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Opus and Dei
:* Opus Dei universities
* Controversies about Opus Dei
* 1928 – The " Prelature of the Holy Cross and the Work of God ", commonly known as Opus Dei, is founded by Saint Josemaría Escrivá.
* Chapter 47 requires the abbot to call the brothers to the " work of God " ( Opus Dei ) in choir, and to appoint chanters and readers.
* October 2 – Saint Josemaria Escriva founds Opus Dei.
Their perspective informs Robert Hutchison's 1997 book Their Kingdom Come: Inside the Secret World of Opus Dei.
Having signed for Mute Records, the group started recording their third studio album, Opus Dei, with Slavko Avsenik Jr.
The usage of Nazi symbols and the name " Opus Dei " caused the Catholic institution of the same name to sue the group but the case was eventually decided in favour of Laibach.
The band began their tradition of cover songs in 1987 with the album Opus Dei, where their sound changed again.
Laibach recorded two new interpretations of the song, which they titled Leben Heißt Leben, and Opus Dei.
The first of these, the opening song on the Laibach album Opus Dei ( 1987 ), was sung in German.
Opus Dei retained some of the original song's English lyrics, but was delivered in a musical style that left the meaning of the lyrics open to further interpretation.
The Opus Dei album also features a cover of Queen's " One Vision " with lyrics translated into German under the title Geburt einer Nation, revealing the ambiguity of lines like " One race one hope / One real decision ".
On this album they also included an anthem for their NSK State in Time, which is based on their song The Great Seal from the Opus Dei album.
* Opus Dei ( Mute Rec., 1987, London )
* Opus Dei ( Mute Rec., 1987, London )
* Opus Dei ( disambiguation )
* Opus Dei UK headquarters
Saint Josemaría Escrivá, the founder of Opus Dei
Opus Dei, formally known as The Prelature of the Holy Cross and Opus Dei (), is an institution of the Catholic Church that teaches that everyone is called to holiness and that ordinary life is a path to sanctity.
Opus Dei is Latin for Work of God ; hence the organization is often referred to by members and supporters as the Work.
Founded in Spain in 1928 by the Catholic priest St. Josemaría Escrivá, Opus Dei was given final Catholic Church approval in 1950 by Pope Pius XII.

Opus and Latin
This battle against what he saw as an imperialised papacy and its supporters, the " sects ," as he called the monastic orders, takes up a large space not only in his later works as the Trialogus, Dialogus, Opus evangelicum, and in his sermons, but also in a series of sharp tracts and polemical productions in Latin and English ( of which those issued in his later years have been collected as " Polemical Writings ").
An Opus number ( Latin sing.
In western Catholicism, canonical hours may also be called offices, since they refer to the official set of prayer of the Roman Catholic Church that is known variously as the Divine Office ( from the Latin officium divinum meaning " divine service " or " divine duty "), and the Opus Dei ( meaning in Latin, " Work of God ").
When referring to Kaloyan's realm and subjects, contemporary Crusader sources ( including the works of Geoffroy de Villehardouin, Henri de Valenciennes, Robert de Clari ) other contemporary sources ( like that of William de Rubruquis and Roger Bacon's " Opus Maius "), as well as the letters of the Latin Emperor Henry of Flanders ) represent Kaloyan as King of Wallachia, ruler of Wallachians and leader of Wallachian armies, and sometimes as ruler of Wallachians and Bulgarians.
Both aspects of " dialects of a same language " and " French as the common langue d ' oïl " appear in a text of Roger Bacon, Opus maius, who wrote in Medieval Latin but translated thus: " Indeed, idioms of a same language vary amongst people, as it occurs in the French language which varies in an idiomatic manner amongst the French, Picards, Normans and Burgundians.
In 1976 the Latinitas Foundation ( Opus Fundatum Latinitas in Latin ) was established by Pope Paul VI to promote the study and use of Latin.
Perceived as a devout Catholic, in 1889 Thompson wrote the short story " Finis Coronat Opus " ( Latin: " The End Crowns the Work ").
* Full Latin text of Opus agriculturae
* Ut sit ( 1982 ) Blessed Pope John Paul II's Apostolic Constitution raising Opus Dei ( Latin for, " The Work Of God ") to the rank of a Personal Prelature ( sort of like a religious institute )
Moreover, aside from those working on the right side of the political spectrum, there are numerous Opus Dei members in many others parts of the world, e. g. Latin America, Europe, Asia, who are involved in left-wing politics and organizations: labor unions, left-of-center political parties, organizations working for the marginalized, poverty alleviation and reduction programs, etc.
* 1982 Statutes of Opus Dei -- Latin and English ( unauthorized translation )
In Spain and Latin America, for example, Opus Dei is predominantly popular among laborers and campesinos.

Opus and Work
Ordinary Work, Extraordinary Grace: My Spiritual Journey in Opus Dei.
The Philosopher's stone is created by the alchemical method known as The Magnum Opus or The Great Work.
The Benedictines began to call the prayers the Opus Dei or " Work of God.
Opus appeared in the Berkeley Breathed Christmas children's book, A Wish for Wings That Work.
He also appeared in some of Breathed's children's books, including A Wish for Wings That Work and Goodnight Opus.
* Opus Dei (" The Work of God "), a Roman Catholic organization founded by Josemaría Escrivá
In contrast, the choir monks ( priests and seminarians ) of the same monastery attended to the Liturgy of the Hours, or Opus Dei (" The Work of God "), sacramental ministry, celebration of the liturgy, and formal studies.
* Opus Dei: a Catholic religious organization which literally means " God's Work "
Keeler took as his episcopal motto: Opus Fac Evangeliste (" Do the Work of an Evangelist ").
In Ordinary Work, Extraordinary Grace, he narrated the influence of Opus Dei in his conversion, and what made him feel that Opus Dei was his specific calling within the Catholic Church: ( 1 ) its members ' devotion to the Bible, ( 2 ) its ecumenism, since Opus Dei was the first Catholic institution to welcome non-Catholics as cooperators, ( 3 ) the upright lives of its members, ( 4 ) they were ordinary people, who lived theology, ( 5 ) holy ambition: " a devout work ethic ", ( 6 ) the practice of hospitality in answering his questions, ( 7 ) prayer: " They made time for intimate prayer every day.
A Wish for Wings That Work: An Opus Christmas Story is a children's book by Berkeley Breathed that was published in 1991.
The Benedictines began to call the prayers the Opus Dei or " Work of God.
Pope John XXIII lauded Opus Dei and said on 5 March 1960 that it opens up " unsuspected horizons of apostolate ," while Paul VI said that the Work is " an expression of the perennial youth of the Church, fully open to the exigencies of a modern apostolate.
Another sign of the church's declining role in Spanish life was the diminishing importance of the controversial secular religious institute, Opus Dei ( Work of God ).
According to Catholic officials and scholars, Opus Dei is God's Work performing a divine operation in society which mobilises Christians to sanctify secular realities from within.

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