Pope Gregory XVI - Creedopedia
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Topic: Pope Gregory XVI


  
 Pope Gregory XVI - Mirari Vos - On Liberalism and Religious Indifferentism - 15 August 1832
Saint Gelasius, Pope, in epistle to the bishop of Lucaniae.
Saint Celestine, Pope, epistle 21 to Bishop Galliar.
Pope Gregory XVI - Mirari Vos - On Liberalism and Religious Indifferentism - 15 August 1832
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/pope0254d.htm   (3038 words)

  
 Pope Gregory Xvi
In 1800 he became a member of the Academy of the Catholic Religion, founded by Pope Pius VII, to which he contributed a number of memoirs on theological and philosophical questions and in 1805 was made abbot of San Gregorio on the Caelian Hill.
Ordained a priest in 1821, he went on in 1830 to found the Institute of Charity, a religious congregation recognized in 1839 by Pope Gregory XVI.
The Order of St. Gregory was instituted in 1831 by Pope Gregory XVI and is presented for loyalty and service to the Holy See.
http://www.wikiverse.org/pope-gregory-xvi   (576 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pope Gregory XVI
While he was engaged in combating the libertarian movements of current European thought, Gregory was obliged also to struggle with the rulers of States for justice and toleration for the Catholic Church in their realms.
During his reign five saints were canonized, thirty-three servants of God declared Blessed, many new orders were founded or supported, the devotion of the faithful to the Immaculate Mother of God increased.
But, amidst all these disturbances in his own kingdom, Gregory had not been free from anxieties for the Faith and the Universal Church.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07006a.htm   (3206 words)

  
 Encyclicals EWTN - search
Gregory speaks of the exigencies of continuing to spread the faith in an age when the Church is under attack from renegades and heretics.
The Pope notes the advantage of the unrestricted activity of the Church to the social order, decries the separation of Church and state and other crimes against the Church, which are signs of an attempt to destroy Religion.
Gregory writes to the Polish bishops to combat the error of certain men who under the pretext of religion were inciting disobedience and rebellion against civil authority.
http://www.angelfire.com/in/theworkofgod/Encndx.html   (5889 words)

  
 The Catholic Church in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
In 1950, Pope Pius XII defined as dogma of faith the Assumption, which states that the Mother of Jesus Christ was taken into heaven bodily by the power of God.
While the temporal power of the pope was crushed in the takeover of the Papal States, his spiritual power and authority as supreme teacher of faith in the universal Church was more recognized and respected than ever before.
This pope was chosen by God to guide the Church through a period of difficult changes in the world, as the style of people's lives was changed more and more by mechanical inventions, the development of factories, and growing problems for family life and the workingman.
http://www.catholiceducation.org/articles/history/world/wh0086.html   (8792 words)

  
 Keeping Catholics Catholic Page XXV-The Timeline-The Nineteenth Century
In 1805, Pope Pius VII commissioned her relies to be sent to Mugnano Del Cardinale, in the Diocese of Nola, to be enshrined in one of the altars of the main Church.
Pope Pius VIII publishes his first two Papal Encyclicals, Traditi Humilitati, asking for prayers for his Bishops; and In Supremi Apostolatus, on Jubilee.
In 1855, Pope Pius IX approved a Proper Mass and Office for her Feast.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Ithaca/6461/19cent.html   (3532 words)

  
 Pope Gregory XVI 17 May 1835 On Church and State
The pope alone and no bishop has the right to transfer the days fixed by the Church for celebrating feasts and observing fasts and to annul the precept of attending Mass.
It is through these rights that the pope is the center of unity, that he has the primacy of order and jurisdiction, and that he has the full power of nurturing, ruling, and governing the universal Church.
It is Church dogma that the pope, the successor of St. Peter, possesses not only primacy of honor but also primacy of authority and jurisdiction over the whole Church.
http://www.ewtn.com/library/ENCYC/G16COMMI.HTM   (2873 words)

  
 GREGORY XVI
Though Gregory suffered much from political troubles and from the persecution of his children in Spain, he enjoyed the consolation of seeing the Church win a great fight with Prussian bureaucracy in the mixed- marriage question.
It was his cross that, a simple pious religious, he was plunged into the vortex of a revolutionary storm which was rocking Europe.
The Powers took this opportunity to read the Pope a lecture on government and to urge certain reforms on him.
http://www.cfpeople.org/Books/Pope/POPEp252.htm   (518 words)

