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Celibacy and all
Celibacy was advocated as an ideal rule of life for all monks and nuns by Gautama Buddha, except for Japan where it is not strictly followed due to historical political developments following the Meiji Restoration.
Popes, bishops, and priests married and sired children for over a thousand years after Christ Celibacy was first written into law for all priests in the 12th century at the First Lateran Council ( 1123 ).

Celibacy and major
All traditions unanimously accept and believe in the core Jain philosophies including the major vows of Non-violence, Truthfulness, Non-stealing, Celibacy and Non-possession.
Celibacy may have been a condition of their office ; sexual abstinence was, according to Ovid, required of those attending Ceres ' major, nine-day festival.

Celibacy and world
They gave birth to Prsnigarbha who gave to the world the practice of Brahmacarya ( Celibacy ).

Celibacy and .
Celibacy refers to a state of being unmarried and, therefore, sexually abstinent, usually in association with the role of a religious official or devotee.
In her book The New Celibacy, Gabrielle Brown states that " abstinence is a response on the outside to what's going on, and celibacy is a response from the inside.
Celibacy also is also the natural state of a pure and advanced devotee of the Lord.
Celibacy excludes not only libidinous acts, but also sinful thoughts or desires of the flesh.
Celibacy is viewed differently by the Catholic Church and the various Protestant communities.
Celibacy not only for religious and monastics ( brothers / monks and sisters / nuns ) but also for bishops is upheld by the Catholic Church traditions.
Celibacy is designed to " consecrate themselves with undivided heart to the Lord and to " the affairs of the Lord, they give themselves entirely to God and to men.
Celibacy was not required of popes, bishops, or priests in the early church.
One explanation for the origin of obligatory celibacy is that it is based on Christ's example and on the writings of Paul, who wrote of the advantages celibacy allowed a man in serving the Lord, Celibacy was popularized by the early Christian theologian Origen and Augustine.
Celibacy is required of monastics — monks, nuns and friars — even in a rare system of double cloisters, in which husbands could enter the ( men's ) monastery while their wives entered a ( women's ) sister monastery.
Celibacy among the clergy is a relavtively recent practice: it became Church policy at the Second Lateran Council in 1139.
Celibacy is considered the appropriate behavior for both male and female students during this stage, which precedes the stage of the married householder.
Single people who either have chosen to remain unmarried ( Celibacy ) or who have lost their spouse for some reason are neither incomplete in Christ nor personal failures.
" St. John Chrysostom wrote: "... virginity is better than marriage, however good .... Celibacy is ... an imitation of the angels.
; Brahmacharya ( Celibacy ): To exercise control over senses ( including mind ) from indulgence.
In the kingdom, as in the Shaker fellowship, there was “ neither marrying nor giving in marriage .” Celibacy was a preparation for the kingdom.
Celibacy is neither encouraged nor discouraged, each member being free to decide his / her own way of life.
Celibacy is neither encouraged nor discouraged, each member being free to decide his / her own way of life.
Celibacy for religious and monastics ( monks and sisters / nuns ) and for bishops is upheld by both the Roman Catholic Church and Orthodox Christian traditions.
On the other hand, George T. Dennis SJ of Catholic University of America says: " There is simply no clear evidence of a general tradition or practice, much less of an obligation, of priestly celibacy-continence before the beginning of the fourth century " Peter Fink SJ agrees, saying that underlying premises used in the book, Apostolic Origins of Priestly Celibacy, " would not stand up so comfortably to historical scrutiny ".

has and existed
There has long existed a brotherly affection between us, thus I accepted him as my pupil.
The Rusk belief in balanced defense, replacing the Dulles theory of massive retaliation, removes a grave danger that has existed.
We are creative, it seems, when we produce something which has not previously existed.
In any case, I have always been treated with the utmost courtesy by Englishmen, even in Devonshire and Cornwall, where anti-Catholic feeling has supposedly existed the strongest and longest.
Examples of such courts include the New Jersey Court of Errors and Appeals ( which existed from 1844 to 1947 ), the Connecticut Supreme Court of Errors ( which has been renamed the Connecticut Supreme Court ), the Kentucky Court of Errors ( renamed the Kentucky Supreme Court ), and the Mississippi High Court of Errors and Appeals ( since renamed the Supreme Court of Mississippi ).
The word adobe has existed for around 4, 000 years, with relatively little change in either pronunciation or meaning.
Whilst a reasonable road infrastructure has existed within Angola, time and the war have taken their toll on the road surfaces, leaving many severely potholed, littered with broken asphalt.
The word Angst has existed since the 8th century, from the Proto-Indo-European root * anghu -, " restraint " from which Old High German angust developed.
Small-scale tourism has existed since the 1950s.
Although systems similar to AARP existed in other systems, Banyan VINES for instance, nothing like NBP has existed until recently.
From the time of the Spanish colonies there has existed a type of sorbet made from fallen hail or snow.
The rivalry has existed for some time with PSV and stems from various causes, such as the different interpretations of whether current national and international successes of both clubs and the supposed opposition between the Randstad and the province.
When analog television was developed, no affordable technology for storing any video signals existed ; the luminance signal has to be generated and transmitted at the same time at which it is displayed on the CRT.
Jewish and Christian music were originally a cappella, and this tradition has existed continuously in both of these religions as well as in Islam.
The size of the byte has historically been hardware dependent and no definitive standards existed that mandated the size.
The concept has existed for centuries and research and development have continued into the modern era.
There has been a great deal of debate about whether blitzkrieg existed as a coherent military strategy.
Cross-dressing has existed throughout much of recorded history.
Storytelling using a sequence of pictures has existed through history.
Cryptozoology has been criticised because of its reliance on anecdotal information and because some cryptozoologists do not follow the scientific method and devote a substantial portion of their efforts to investigations of animals that most scientists believe are unlikely to have existed.
The book has existed in numerous forms, with varying content, throughout the history of the Church and has also been published in differing formats by the various Latter Day Saint denominations.
In other words, even if the Universe has always existed, it still owes its existence to an Uncaused Cause, Aquinas further said: "... and this we understand to be God.

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