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Topic: Francis Kenrick


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 Francis Kenrick
Kenrick wanted to establish control and authority over the lay people in the Church.
Kenrick told lay people they must stay within their boundaries and not try to control him and the Church.
Mary’s Parish became a center of conflict with that goal.
encyclopedia.codeboy.net /wikipedia/f/fr/francis_kenrick.html

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Francis and Peter Kenrick
Francis Patrick was sent by his uncle to a good classical school, and at the age of eighteen was selected as one of those who were to go to Rome to study for the priesthood.
When Bishop Kenrick went to Philadelphia in 1830 there were only four churches in the city and one in the suburbs, and ten priests, when he left at in 1857, the diocese contained 94 churches and many religious institutions, and was the home of 101 priests and 46 seminarians, besides numerous religious orders.
An uncle, Father Richard Kenrick was for several years parish priest of St. Nicholas of Myra in the same city, and he cultivated carefully the quality of piety which he observed at an early age in both children.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/08618a.htm

  
 Catholic Almanac Online
Kenrick, Peter (1806-96): Brother of Francis Kenrick and first archbishop of St. Louis from 1847-95; born in Ireland; after service in Ireland, invited by his brother to Philadelphia; rector of the cathedral and president of St. Charles Borromeo Seminary from 1833-41; coadj.
Kenrick, Francis P. (1796-1863): Archbishop of Baltimore from 1851-63; born in Ireland and educated in Rome; labored in Bardstown, Kentucky and defended the Catholic faith; coadj.
Duffy, Francis (1871-1932): Chaplain and educator; served for 14 years as a teacher at Dunwoodie Seminary; served as a chaplain during World War I from 1917-20; promoted ecumenism and supported Alfred E. Smith.
www.osv.com /catholicalmanac/catholicspast.asp

  
 The Bishops of Philadelphia
The successor to Francis Kenrick was of an unassuming, saintly nature likewise, but due to his Germanic roots (he was born in Bohemia) he was disliked by many of the Irish bishops who wanted the American episcopacy to remain Irish.
Francis Kenrick served in Philadelphia for twenty one years.
Kenrick played a major role in the planning of the First Plenary Council of Baltimore in 1852, the result of which is the Baltimore Catechism we all know and love.
www.rc.net /philadelphia/history/bishops.htm

  
 Goals of the Master of Arts Program
Kenrick provides structured opportunities for faculty research and intellectual growth in such means as faculty colloquia and in-service workshops, in allowances for books, memberships, and attendance at conventions, and above all in sabbatical leaves.
Kenrick ensures that revenues, expenditures, and capital projects are budgeted and submitted for review and approval by the Board of Trustees and the Board of Directors, clearly reflecting the directions of the strategic plan for the school.
Kenrick regularly reviews the quality of applicants admitted to its programs, and seeks to develop strategies for enhancing the overall quality of its student population.
www.kenrick.edu /InstResources/resources.html

  
 The Catholic Biblical Association of America
Kenrick died in 1863 and his version never received widespread use in the U.S. church.
With that, Kenrick's translation virtually disappeared from public knowledge--it is not mentioned among the English versions in either the original or revised Jerome Biblical Commentary.
In 1866 the bishops at the Second Plenary Council initially urged its adoption, but had to drop the issue in the face of unexplained opposition from Kenrick's brother, Archbishop Peter R. Kenrick of St. Louis.
studentorg.cua.edu /cbib/fog.cfm

  
 AllRefer.com - Francis Patrick Kenrick (Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: General Biography) - Encyclopedia
Francis Patrick Kenrick 1797–1863, American Roman Catholic churchman, b.
Francis Patrick Kenrick, Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: General Biographies
AllRefer.com - Francis Patrick Kenrick (Roman Catholic And Orthodox Churches: General Biography) - Encyclopedia
reference.allrefer.com /encyclopedia/K/Kenrick.html

