October for Raphael ).
" Of these seven " archangels ", which appear in the angelology of post-Exilic Judaism, only the above three, Gabriel, Michael and Raphael, are mentioned in the Scriptures that the Catholic Church considers canonical.
Another Catholic variation lists them corresponding to the days of the week as: St Michael ( Sunday ), St Gabriel ( Monday ), St Raphael ( Tuesday ), St Uriel ( Wednesday ), St Sealtiel / Selaphiel ( Thursday ), St Jehudiel / Jhudiel ( Friday ), and St Barachiel ( Saturday ).
This view was defended in the 20th century by Gabriel Roschini, and more generally, by Pope Pius XII in his encyclical Mystici Corporis as official doctrine of the Catholic Church.
In modern history the leaders of the Syriac Catholic Church have been among others: Patriarch Michael III Jarweh, Archbishop Clemens Daoud, Patriarch Ephrem Rahmani, Vicomte de Tarrazi, Monsignor Ishac Armaleh, Ignatius Gabriel I Tappuni, Chorbishop Gabriel Khoury-Sarkis, Ignatius Antony II Hayyek, Ignatius Moses I Daoud, Ignatius Peter VIII Abdalahad and presently Ignatius Joseph III Yonan
Gabriel was raised a Métis, learning both French Catholic and Cree customs.
With the reform of the Roman Catholic Calendar of Saints in 1969, this feast was transferred to September 29 for celebration together with Saint Michael and Saint Gabriel.
According to Orthodox and Eastern Catholic tradition Mary, having spent her life after Pentecost supporting and serving the nascent Church, was living in the house of the Apostle John, in Jerusalem, when the Archangel Gabriel revealed to her that her death would occur three days later.
She was also a devout Catholic with strong ties to the Jesuits, including her personal confessor, Gabriel Malagrida.
The Brethren spared no pains to obtain good masters, if necessary from foreign countries, for their schools, which became centres of spiritual and intellectual life of the Catholic Church ; amongst those whom they trained or who were associated with them were men like Thomas à Kempis, Dierick Maertens, Gabriel Biel, Jan Standonck ( 1454 – 1504 ), priest and reformer, Master of the Collège de Montaigu in Paris, and the Dutch Pope Adrian VI.
The figures of the virgin Mary and the angel Gabriel, being emblematic of purity and grace, were favorite subjects of Roman Catholic Marian art, where the scene is also used to represent the perpetual virginity of Mary via the announcement by the angel Gabriel that Mary would conceive a child to be born the Son of God.
Of the seven Archangels in the angelology of post-Exilic Judaism, only two, Gabriel, and Michael, are mentioned by name in the Scriptures consistently recognised by both the post-Jamnia Jewish tradition and the books common to both the Catholic biblical canon and the smaller Protestant one.
Only the reverence of the archangels mentioned in the recognized Catholic canon of scriptures, Michael, Gabriel and Raphael, remained licit.
The virginity of Mary at the time of her conception of Jesus is a key topic in Marian art in the Catholic Church, usually represented as the annunciation to Mary by the Archangel Gabriel that she would virginally conceive a child to be born the Son of God.

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