Help


[permalink] [id link]
+
Page "Clerical celibacy" ¶ 52
from Wikipedia
Edit
Promote Demote Fragment Fix

Some Related Sentences

Canon and 21
* Canon 21, the famous " Omnis utriusque sexus ", which commands every Christian who has reached the years of discretion to confess all his, or her, sins at least once a year to his, or her, own ( i. e. parish ) priest.
* January 21 – The National Trust is founded in Britain by Octavia Hill, Robert Hunter and Canon Hardwicke Rawnsley.
For example, in 2012 the three largest sensors ( in terms of pixel count ) used by Canon were the 22. 3, 21. 1, and 17. 9 megapixel CMOS sensors.
Some classical works that achieved crossover status in the twentieth century include the Canon in D by Johann Pachelbel, the Symphony No. 3 by Henryk Górecki, and the second movement of Mozart's Piano Concerto No. 21, K. 467 ( from its appearance in the 1967 film Elvira Madigan ).
It was introduced on February 21, 2002 at the PMA Annual Convention and Trade Show as a direct competitor to the Canon EOS D60.
During the first 5 years when about 38 camera models were launched that wrote DNG, Adobe software added support for about 21 Canon models, about 20 Nikon models, and about 22 Olympus models.
Photo taken by user: NightThree with a Canon Powershot A60 on August 21, 2004.
The Reverend Canon Melville Cooper Newth OBE, the eleventh and longest-serving Headmaster of St Andrew ’ s Cathedral School, died peacefully on 21 October 2004, aged 90.
The Reverend Canon Arthur Robert Peacocke MBE ( 29 November 1924 – 21 October 2006 ) was a British theologian and biochemist.
Ordained a priest on 21 December 1954 at Kanda Catholic Cathedral, he went to study at the Pontifical Urban University in Rome, earning a doctorate in Canon law in 1960.
Canon 21 of the Fourth Council of the Lateran ( 1215 ), binding on the whole Church, laid down the obligation of secrecy in the following words:
Later, on the April 21, 2006 edition of SmackDown !, Canon remarked that The Miz was acting inappropriately, and had him escorted from the arena by security.

Canon and We
: Canon 3: We absolutely forbid priests, deacons, and subdeacons to associate with concubines and women, or to live with women other than such as the Nicene Council ( canon 3 ) for reasons of necessity permitted, namely, the mother, sister, or aunt, or any such person concerning whom no suspicion could arise.
: Canon 6: We also decree that those who in the subdiaconate and higher orders have contracted marriage or have concubines, be deprived of their office and ecclesiastical benefice.
We find the prayers of our Canon in the treatise de Sacramentis and allusions to it in the 4th century.
We must then admit that between the years 400 and 500 a great transformation was made in the Roman Canon " ( Euch.

Canon and absolutely
In Canon law, the word or its Latin original officialis is used absolutely as the legal title of a diocesan bishop's judicial vicar who shares the bishop's ordinary judicial power over the diocese and presides over the diocesan ecclesiastical court.
According to Roman Catholic Canon law, " The sacramental seal is inviolable ; therefore it is absolutely forbidden for a confessor to betray in any way a penitent in words or in any manner and for any reason.

Canon and forbid
* asserted that the canons appealed to by Constantinople do not give it the right to ' intrude into the affairs of other Local Churches and, in particular, to take into his jurisdiction a hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church without the letter of dismissal stipulated by the holy canons ', quoting Apostolic Canon 33 and Council of Carthage, Canon 32, which forbid this ;

