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Topic: Tract (liturgy)


    Note: these results are not from the primary (high quality) database.


  
 Medieval Sourcebook: Mass of The Roman Rite [Latin/English]
It seems that among these the liturgy of the Church in Rome was both particularly ancient and, owing the to position of the papacy, increasingly prestigious.
In Lent and at Masses for the dead the Alleluia is omitted and a tract sung instead.
Celebration of mass in the vernacular was also allowed as an option by Pope Paul VI, and, in effect, this has become usual practice throughout the Catholic world.
www.fordham.edu /halsall/basis/latinmass2.html   (6657 words)

  
 Palmer: Origines Litugicæ, Doc 05
A tract ascribed to Proclus, patriarch of Constantinople in the early part of the fifth century, certainly speaks of the liturgy of Chrysostom.
The liturgy of Constantinople, however, seems to have been received by all as a thing neither strange nor new; but, on the contrary, as representing that rite which they and their predecessors had received in long succession from the most primitive times.
It must be confessed, that the records of antiquity do not furnish us with many allusions to this appellation of the Constantinopolitan liturgy.
anglicanhistory.org /palmer/palmer3.html   (1636 words)

  
 Rosycross Publishing Group
Included in this issue is the Fama Fraternitas, Confesio Rosicruciana (Chemical Wedding of CR is being prepared as a separate tract) Liber XXXIII, an Account of the A\A\, One Star in Sight and a few other documents of provenance to the subject.
Included in the F.S. material will be corrected translations of the materials presented in Fire & Ice by Dr. Stephen Flowers and adaptations of the Liturgy for the Master of the Chair for individual practice.
The issue will feature the Third Covenant articles of Frater Zephyros of the Ambrosii Magi Hortum Rosarum and an examination of the Fraternitas Saturni?s doctrine and rituals by Frater Oma.
members.fortunecity.com /rosycross1/pub.htm   (285 words)

  
 USCCB - NAB - Judith - Introduction
The Book of Judith is a tract for difficult times; the reader, it was hoped, would take to heart the lesson that God was still the Master of history, who could save Israel from her enemies.
The beautiful hymn of the people honoring Judith (Judith 15:9-10) is often applied to Mary in the liturgy.
Any attempt to read the book directly against the backdrop of Jewish history in relation to the empires of the ancient world is bound to fail.
www.nccbuscc.org /nab/bible/judith/intro.htm   (631 words)

  
 Crosswalk.com
The Book of Judith is a tract for difficult times; the reader, it was hoped, would take to heart the lesson that God was still the Master of history, who could save Israel from her enemies.
The beautiful hymn of the people honoring Judith (Jdt 15:9-10) is often applied to Mary in the liturgy.
Having fasted and prayed, Judith dresses in her finest garments and proceeds to the Assyrian camp, where she succeeds in killing Holofernes while he lies in a drunken stupor.
bible.crosswalk.com /History/BC/Apocrypha/Judith.html   (598 words)

  
 St. Mary Magdalene
In May of 2002 the community purchased a 1.82 acre tract of land a little north of Savannah, in the city of Rincon, GA. On June 2, after the Divine Liturgy, the whole community of Orthodox believers of St Mary Magdalene drove to the property for a Cross-planting ceremony, thereby claiming the land for God.
In May 1990, St Mary's moved into a storefront facility attached to a veterinarian's clinic on Skidway Rd. In June of that same year, the community's first permanent priest, Fr Adrian Pollard, along with his wife Matushka Xenia and their son Daniel, arrived and began ministering to the community.
In January 1989 an organizational meeting was held by several Orthodox families in Savannah, and out of this meeting St Mary Magdalene was born.
www.effga.com /st.mary   (598 words)

  
 USCCB - NAB - Judith - Introduction
The beautiful hymn of the people honoring Judith (Judith 15:9-10) is often applied to Mary in the liturgy.
The Book of Judith is a tract for difficult times; the reader, it was hoped, would take to heart the lesson that God was still the Master of history, who could save Israel from her enemies.
Having fasted and prayed, Judith dresses in her finest garments and proceeds to the Assyrian camp, where she succeeds in killing Holofernes while he lies in a drunken stupor.
www.nccbuscc.org /nab/bible/judith/intro.htm   (598 words)

  
 Jack Chick
Chick tracts deal with Jews (well-intentioned and beloved, even though they're gonna burn in hell), rock and roll (a seething cauldron of Satanism), Dungeons & Dragons (gateway to real Witchcraft), Muslims (Islam is based on godless pagan lunar cult), Halloween (invented by Satan personally) and Buddhists (Buddha didn't die for your sins, you fool).
After being delivered from the festering sewer of "bad language" that had apparently constituted his whole life before marriage, Chick decided to turn his talents to pamphleteering, beginning with a tract called "Why No Revival?" which condemned the lethargic lack of enthusiasm of modern churchgoers.
He did it because he loves Catholics and wants them to be saved through faith in Jesus, not trusting in religious liturgy and sacraments.
www.rotten.com /library/bio/religion/jack-chick   (606 words)

  
 Enzie
This parish includes the greater part of the ruraLdistrict or Barony known as The Enzie, a tract of country very celebrated in the history of Catholicism in Scotland.
Following Vatican 11, to accommodate the new Liturgy, the altar and reredos were skilfully separated, the altar~ being brought forward to the position it now occupies.
This situation, and the reason why so many of the population had remained Catholics despite the difficulties presented since the Reformation, was due to the fact that the Gordons, who owned most of the country around, were themselves Roman Catholics.
www.scalan.co.uk /enzie.htm   (1410 words)

  
 USCCB - NAB - Judith - Introduction
The beautiful hymn of the people honoring Judith (Judith 15:9-10) is often applied to Mary in the liturgy.
The Book of Judith is a tract for difficult times; the reader, it was hoped, would take to heart the lesson that God was still the Master of history, who could save Israel from her enemies.
Having fasted and prayed, Judith dresses in her finest garments and proceeds to the Assyrian camp, where she succeeds in killing Holofernes while he lies in a drunken stupor.
www.nccbuscc.org /nab/bible/judith/intro.htm   (1410 words)

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