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priest and thought
As he grew up, his relatives " thought to have made me a priest " but he was instead apprenticed to a local shoemaker and grazier, George Gee of Mancetter.
Denying any special status to the priesthood, Lollards thought confession to a priest was unnecessary since according to them priests did not have the ability to forgive sins.
The title mullah, commonly translated " cleric " in the West and thought to be analogous to " priest ", is a title of address for any educated or respected figure, not even necessarily ( though frequently ) religious.
According to church tradition, he was raised in Carthage and was thought to be the son of a Roman centurion, a trained lawyer, and an ordained priest.
Leo was the priest of the church of St. Sixtus in Rome, thought to be a Benedictine monk.
Married clergy are considered as best-suited to staff parishes, as a priest with a family is thought better qualified to counsel his flock.
The title mullah ( a Persian corruption of the Arabic maula, " master "), commonly translated " cleric " in the West and thought to be analogous to " priest " or " rabbi ", is a title of address for any educated or respected figure, not even necessarily ( though frequently ) religious.
The priest will make a prostration before all and ask their forgiveness for sins committed in act, word, deed, and thought.
Though d ' Artagnan finds, through the decoration of Aramis ' chambre, that the former musketeer who had thought of little other than being a priest is now a priest who thinks of little other than being a soldier, Aramis is not willing to enter into Mazarin's service.
In his teens he thought seriously about becoming a Roman Catholic priest.
And so I begged, since I was in a wretched plight, to be given one day for thought and a priest.
The priest was refused me, but the time for thought was given.
The Archbishop of Calcutta, Henry Sebastian D ' Souza, said he ordered a priest to perform an exorcism on Mother Teresa with her permission when she was first hospitalised with cardiac problems because he thought she may be under attack by the devil.
This priesthood was so named, according to a revelation, because Melchizedek " was such a great high priest " and ".. out of respect or reverence to the name of the Supreme Being, to avoid the too frequent repetition of his name ..." This priesthood was thought to be the order of priesthood held by Jesus, and a distinction was made between the Aaronic and Melchizedek priesthoods, which derives in part from the Epistle to the Hebrews, whose author argues that Jesus arose " after the order of Melchizedec, and not ... after the order of Aaron.
Thus, in 1829, Smith and his associate claimed that the Aaronic Priesthood was given to him by John the Baptist, who was thought to have authority through the lineage of his father Zacharias, who was an Aaronic priest.
Following pressure from Jakarta, he stepped down in 1983 and was replaced by the younger priest, Monsignor Carlos Filipe Ximenes Belo, who Indonesia thought would be more loyal.
" I'd got accepted to a seminary in Wisconsin, and I was gonna become a priest, but at the last second I thought, ' I'll just go to public school.
" Another theme is the idea of social restraint versus internal thought: at Lester Richards ' funeral, the priest begins the eulogy: " Lester Richards is dead, and aren't you glad it wasn't you?
It was once thought to be etymologically related to the Avestan āθrauuan ( Vedic atharvan ), a type of priest, but that is now considered unlikely ( Boyce, 2002: 16 ).
While Duigenan thought that Catholics should not have political rights, he provided his Catholic wife with a chapel at their home and arranged for a priest to say mass for her on Sundays.
" They thought the " Allons au peuple " catchphrase had a ring of heresy, breaking down the divinely established distinction between the priest and the layman, and giving lay people too much power in Church affairs.
Although Eastwood thought the script needed work, he liked the concept, particularly the priest with militant leanings and the portrayal of black militants, which was based on the Black Panther Party.
The six vocal parts were thought to represent six archetypal American characters-a waitress, a policeman, a businessman, a cheerleader, a priest, and a mechanic.

priest and chapter
In his undelivered speech " How to Build a Universe That Doesn't Fall Apart Two Days Later ", Dick recounts how in describing an incident at the end of the book ( end of chapter 27 ) to an Episcopalian priest, the priest noted its striking similarity to a scene in the Books of Acts in the Bible.
Conversely, the remarkably accurate calculation of the earth's circumference by Eratosthenes, and the invention of a steam engine by Heron, both ascribed in chapter 60 to the priest Menes, historically occurred in Alexandrian Egypt, centuries after the period of the novel.
Those who must be invited to a diocesan synod by law are any coadjutor or auxiliary bishops, the vicars general and episcopal, the officialis, the vicars forane plus an additional priest from each vicariate forane, the presbyterial council, canons of the cathedral chapter ( if there is one ), the rector of the seminary, some of the superiors of religious houses in the diocese, and members of the laity chosen by the diocesan pastoral council, though the diocesan bishop can invite others to attend at his own initiative.
The characters include the Haranian Phut ( aka the Chaldean priest Berossus ) and his look-alike ( chapter 20 ), and the protagonist Ramses and his look-alike and nemesis, Lykon.
Mount Argus was the official home of Saint Charles of Mount Argus who was a well known Passionist priest in 19th-century Ireland, he was mentioned as a miracle worker in the book Ulysses, Circe chapter.
During the following years he traveled in various European countries, spending some time at the German College in Rome ; in 1728 he was ordained priest and, formally admitted to the chapter of St Simeon in 1732, he became a professor at the university of Trier.
The Catechism of the Council of Trent thus repeats what is stated in chapter II of that Council's Decree on the Sacrament of Order, using the word " priest " to refer both to bishops and to presbyters.
In chapter IV, it uses the word " priest " to refer instead to presbyters alone.
For Brahmanas and twice-born men, " causing an injury to a priest, smelling wine or things that are not to be smelled, crookedness, and sexual union with a man are traditionally said to cause loss of caste " In the same chapter, the atonement for twice-born men is a ritual bath: " A twice-born man who has intercourse with a male, or with a female in a cart drawn by oxen, in water, or in the day-time, shall bathe, dressed in his clothes.
The most widely-read of these works is probably A Practical Guide to Qabalistic Symbolism, but other notable works include The Experience of the Inner Worlds, which grew out of an association with Christian priest Anthony Duncan, and a new edition of Dion Fortune's An Introduction to Ritual Magic, to which Knight contributed a companion chapter for each of Fortune's original chapters.
The right to appoint the priest at St. Stefan's church in Colombier was held by the cathedral chapter of Lausanne Cathedral.
As Nils Allesson was the son of a priest, the cathedral chapter in Lund, Denmark-the primate over Uppsala-appealed the election to the pope.
The first chapter of St John's Gospel was read while the priest made his way back to the sacristy.
At other times ( as with the priest Samentu in chapter 55 ) he apparently invented them.
The next morning, she re-writes a chapter in the book of her neighbour to make him a priest, and therefore not able to marry the woman from downstairs who caused all the fuss.
In the next chapter, the life of Alexander Crummell is a short biography of a black priest in the Episcopal Church.
More commonly, in places throughout the world where a cathedral chapter has not been erected ( as for instance, in the United States, where there are no chapters at all ), the term Rector is used for the priest who serves as chief administrator of a cathedral church.
Textual scholars regard the chapter as being an insertion by the deuteronomist, and, even in the Talmud, it is argued that the chapter had been moved and was originally part of the Torah as an aspect of the Deuteronomic Code ; though the masoretic text for this chapter includes a role for the death of the high priest, the Septuagint's version of the chapter does not mention it.

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