Canon and priests
It remains a matter of Canon Law ( and often a criterion for certain religious orders, especially Franciscans ) that priests do not own land and therefore cannot pass it on to legitimate or illegitimate children.
With the revision of the Code of Canon Law promulgated in 1917 by Pope Benedict XV, only those who are already priests or bishops may be appointed cardinals.
* Canon 11 forbade clerics to have women in their houses or to visit the monasteries of nuns without a good reason ; declared that married clergy should lose their benefices ; and decreed that priests who engaged in sodomy should be deposed from clerical office and required to do penance-while laymen should be excommunicated.
A meeting of all priests in a Synod had to be postponed at the wish of the Vatican considering ongoing changes in Canon Law.
* Bishop's Chapel – in Anglican and Roman Catholic Canon Law, Bishops have the right to have a chapel in their own home, even when travelling ( such personal chapels may be granted only as a favor to other priests )
The Church forbids Catholic priests from holding political office anywhere in the world ( Code of Canon Law 285 § 3 ; 287 § 2 ).
The center of English Catholicism was the English College at Douai ( University of Douai, France ) founded in 1568 by William Allen, formerly of Queen's College, Oxford, and Canon of York, and subsequently cardinal, for the purpose of training priests to convert the English again to Catholicism.
Williamson was one of the four priests from the Society of St. Pius X who were excommunicated 20 years ago for taking part in the consecration of Bishops contrary to Canon Law.
The 1917 Code of Canon Law also restricted conferral of tonsure and any order below that of the presbyterate to those who intended to become priests and who were judged likely to be worthy priests.
Since the Canon of the Mass is now said aloud, observers have been able to check that the Pope is prayed for by name ( a traditional test of unity and loyalty ) even by those priests who, at least externally, accept directions from the CPCA, leading to the conclusion that " there is only one Catholic Church in China, whether state-recognized or so-called underground, they have the same faith, and the same doctrine.
According to Canon law, priests were allowed to say up to three masses per day and to accept a fee for requested prayers for the dead.
But Lefebvre did send three of his priests and in 1976, the ( now laicised ) Swiss priest Maurice Revaz ( who had taught Canon Law at the Society of Saint Pius X ( SSPX ) seminary of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre in Ecône ) persuaded the elderly Vietnamese Roman Catholic Archbishop Ngo Dinh Thuc of the authenticity of the apparitions.
On January 7, 2008, Bishop Leonardo Medroso, chairman of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines ( CBCP ) Episcopal Commission on Canon Law and bishop of Tagbilaran diocese, Bohol issued the appeal to priests to stay away from politics, ahead of the May 2010 elections.
He cited Code of Canon Law, prohibition, Canon 285, which forbids all clerics from entering politics and that priests " cannot have an active role in political parties unless the need to protect the rights of the Church or to promote the common good.
Although once required, it is no longer necessary to name the child after a saint as Canon 855 of the Code of Canon Law states " Parents, sponsors and parish priests are to take care that a name is not given which is foreign to Christian sentiment.
During the Paschal Canon, the priests cense the church, continually exchanging the Paschal greeting with the faithful.
These include the accentus prayers and lessons chanted by the deacons or priests such as the Collect, Epistle, Gospel, Secret, Preface, Canon, and Postcommunion, as well as such regular texts as the Pater noster, Te Deum, and the Gloria in excelsis Deo.
When Petrus in 1196 elected three bishops, Absalon requested the Pope to interact since the bishops were the sons of other priests, and this was not allowed according to Canon law.
" The Nine " ( as the four expelled priests plus five who voluntarily left were called in SSPX circles ) balked at Lefebvre's imposition of the 1962 missal which they believed already included significant departures from the liturgical traditions of the Church ( for example, adding the name of St. Joseph to the Canon of the Mass ).
Pope John Paul II denounced him and two other priests in the Nicaraguan government because they did not resign from office and were therefore in violation of Canon Law.

Canon and monks
Some lay practitioners in the West these days use the word " Sangha " as a collective term for all Buddhists, but the Pali Canon uses the word parisā ( Sanskrit, parisad ) for the larger Buddhist community — the monks, nuns, lay men, and lay women who have taken the Three Refuges — reserving ‘ Sangha ’ for a more restricted use .”
The council also decreed that every altar should contain a relic, which remains the case in modern Catholic and Orthodox regulations ( Canon VII ), and made a number of decrees on clerical discipline, especially for monks when mixing with women.
In common parlance, all members of male religious institutes are often termed " monks " and those of female religious institutes " nuns ", although in a more restricted sense, a monk is one who lives in a monastery under a monastic rule such as that of Saint Benedict and the term " nun " was in the 1917 Code of Canon Law officially reserved for members of a women's religious institute of solemn vows, and is sometimes applied only to those who devote themselves wholly to the contemplative life and belong to one of the enclosed religious orders living and working within the confines of a monastery and reciting the Liturgy of the Hours in community.
* Canon 27: Nuns were prohibited from singing the Divine Office in the same choir with monks.
* Canon 28: No church was to be left vacant more than three years from the death of the bishop ; secular canons who excluded from episcopal election regular canons or monks were condemned.
He travelled the country as a monk and saw the relaxation of the rules of Pali Canon among the Siamese monks he met, which he considered inappropriate.
After the then 20-year-old prince entered monastic life in 1824, he noticed what he saw as serious discrepancies between the rules given in the Pali Canon and the actual practices of Thai monks, and sought to upgrade monastic discipline to make it more orthodox.
748 the Tang emperor Tang Xuan-Zong ( claimed to be a descendant of Laozi ) sent monks to collect further teachings to add to the Canon.
The monastic code ( Patimokkha ) followed by Thai monks is taken from the Pāli Theravada Canon.
There are many suttas in the Pali Canon where the Buddha instructs monks to practice in remote wilderness.
In many they had originally been monks and had converted themselves into Canon, but all considered themselves bound by their rule to reside within the precincts of their monasteries, to meet daily in the church for the performance of divine service, to take their meals in the same hall, and to sleep in the same dormitory.

1.383 seconds.