  
 Archdiocese of St. Louis: 1843-1903, The Immigrant Church
Kenrick’s distaste for politics and his practice to stay out of political discussions was severely tested in the 1860s, as the Civil War raged.
Kenrick’s brother died a few days after the Battle of Gettysburg, but because of war travel restrictions, he could not attend the funeral.
Kenrick wrote to Rosati, who was in Haiti on a special mission for the Holy Father.
www.archstl.org /history/chap3.html

  
 First Diocesan Synod (1832)
The First Synod was convoked by Bishop Francis P. Kenrick in 1832.
Bishop Kenrick's notification of the Synod informed priests that "although only priests exercising quasi-parochial functions were entitled, as of right, to seats in the synod, he would gladly hear any priest who wished to address him." Bishop Kenrick drafted statutes before the synod, and proposed them to the priests for discussion.
After a short retreat for participants was held at Old Saint Mary's Church, the synod opened with a pontifical Mass celebrated by Bishop Kenrick.
www.synod-phl.org /first_diocesan_synod_(1832).htm

  
 American Catholic History page 2 - Catholic Bible Study
When Bishop Francis Kenrick petitioned city officials because Catholic children were forced to use the King James Bible, the American Protestant Association was formed and declared that the "principles of popery" were "subversive of civil and religious liberty", and as a result they were uniting to defend themselves against these great exertions.
Francis was considered the leading theologian in America at that time, although he soon became caught up in protestant theology.
One ecclesiastic who began to have doubts about the level of authority of the Catholic Church Bishop Peter Kenrick, who opposed the Vatican I definition of papal infallibility, and was one of the last bishops to submit to the definition after the council.
www.cathtruth.com /catholicbible/amerhst2.htm

  
 THEOTRAD.TXT
Kenrick's norm for the proper interpretation of Scripture was the consensus of the fathers.[18] This concept, though not original, shaped his approach to the continuing teaching authority in the Church.
Kenrick became Archbishop of Baltimore in 1850 and died in 1863.
Kenrick did not embrace any particular theory of inspiration, but he did treat of its extent, especially in regard to the relationship between science and the Bible.
www.ewtn.com /library/HUMANITY/THEOTRAD.TXT

  
 AOH in America
Dublin-born Bishop Francis Kenrick tried to defuse the situation by closing all churches on the Sunday after the attacks.
Declaring that it was better to let all churches burn than shed one drop of blood, he counseled Catholics to take no action and offer no resistance.
Rioting in Irish Kensington was one thing, but rioting in elite Philadelphia was another, especially when the Mayor was stoned as he tried to calm the mobs.
www.irishroots.org /aoh/aohamerica.htm

  
 SIXTH GENERATION
Francis Kenrick BIRLEY was born on 8 Jul 1892 in Claridges, Lingfield, Surrey, England.
EMAIL US Francis Hornby BIRLEY J.P. was born on 14 Mar 1850 in Pendleton, Manchester, Lancashire, England.
Frances Kenrick BIRLEY was born on 8 Jun 1892 in Claridges, Lingfield, Surrey, England.
www.birley.org /jbirleyd/d266.htm

  
 St. Francis Xavier Catholic Church:
Francis P. Kenrick, Bishop of Philadelphia) with music by the choir from Emmitsburg, Md. presumably from Mount St. Mary's Seminary.
Francis was among the first seven who took vows in the Society of Jesus (founded by Ignatius) on the feast of Mary's Assumption in 1534.
Francis Xavier Gartland was to become the first Bishop of Savannah and Thomas R. Butler was later president of Mount St. Mary's College.
www.sfxcatholicchurch.org /Details.asp?ContentID=2137352958&TOCID=2083225509

  
 Ch 3 (spring 2004)
In the years between 1835 and 1863 Francis Patrick Kenrick (1796-1863) was actively in search of converts to the Roman Catholic Church.
Kenrick had not been able to convince the entire House of Bishops to convert, but he could finally boast of one Episcopal bishop.
Kenrick thought that Episcopalians were particularly vulnerable to conversion.
www.vts.edu /classes/lma6/CH3_2004/Lecture_4a_converts_to_Rome.htm

