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Some Related Sentences

Vicarius and Filii
See the article Vicarius Filii Dei for the claim that papal tiaras are inscribed with those words.
Vicarius Filii Dei ( Latin: Vicar or Representative of the Son of God ) is a phrase first used in the forged medieval Donation of Constantine to refer to Saint Peter, a leader of the Early Christian Church and regarded as the first Pope by the Catholic Church.
The earliest known instance of the phrase Vicarius Filii Dei is in the Donation of Constantine, now dated between the eighth and the ninth centuries AD.
The title " Vicarius Filii Dei " appeared again in Our Sunday Visitor, a Catholic journal.
The earliest extant record of a Protestant writer on this subject and addressing the phrase Vicarius Filii Dei is Andreas Helwig in 1612.
Out of all these titles, he preferred to single out Vicarius Filii Dei, used in the Donation of Constantine, for the reason that it met " all the conditions which Bellarmine had thus far demanded.
Some later Protestant figures claimed that Vicarius Filii Dei was an official title of the Pope, with some saying that this title appeared on the papal tiara and / or a mitre.
: The pope wears upon his pontifical crown in jeweled letters, this title: " Vicarius Filii Dei ," " Viceregent of the Son of God ;" the numerical value of which title is just six hundred and sixty-six The most plausible supposition we have ever seen on this point is that here we find the number in question.
Catholic apologists answer the Protestant claims by noting that " Vicarius Filii Dei " is not an official Papal title.
They answer the claims that " Vicarius Filii Dei " is written on Papal Tiara by stating that there is no evidence of any Papal Tiara having such inscription.
ru: Vicarius Filii Dei
tl: Vicarius Filii Dei
uk: Vicarius Filii Dei
The Beast of Revelation is the papacy because the pope's alleged title Vicarius Filii Dei adds up to 666 and is allegedly engraved on papal tiara.
The Roman Catholic Church, however, claims that Vicarius Filii Dei is not an official title of the pope and there is no evidence that Vicarius Filli Dei is inscribed on papal tiara
The conspiracy theory of " Vicarius Filii Dei " ( Vicar of the Son of God ), supposedly considered an expansion of the historic title " Vicarius Christi ", is a term used in the spurious " Donation of Constantine " to refer to Saint Peter.
But due to lack of images or any source of Use " Vicarius Filii Dei " the tiara or mitre, and the term was never used as an official title ( as well as the fact that their founder Ellen Gould White's name also adds up to 666 by the same system ), the claim was abandoned by many Seventh-day Adventists.
* Vicarius Filii Dei

Vicarius and Latin
Vicar of Christ ( from Latin Vicarius Christi ; Vicar of God is used as an equivalent title ) is a term used in different ways, with different theological connotations throughout history.
Vicarius is a Latin word, meaning substitute or deputy.

Vicarius and Vicar
" Vicar of Jesus Christ " ( Vicarius Iesu Christi ) is one of the official titles of the Pope given in the Annuario Pontificio.
It is commonly used in the slightly abbreviated form " Vicar of Christ " ( Vicarius Christi ).
The title " Vicar of Peter " ( Vicarius Petri ) is used only of the Pope, not of other bishops.
Variations of it include: " Vicar of the Prince of the Apostles " ( Vicarius Principis Apostolorum ) and " Vicar of the Apostolic See " ( Vicarius Sedis Apostolicae ).

Vicarius and ),
Prefecture most commonly refers to a self-governing body or area since the tetrarchy when Emperor Diocletian divided the Roman Empire into four districts ( each divided into dioceses, grouped under a Vicarius ( a number of Roman provinces, listed under that article ), although he maintained two pretorian prefectures as an administrative level above the also surviving dioceses ( a few of which were split ).
From 395 there two imperial courts, at Rome ( later Ravenna ) and Constantinople, but the four prefectures remained as the highest level of administrative division, in charge of several so-called dioceses ( groups of Roman provinces ), each of which was headed by a Vicarius.
Diocletian set up 12 dioceses ( later several were split ; see under Roman province ), originally two to four for each of the four co-emperors under the short-lived Tetrarchy ( two senior Augusti, each above a Caesar ), each governed by a Vicarius who substituted for or acted on behalf of the praetorian prefect.

Vicarius and used
Helwig suggested that the supposed title was an expansion of the historical title Vicarius Christi, rather than an official title used by the Popes themselves.

