Skip to main content

Home/ Catholic/ Group items tagged Original

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Sue Cifelli

Two Catholic women ordained as priests - UPI.com - 0 views

shared by Sue Cifelli on 13 Nov 07 - Cached
  • Two Catholic women ordained as priests Published: Nov. 12, 2007 at 8:41 AM Print story Email to a friend Font size: ST. LOUIS, Nov. 12 (UPI) -- A couple of firsts: Two women were ordained as Roman Catholic priests Sunday in St. Louis -- and the ordination was in a synagogue.The ceremony for Rose Marie Dunn Hudson, 67, and Elsie Hainz McGrath, 69, was held at Central Reform Congregation with 600 people looking on, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.The Roman Catholic church doesn't allow women to become priests and St. Louis Archbishop Raymond Burke sent the women a letter condemning their plans and informing them they would automatically be excommunicated if they went ahead.Burke also criticized the Central Reform Congregation, threatening to cease all participation in interfaith events with the congregation, the newspaper said."For us in St. Louis today, the (Gateway) Arch is a symbol for the gateway to justice and equality for women," Patricia Fresen, the ordaining bishop with Roman Catholic Womenpriests, told the Post-Dispatch.The women said they plan to hold services in a Unitarian church, as part of an international organization called Roman Catholic Womenpriests.McGrath is a great-grandmother, who edited at a Catholic publishing house and served as a campus minister at St. Louis University, a Catholic institution. Hudson, who said she wanted to be a priest since she was 14, is a grandmother who taught in St. Louis schools for more than 40 years.
Karsten Nordmo

Catholic and Enjoying It! - 0 views

  •  
    Article on the origins of Christmas
Sue Cifelli

Burying a Statue of St. Joseph to Sell One's Home - 0 views

  •  
    The origin of burying a statue of St. Joseph for the purpose of selling one's home is uncertain. Some say the tradition can be traced back hundreds of years to St. Teresa of Avila, who invoked St. Joseph's intercession in order to obtain land for new convents. According to this tradition, St. Teresa encouraged her companions to bury their St. Joseph medals as a symbol of devotion. Over time, the practice of burying medals evolved into that of burying statues. Today, some organizations promote this practice and have developed complete "Underground Real Estate Agent" kits. Many home-sellers and real estate agents nationwide continue this tradition. Burying a statue of St. Joseph for the purpose of selling one's home is an action similar to wearing a saint's medal or a scapular, having religious art in one's home, or placing a statue of a saint in one's yard-it is an outward sign of an inward devotion. Ideally, people who turn to this custom do so as a symbol of their devotion-an external sign of their trust in St. Joseph as a powerful intercessor. They demonstrate their faith in the power of prayer and the communion of saints. The individual consecrates the ground in the name of St. Joseph and asks him to intercede with God the Father on his or her behalf for the sale of the home.
lovephileo koikos

All World Intercessors Should Need This Manual - 1 views

  •  
    Have you been commissioned by the God to pray for others? Do you bear that burning fire of Starting A Prayer Ministry? Most probably, you don't know where to begin or how to go, manage, and maintain the Ministry while obtaining lasting results. Absolutely, you are hitting the smartest springboard on taking the more effective and powerful tool and strategies on building a Ministry of Prayer.
1 - 20 of 20
Showing 20 items per page