  
 Third Diocesan Synod (1847)
The Third Synod was convoked by Bishop Francis P. Kenrick in 1847.
Francis X. Gartland acted as secretary to the Synod.
The Synod was held at Saint John's pro-cathedral in Philadelphia on October 3, 1847.
www.synod-phl.org /third_diocesan_synod_(1847).htm

  
 Archbishop Keough - Cathedral of Mary Our Queen, Baltimore
Francis had an interest in the priesthood from a very early age.
On November 29, 1947, six months after the death of Archbishop Curley, Francis P. Keough was named the eleventh archbishop of Baltimore, America's premier see.
His Irish-born parents lost two daughters in early childhood, and his father himself died when Francis was only five years old.
www.cathedralofmary.org /history/archbishops4.htm

  
 Notre Dame Archives Inventory: MDRI 1
Francis P. to Bishop John McGill 1853/0513 1 L Elder, A. to Bishop John McGill 1853/0517 1 L Zenner, Franciscus to Bishop John McGill 1853/0521 1 L Zenner, Franciscus to Bishop John MCGill 1853/0529 1 L O'Reilly, Bishop Bernard to Bishop John McGill 1853/0603 1 L Kenrick, Archbp.
Francis P. to Bishop John McGill 1852/0323 1 L Whelan, Bishop Richard Vincent to Bishop John McGill 1852/0412 1 L Hitselberger, Father A. to Bishop John McGill 1852/0413 1 L Kenrick, Archbp.
Francis P. to Bishop John McGill 1852/0422 1 L Keiley, A. to Bishop John McGill 1852/0712 1 L Gartland, Bishiop Francis Xavier to Bishop John McGill 1852/0726 1 L Kenrick, Archbp.
archives1.archives.nd.edu /mdri01.htm

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Augustine Francis Hewit
This occupation called him to Baltimore and Philadelphia, where he resided with Bishop Francis P. Kenrick and became acquainted with the Venerable John Nepomucen Neumann, C.SS.R. [Editor's note: St. John N. Neumann was canonized by Pope Paul VI in 1977].
As a Redemptorist he laboured principally on missions with Fathers Isaac T. Hecker, Clarence A. Walworth, Francis A. Baker, and George Deshon, until with them he was dispensed from his religious vows by a decree of the Roman Congregation of Bishops and Regulars, 6 March, 1858.
His most popular book was "The Life of Rev. Francis A. Baker", one of his companions, who died in 1865.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/07309b.htm

  
 Philadelphia Archdiocesan Historical Research Center
Bishop Francis Patrick Kenrick (1796-1863), born in Ireland, was installed as the third Bishop of Philadelphia.
Kenrick is appointed a Coadjutor-Bishop with right of succession upon the death of Bishop Conwell.
The Most Reverend Edmond Francis Prendergast (1843-1918), was installed as the seventh Bishop of Philadelphia, and in the process became the first graduate of St. Charles Borromeo Seminary to attain this honor.
www.rc.net /philadelphia/pahrc/timeline.html

  
 Protestant Influence on American Catholics - Catholic Bible Study
Bishop Francis Kenrick, having become sensitive to protestant criticism, began to consider their arguments concerning the nature and extant of inspiration as having a point.
One professor at St. Mary's Seminary in Baltimore was thrilled to learn that some German professors were denying the inspiration of various books, and were seeking natural explanations for the miracles of Jesus.
He attempted a revision that was never published, where he chose to use certain protestant terms for some of the books of the Old Testament, and placed the deuterocanonical works and the end of his book.
www.cathtruth.com /catholicbible/protinf.htm

  
 Archbishops - Cathedral of Mary Our Queen, Baltimore
He gave quick witness to his mental gifts, entering the Bardstown seminary at an early age, while Francis Kenrick still taught there.
Born in Dublin in 1797, Francis Patrick Kenrick made his clerical studies in Rome, and then volunteered for service in Kentucky.
During his rule, five provincial councils were held, and St. Charles' Minor Seminary was founded.
cathedralofmary.org /history/archbishops2.htm

