Verbatim. (News: signs of the times)."How did we get to the point where Christian leaders Feel it is their right and duty to treat others in such an unchristian way?" --From a statement on needed church reforms by members of Our Lady of Grace Church in Encino, California (National Catholic Reporter, June 21, 2002) "This is the priesthood, and I have to be ready to embrace suffering for things that I didn't do." --Newly ordained or·dain tr.v. or·dained, or·dain·ing, or·dains 1. a. To invest with ministerial or priestly authority; confer holy orders on. b. To authorize as a rabbi. 2. Father Tim McMorland, on becoming a priest in a year marred by clergy sex scandals (Newsweek, June 17, 2002) "The entire ecumenical liturgical conversation and dialogue is over--finished, dead, done." --The Rev. Horace Allen You may be looking for:
n. 1. One who uses or advocates the use of liturgical forms. 2. A scholar in liturgics. 3. A compiler of a liturgy or liturgies. Noun 1. , on a controversial Vatican document on liturgical translations (National Catholic Reporter, May 24, 2002) "I suspect that there are people out there who would have been critical of the way Jesus celebrated the first Eucharist at the Last Supper Last Supper, in the New Testament, meal taken by Jesus and his disciples on the eve of the passion. Jesus broke bread and passed a cup of wine among the disciples, identifying himself with the bread and the wine and linking the meal to his impending death on the ." --Cincinnati Archbishop Daniel Pilarczyk (Catholic Trends, March 2, 2002) "To say we live in a secular civilization is to say that God is no longer inescapable. It doesn't mean that we live in a society from which God has been expelled. I don't think we ever will live in such a society for very long; the communists tried that." --Philosopher Charles Taylor
Charles Taylor may refer to: Political figures
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