Filii and Dei
The Latin of Melech and LaVey is based on the Roman Catholic Latin Missal, reworded so as to give it a Satanic meaning ( e. g. the Roman Mass starts " In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti, introibo ad altare Dei ", while LaVey's version, printed in the Satanic Rituals, starts " In nomine magni dei nostri Satanas, introibo ad altare Domini Inferi ").
Together, they published some polemical writings against Trinitarian belief, particularly De falsa et vera unius Dei Patris, Filii et Spiritus Sancti cognitione, which is largely a summarized version of Servetus's Christianismi Restitutio.
* Missa Dei Filii
* Missa Dei Filii, Litaniae Laurentanae " Salus Infirmorum "-Taffelmusik ( Frieder Bernius ), CD, 2004, Deutsche Harmonia Mundi
The main phrase of the blessing ends Et benedictio Dei omnipotentis, Patris et Filii et Spiritus Sancti descendat super vos et maneat semper ( And may the blessing of Almighty God, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit, descend on you and remain with you always ).

Filii and Latin
The sign of the Cross is made by touching the hand sequentially to the forehead, lower chest or navel area, and both shoulders, accompanied by the Trinitarian formula: at the forehead In the name of the Father ( or In nomine Patris in Latin ); at the stomach or heart and of the Son ( et Filii ); across the shoulders and of the Holy Spirit / Ghost ( et Spiritus Sancti ); and finally: Amen.
The Sons of the Most Holy Redeemer ( Latin: Filii Sanctissimi Redemptoris, Latin siglum: F. SS. R.

Filii and Son
In the sacristy, a priest wearing an alb, if he is to celebrate the Mass, or surplice, if he is not the celebrant of the Mass, and vested with a stole, which is the color of the day if the priest is the celebrant of the Mass or purple if he is not the celebrant of the Mass, exorcises and blesses salt and water, then puts the blessed salt into the water by thrice sprinkling it in the form of a cross while saying once, " Commixtio salis et aquæ pariter fiat in nomine Patris, et Filii et Spiritus Sancti " ( May a mixture of salt and water now be made in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit ).

Filii and ),
), Prodromus Systematis Universalis Regni Vegetabilis 15 ( 1 ): 1-260, Parisiis, Victoris Masson et Filii.
Between 1640 and 1650, Liceti published a series of seven books in which he answered questions on a variety of topics posed through letters by some of the most famous intellectuals of the day: De quaesitis per epistolas a claris viris responsa ( 1640 ), De secundo-quaesitis per epistolas a claris viris responsa ( 1646 ), De tertio-quaesitis per epistolas a claris viris responsa ( 1646 ), De motu sanguinis, origine nervorum, de quarto-quaesitis per epistolas a claris viris responsa medico-philosophica ( 1647 ), De providentia, nimbiferi gripho, de quinto-quaesitis per epistolas a claris viris responsa ( 1648 ), De sexto-quaesitis per epistolas a claris viris responsa ( 1648 ), and De septimo-quaesitis, creatione Filii Dei ad intra, theologice denuo controversa per epistolas a claris viris responsa ( 1650 ).