  
 Parents will access student data online via 'Edline' - PittsburghLIVE.com
The date will mark 174 years to the day since the parish's first church, then still under construction, was blessed by Bishop Francis Kenrick.
On Oct. 28, 1830, the Blairsville parish's first church was blessed by newly consecrated Bishop Francis Kenrick, who stopped by the town on his way from Pittsburgh to his new charge in Philadelphia.
Enlargements of the rectory and school and installation of stained glass windows in the church were among McKeever's accomplishments, while Brady oversaw purchase of an organ and replacement of gas lighting with electricity.
www.pittsburghlive.com /x/blairsvilledispatch/s_262143.html

  
 LIFE OF SAINT JOHN NEUMANN, Miracle Worker
On his 41st birthday, he was consecrated bishop of Philadelphia by Archbishop Francis Kenrick at St. Alphonsus Church in Baltimore, in 1852.
He may also lay claim to being founder of a religious order for women, the Third Order of St. Francis of Glen Riddle, whose Rule he drafted in 1855 after returning from Rome for the solemn promulgation of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception.
Recent research in the files of the State Department show that Bishop Neumann became a naturalized citizen of the United States at Baltimore on February 10, 1848, renouncing allegiance to the Emperor of Austria in whose realm he was born on March 28, 1811.
www.stjohnneumann.org /life.html

  
 Catholic Churches in Northeast Pennsylvania
Kenrick, Francis Patrick, translated and edited by Francis E Tourscher, by permission and under the direction of Edmond F Prendergast, Diary and Visitation record of the Rt Rev Francis Patrick Kenrick, administrator and bishop of Philadelphia, 1830-1851, later, archbishop of Baltimore, Lancaster: Wickersham Print Co, 1916.
I determined that this church shall be dedicated to God under the patronage of St Francis Xavier.
Footnotes and editorial comments unless cleary marked are as found in the 1916 translation.
www.users.fast.net /~alkeis/catholics/history/kenrick.html

  
 University of Notre Dame Archives: Calendar (1826)
As to the seventh question, Kenrick thinks what he has just said is sufficient since the promise of the parents is not acceptable and what Kenrick had told Rese is retracted by the Secretary.
Since the Sacred Congregation cannot consider taking Kenrick away from Bardstown because Bishop (Benedict Joseph) Flaget has insisted upon his need of him, De Somalia has written to Maréchal asking that he pass over Kenrick and suggest three other candidates for the coadjutorship.
De Somalia thinks that Kenrick should be left there and asks that Maréchal name three other candidates for the coadjutorship and he will see that the appointment is put through quickly.
catholic.archives.nd.edu /calendar/cal1826.htm

  
 Slides
Kenrick Library has a collection of slides on carousels with accompanying audiocassettes.
Kenrick Library slides may are for reference use only and may not be borrowed.
The slides in Kenrick Library are located in the audiovisual collection on Level 3.
www.uce.ac.uk /library/public/asslides.htm

  
 Fillebrown Family by Jerry Fillebrown: Fifth Generation
When John was age 40 and Sarah Kenrick was age 30 they became the parents of Anna Fillebrown December 30, 1761 in Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts.
When John was age 38 and Sarah Kenrick was age 28 they became the parents of Thomas Fillebrown November 26, 1759 in Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts.
When John was age 44 and Sarah Kenrick was age 34 they became the parents of William Fillebrown October 30, 1765 in Boston, Suffolk County, Massachusetts.
www.fillebrown.com /d0/i0000025.htm

  
 July 8, 1863 in History
Francis P Kenrick, Irish/US archbishop of Baltimore, dies at 65
A good head and a good heart are always a formidable combination.
Add "Today in History" to Your Site - it's Easy!
www.brainyhistory.com /events/1863/july_8_1863_55400.html

  
 Deceased Bishops of United States of America, Page 3 [Catholic-Hierarchy]
Archbishop Francis Patrick Kenrick †, Archbishop of Baltimore
Archbishop Francis Xavier Leray †, Archbishop of New Orleans
Archbishop Joseph Francis McGeough †, Apostolic Nuncio Emeritus to Ireland
www.catholic-hierarchy.org /country/bus3c.html

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