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vicar and would
It is difficult to say what Thompson expected would come of their relationship, which had begun so soon after his emotions had been stirred by Maggie Brien, but when Katie wrote on April 11, 1900, to tell him that she was to be married to the Rev. Godfrey Burr, the vicar of Rushall in Staffordshire, the news evidently helped to deepen his discouragement over the failure of his hopes for a new volume of verse.
When the negotiations began, his quarrel with the king of France was temporarily in abeyance, and he had no intention of reviving it so long as there was hope that French money would come to pay the troops who, under Charles of Valois, the papal vicar of Tuscany, were so valuable in the crusade against the Colonna cardinals and their Sicilian allies.
The vicar George Dance agreed that he would give £ 60 a year, out of his income of £ 200, to a preacher who should be chosen by certain trustees.
In one of his letters to his vicar in the Milan diocese, Nicolo Ormaneto of Verona, Borromeo commissioned the master of the chapel, Vincenzo Ruffo ( 1508 – 1587 ), to write a mass that would make the words as easy to understand as possible.
As archbishop and military vicar, he would have greater freedom than official diplomats.
Aitken's claim that he had found God initially met with some scepticism, and he said that he would not become a vicar because he is not worthy of the office and " wouldn't like to give dog-collars a bad name ".
From 1969 to 1979, he was vicar of Sainte-Jeanne-de-Chantal, in the wealthy XVIe arrondissement of Paris, with his parochial vicar André Vingt-Trois, who would later become his successor as Archbishop of Paris.
I would like to make an entire range: tea pot, gravy boat, etc .- more tea, vicar?
Van Outen was particularly good in this as the ugly nun who would occasionally speak up only to be shouted down as an abomination by the goodly vicar Vaughan, complete with flashing lights and thunder effects called down from above.
If the French Jesuits would separate from the order, under a French vicar, with French customs, as with the Gallican church, the Crown would still protect them.
One of Izzard's most well-known routines was performed during Dress To Kill: a satirical depiction of Church of England fundamentalism, wherein Izzard explains how Church of England fundamentalism would be impossible because people would be shouting out " You must have tea and cake with the vicar or you DIE!
A vicar offered him some of the old gravestones from the church graveyard, which Dibnah then used to create the stone lintels and mullions, though he later expressed his fear that his property would now be haunted.
The mood is joyful, but at the end of the final chapter, the reader is reminded that Fancy has married with " a secret she would never tell " ( her final flirtation and brief engagement to the vicar ).
Eventually they found a female vicar who would help them, and they were united in a blessing ceremony held in Roy's Rolls on 23 April 1999.
" The result of this hearing was that he was allowed to continue in his post as vicar at Bergholt, but that the parishioners elect him a curate, who would pay him the majority of his stipend. The curate chosen was nonconformist, Robert Billio.
Stow says Crowley declared " the church was his, and the queen had given it him during his life and made him vicar thereof, wherefore he would rule that place and would not suffer any such superstitious rags of Rome there to enter.
Although Hampton School was founded in 1557 there was provision in the will that the school would only continue as long as the vicar, churchwardens and parishioners carried out his requests.
The vicar would operate under the authority of the primate of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.

vicar and funeral
Rivière's remains were brought back to Hanoi, where a funeral service was said over them by Paul-François Puginier, the French apostolic vicar of Western Tonkin.
Although Keating has never been a permanent cast member in the soap, he continues to appear as the local vicar in EastEnders, usually for a single episode at a time, in connection with another character's christening, marriage, or funeral.

vicar and sermon
The late Princess, a vicar told in her sermon, was interested in all religions and in reincarnation.
His father was a Church of England vicar who was proud of never having preached a sermon longer than 10 minutes.
The church was consecrated by the Bishop of London on 7 May 1822, and the sermon was preached by the vicar of St Pancras, James Moore.

vicar and be
Intercede for our separated brethren, that with us in the one true fold they may be united to the chief Shepherd, the vicar of thy Son.
An auxiliary bishop is a titular bishop, and he is to be appointed as a vicar general or at least as an episcopal vicar of the diocese in which he serves.
David Astor lived in Sutton Courtenay, Oxfordshire, and negotiated with the vicar for Orwell to be interred in All Saints ' Churchyard there, although he had no connection with the village.
* The 1870 Dogmatic Constitution Pastor Aeternus of the First Vatican Council reaffirmed that " it has always been necessary for every Church, e. g., the faithful throughout the world — to be in agreement with ( the Roman Church ) because of its preeminent authority " and that consequently the bishop whom the Church in Rome acknowledges as its head " is the successor of blessed Peter, the prince of the apostles, true vicar of Christ, head of the whole Church and father and teacher of all Christian people.
Amadeus had a tendency to exaggerate his titles, and also claimed to be Duke of Lombardy, Duke of Burgundy, Duke of Chablais, and vicar of the Holy Roman Empire, the latter of which had been given to his father by Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor.
Many of these books are believed to be a gift of the vicar serving when the library was first established, the Rev'd Anthony Tuckney.
The vicar, Mr. Beebe, announces that new tenants have leased a local cottage ; the new arrivals turn out to be the Emersons, who have been told of the available cottage at a chance meeting with Cecil ; the young man brought them to the village as a comeuppance to the cottage's landlord, whom Cecil thinks to be a snob.
The ceremony involves the Mayor of St Ives, a customs officer, and a vicar accompanied by two widows and 10 girls who should be the " daughters of fishermen, tinners, or seamen ".
The bishop of Quebec made him his vicar general in 1698 and appointed him to be the superior of the missions in Acadia.
In addition, in the Holy Roman Empire a local representative of the emperor, perhaps an archduke, might be styled " vicar ".
In the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America, The Lutheran Church — Missouri Synod, Lutheran Church — Canada, and the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod a vicar is a candidate for ordained pastoral ministry, serving in a vicariate or internship, usually in the third year of seminary training, though it can be delayed to the fourth year ( this is often referred to as " a vicarage ", a homonym of the residence of the Vicar ).
In either tradition, a vicar can be the priest of a " chapel of ease ", a building within the parish which is not the parish church.
The term " parson " came to be used to refer to all perpetual curates whether or not they received the higher positions of " vicar " or " rector ".
The warden presented himself for election every year ; there was to be an election for the post of vicar only when there was a vacancy.
In fact Reg seems to be sleeping with every man he can get hold of ( as it seems, even with the vicar ).
The judicial vicar and the assistant judicial vicars must be priests with doctorates or at least licenses in canon law.
In the Eastern Christian Churches ( Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox and Eastern Catholic ), the term exarch has two distinct uses: the deputy of a patriarch, or a bishop who holds authority over other bishops without being a patriarch ( thus, a position between that of patriarch and metropolitan ); or, a bishop appointed over a group of the faithful not yet large enough or organized enough to be constituted an eparchy / diocese ( thus the equivalent of a vicar apostolic ).
According to Bishop Burnet he was cast out by the Presbyterians, but whether this be so or not, he soon made his way to England and became vicar of Godmersham, Kent, from which living he was expelled by the Act of Uniformity 1662.
An outcome of the nearby Pentridge, or Pentrich, Rising of 1817 was for the vicar of Pentrich Church to call for an Anglican church to be built in Ripley as soon as possible.
von Knorring, after Åland teacher and vicar Frans Peter von Knorring ) can also be found here.
This angered the vicar and the magistrates published a notice ordering that any further preachers were to be brought to them.

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