Dei and Latin
The title in Latin was: Kazimirus, Dei gracia rex Poloniæ ac terrarum Cracoviæ, Sandomiriæ, Syradiæ, Lanciciæ, Cuyaviæ, Pomeraniæ, Russiequæ dominus et heres.
The Agnus Dei would have been chanted in both Greek and Latin during this period, in the same manner as the other liturgical changes of Sergius I. Sergius I himself composed a litany in Greek ( extant in the Athelstan Psalter to be recited on the feast of all saints.
* Saint Augustine of Hippo, De Civitate Dei IV, 8 ( Latin )
The phrase " Dei Verbum " is Latin for " Word of God " and is taken from the first line of the document, as is customary for titles of major Catholic documents.
For the Latin text of sections 18 and 19 and the relevant sections of Sancta Mater Ecclesia see Bernard Orchard OSB, Dei Verbum and the Synoptic Gospels, Appendix ( 1990 ).
Latin: Wladislaus Dei gracia Polonie, Hungarie, Dalmacie, Croacie etc.
The Latin text was printed for the first time in Basel in 1549 by Nicholas Brylinger ; it was also published in the Gesta Dei per Francos by Jacques Bongars in 1611 and the Recueil des historiens des croisades ( RHC ) by Auguste-Arthur Beugnot and Auguste Le Prévost in 1844, and Bongars ' text was reprinted in the Patrologia Latina by Jacques Paul Migne in 1855.
* Official Latin version: Michael I, Dei Gratia rex Poloniae, magnus dux Lithuaniae, Russiae, Prussiae, Masoviae, Samogitiae, Livoniae, Smolensciae, Kijoviae, Volhyniae, Podoliae, Podlachiae, Severiae, Czernichoviaeque, etc.
* Official title was ( in Latin ): Joannes III, Dei Gratia rex Poloniae, magnus dux Lithuaniae, Russiae, Prussiae, Masoviae, Samogitiae, Livoniae, Smolenscie, Kijoviae, Volhyniae, Podlachiae, Severiae, Czernichoviaeque, etc.
According to the Oxford English Dictionary, and to Lo Zingarelli, the word duomo derives from the Latin word " domus ", meaning house, as a cathedral is the " house of God ", or domus Dei.
* Royal titles in Latin: Sigismundus Tertius Dei gratia rex Poloniæ, magnus dux Lithuaniæ, Russiæ, Prussiæ, Masoviæ, Samogitiæ, Livoniæque, necnon Suecorum, Gothorum Vandalorumque hæreditarius rex.
The sign of peace is exchanged and then the " Lamb of God " (" Agnus Dei " in Latin ) litany is sung or recited, while the priest breaks the host and places a piece in the main chalice ; this is known as the rite of fraction and commingling.
Opus Dei is Latin for Work of God ; hence the organization is often referred to by members and supporters as the Work.
The newly combined school will be known as Mater Dei, Latin for " Mother of God.
* Missa Cantata ( Latin for " sung mass "): celebrated by a priest without deacon and subdeacon, and thus a form of Low Mass, but with some parts ( the three variable prayers, the Scripture readings, Preface, Pater Noster, and Ite Missa Est ) sung by the priest, and other parts ( Introit, Kyrie, Gloria, Gradual, Tract or Alleluia, Credo, Offertory Antiphon, Sanctus and Benedictus, Agnus Dei, and Communion Antiphon ) sung by the choir.
In 1988, following the excommunication of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre and four bishops that he had consecrated, the Pope issued a further document, a motu proprio known as Ecclesia Dei, which stated that " respect must everywhere be shown for the feelings of all those who are attached to the Latin liturgical tradition ".
In some monotheistic religions such as Christianity ( the Catholic Church where the official language, Latin, used terms as Imperium Dei / Domini ) the Divine is held to have a superior imperium, as ultimate King of Kings, above all earthly powers.
The impetus for this revival came in the mid 1400's when Leonardo de Candia Pistoia a Byzantine monk, brought in 1460 the Hermetica manuscript and the 14 books called Corpus Hermeticum to the court of Cosimo de ' Medici, ruler of Florence, who later requested the Latin translation by Marsilio Ficino, a member of the de ' Medici's court, who published a collection of thirteen tractates in 1471, as De potestate et sapientia Dei.
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 ").
* In Latin: " Vladislaus Quartus Dei gratia rex Poloniae, magnus dux Lithuaniae, Russiae, Prussiae, Masoviae, Samogitiae, Livoniaeque, necnon Suecorum, Gothorum Vandalorumque haereditarius rex, electus magnus dux Moschoviae.
* Official titles in Latin: Ioannes Casimirus, Dei Gratia rex Poloniae, magnus dux Lithuaniae, Russie, Prussiae, Masoviae, Samogitiae, Livoniae, Smolenscie, Severiae, Czernichoviaeque ; nec non Suecorum, Gothorum, Vandalorumque haereditarius rex, etc.
A bull's format began with one line in tall elongated letters containing three elements: the Pope's name, the Papal title episcopus servus servorum Dei, meaning ' bishop, servant of the servants of God ', and the few Latin words that constituted the incipit from which the bull would also take its name for record keeping purposes, but which might not be directly indicative of the bull's purpose.
The title Lamb of God ( in Latin Agnus Dei ) appears in the Gospel of John, with the exclamation of John the Baptist: " Behold the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world " in John 1: 29 when he sees Jesus.

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