Sentences with phrase «years of faith»

I guess all these years of faith based, science - free Republican politics (abstinence education reduces unwanted pregnancy more than birth control info does!
I found I was this way for 6 years of my faith â $ «within Christian denoms Evangelical and Charismatic in appeal â $ «after leaving I was more open hearing the â $ ˜wholeâ $ ™ story from all sidesâ $ ¦ then weighing in.
There is not one single Christian in the first 300 years of the faith who justifies violence or makes a case for self - defense.
Forty years of faith - fuelled songs later, Steve Stockman charts the spiritual journey of Saint Bono and his band.
Actually, I come from a long line of ministers, and I am an atheist now, after many years of faith and many more of questioning and struggling.
That was eight years ago, after 25 years of the faith struggle.
But after experiencing that struggle within myself, and seeing that so very many Christians still, after years of faith, suffer through the same inner struggle I did, I have to stand back and ask them... what do you have that I could possibly want or need?
This past weekend, the Diocese of Bismarck hosted THIRST, a eucharistic conference for the Year of Faith in support of the New Evangelization.
In preparation for the Year of Faith, all of the faithful are invited to read closely and meditate upon Pope Benedict XVI's Apostolic Letter Porta Fidei.
Gracewing, 1994, 218pp, # 9.99 In this Year of Faith it seems that...
In January of last year the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith issued a series of recommendations for the implementation of the Year of Faith.
The Year of Faith «will also be a good opportunity to intensify the celebration of the faith in the liturgy, especially in the Eucharist».
Associations and Ecclesial Movements are invited to promote specific initiatives which, through the contribution of their proper charism and in collaboration with their local pastors, will contribute to the wider experience of the Year of Faith.
During the last Year of Faith Pope Paul VI dedicated a number of audiences to the theme of Faith.
Contemplative communities, during the Year of Faith, should pray specifically for the renewal of the faith among the People of God and for a new impulse for its transmission to the young.
In the light of Pope Benedict's recent announcement of a «Year of Faith», calling all the faithful to a more «profound understanding of the content of the faith» (Porta Fide?)
As we enter the «Year of Faith», a «full survey» of the British Church may be in order, to find out how we became so weak as to have lost such a pivotal, not to say epoch - making, battle.
Recommendations There exists a profound bond between the lived faith and its contents... the following recommendations for the Year of Faith desire to aid both the encounter with Christ through authentic witnesses to faith, and the ever - greater understanding of its contents.
... The beginning of the Year of Faith coincides with the... the fiftieth anniversary of the opening of the Second Vatican Council,... and the twentieth of the promulgation of the Catechism of the Catholic Church...
During this Year of Faith the texts of the Council and Catechism will be central to our efforts as Catholics to rediscover and share with others the gift of Faith entrusted to the Church.
A Year of Faith begins in October, and the CTS has produced an attractive pocket - sized set of meditations by John Paul II to link with this.
RECOMMENDATIONS FOR YEAR OF FAITH FROM THE CONGREGATION FOR THE DOCTRINE OF THE FAITH Virtually every one focuses upon knowledge of the Catechism and the Second Vatican Council
... The continuing education of the clergy can be focused during this Year of Faith on the documents of Vatican Council II and on the Catechism of the Catholic Church,... 7.
Providentially this is also the 50th anniversary of the Second Vatican Council and we are being called to look carefully at its texts during the Year of Faith, which starts in October.
I was glad to see Kevin White's piece on the effects of microphones on the Mass in the recent issue of First Things («Drop the Mic,» December 2012), for microphones have been on my mind lately as I hear homilies at Masses several times a week and as I reflect on and teach about mission, liturgy, and preaching in various contexts for the Year of Faith.
The Church opens the Year of Faith [1] with a Synod on the New Evangelisation at a time when, in England, there are a number of issues about the adequacy of theology programmes in preparing their students for the task of evangelising.
In this Year of Faith, the theme is that of upholding and passing on the Catholic Faith.
[2] I take to heart the deeper round of appropriation of the Council documents that Pope Benedict urged on the Church at the opening of the Year of Faith.
In 1968 at the close of the last Year of Faith Paul VI published a motu proprio, the Credo of the People of God.
During this Year of Faith, 50 years on from the beginning of the Second Vatican Council, the Church is calling us to recover the texts of...
Moreover, achieving this may well challenge the churches of the Reformation, and particularly the Church of England, to seek a renewal of their own faith and practice in parallel with the Catholic Church's Year of Faith.
During the Year of Faith much use will be made of this creed and its authoritative elaboration in the Catechism of the Catholic Church.
Benedict announced the current Year of Faith in his apostolic letter Porta Fidei, or «Door of Faith.»
Pope Paul VI announced the last Year of Faith in 1967, hoping to heal the ambiguity and turmoil in the Church that followed Vatican II.
He wants us to apply our minds in this Year of Faith, so that we might acquire an intellectual apprehension of the data of our faith.
So as we draw to the close of this Year of Faith, may God turn our hearts to him, and make us a «fire upon the earth»» a fire that lifts up his creation in love.
To begin our new column, which develops from and replaces our «Road from Regensburg» column, Dudley Plunkett explores some implications and contrary forces in undertaking to spread the virtue of Faith during the Year of Faith.
Gracewing, 1994, 218pp, # 9.99 In this Year of Faith it seems that we are all being called, at a level suited to our own situation, to engage with, be challenged by, and essentially grow in understanding of our own personal faith and also the faith that has been passed down to us by the Apostles.
Benedict XVI, when launching the Year of Faith in his Apostolic Letter Porta Fidei (way back in October 2011) saw a «crisis of faith» in the Church and in the world.
My goal tonight is to speak about personal conversion and the new evangelization, through the lens of the Year of Faith.
Catholics who read Porta Fidei in the light of the documents of Vatican II can see how consistent it is with Council teaching, and also with the Catechism and with the project of a faith - filled pastoral and evangelising programme, these being the three main criteria that Pope Benedict proposes for the Year of Faith.
During this Year of Faith, this book could be read in sections as part of a more meditative approach to understanding the Creed or as a resource for use as part of a study group.
A Year of Faith is a time set aside by the Church to focus on the meaning of our baptism» in other words, who we are, what we believe, and how we're called to act as a Christian community.
Above all, in living the Year of Faith, Benedict wanted the Church and her pastors to recover the courage and zeal «to lead people out of the desert toward the place of life,» toward the God who gives us life in abundance.
These remarks were delivered the evening of October 1 at Philadelphia's St. Charles Borromeo Seminary as part of a Year of Faith discussion series.
I Believe In One God: The Creed Explained By Pope Benedict XVI, St Paul's Publishing, 2012, 160pp, # 9.99 Both the foreword and the introduction of / Believe In One God: The Creed Explained draw our attention to the monumental opportunity that lies before us in this Year of Faith.
Discordant voices are being raised about the Year of Faith announced by Pope Benedict.
He knows London well, and often stays at St Patrick's, Soho, where he spoke at the Day of Faith organised by the Faith Movement in the summer of the Year of Faith in 2013.
«How can we celebrate the Year of Faith better in our daily lives?»
She admits having started this book during the Year of Faith, to which she makes numerous references.
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