  
 Gregory XVI --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Prior to his election as pope, Benedict led a distinguished career as a theologian and as prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith.
Following the death of John Paul II in 2005, Benedict XVI became the 265th bishop of Rome and the head of the Roman Catholic church.
His efforts to consolidate papal authority within the church were matched by his support of traditional monarchies throughout Europe.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9001545   (559 words)

  
 Papal Tiara
When popes were crowned, the words 'Father of princes and kings, Ruler of the world, Vicar of our Saviour Jesus Christ' were used, perhaps indicating the definitive meaning of the three crowns, though there is no evidence that that coronation oath is based on the originally intended meaning attached to the three tier tiara.
As with all other modern coronations, the ceremony itself was only symbolic; the person duly elected became pope and Bishop of Rome the moment he accepted his election in the Conclave, as popes John Paul I and II showed by declining a coronation.
Peter to honour him as the first pope on the feast of Saints Peter and Paul, June 29.
http://www.ukpedia.com/p/papal-tiara.html   (3054 words)

  
 Mirari Vos – Pope Gregory XVI – The Papal Library
Gelasius, Pope, in epistle to the bishop of Lucaniae.
Mirari Vos – Pope Gregory XVI – The Papal Library
Given in Rome at St. Mary Major, on August 15, the feast of the Assumption of the Virgin, in the year of Our Lord 1832, the second year of Our Pontificate.
http://www.saint-mike.org/Library/Papal_Library/GregoryXVI/Encyclicals/Mirari_Vos.html   (3068 words)

  
 The Episcopal Lineage of Pope Benedict XVI
Consecrated 23 February 1777 at Rome, Church of Santa Maria Regina Coeli, by Bernardino Cardinal Giraud, Archbishop emeritus of Ferrara, assisted by Marcantonio Conti, Titular Archbishop of Damascus, and by Giuseppe Maria Carafa, Bishop of Mileto.
Consecrated 3 February 1675 in the Church of SS.
Carlo Rezzonico, Cardinal Bishop of Padova, the future Pope Clement XIII.
http://mysite.verizon.net/res7gdmc/aposccs/id1.html   (1088 words)

  
 Gregory XVI
Gregory's view: papal power of divine origin; authority of the popes in the Papal States was immutable
June 1, 1846: Pope Gregory XVI died; the most hated Pope in two centuries.
Not a word was spoken over his remains.
http://home.cc.umanitoba.ca/~creamer/homepage/GregoryXVI.htm   (1355 words)

  
 Welcome to His Mercy Ottawa
Pope Pius IX 9 November 1846 On Faith and Religion
Pope Pius XI 11 December 1925 Feast of Christ the King
http://www.hismercy.ca   (7379 words)

  
 QUO GRAVIORA
Because they are free from ecclesiastical instruction, they can undergo change, but only by the pope, whom Christ placed over the entire Church to judge concerning the necessity of change for various reasons of circumstance.
This is appropriate for those who were called to share in the administration and defense of the Church.
We will now discuss those sections of discipline which are in effect for the whole Church.
http://www.papalencyclicals.net/Greg16/g16quogr.htm   (3051 words)

  
 Catholic Pages Directory: » Church Documents » Papal Documents » EARLY ENCYCLICALS
Probe nostis Pope Gregory XVI: On the Propagation of the Faith (18 September 1840)
Mirari vos Pope Gregory XVI: On Liberalism and Religious Indifferentism (15 August 1832)
Ubi Primum Pope Benedict XIV: On the Duties of Bishops (3 December 1740)
http://www.catholic-pages.com/dir/pre1846.asp   (521 words)

  
 Roman Catholic Church Opposition to Slavery: (441 AD - 873 - 1102 - 1462 - 1591 - 1686 - 1890's)
You can refute slavers' false claims that the Bible repeatedly says 'slavery is ok.' Simply call attention to the fact is that the word 'slavery' is not even in the Bible; nor the word 'slaves,' not until Rev.
Wherefore, it is clear why the above-cited Pope, Gregory XVI, told Catholics to not defend slavery.
Not only is it sin, but the defense involves oneself in the carnal unrepentant practice of subject-changing, comparing with, finger-pointing at, others.
http://medicolegal.tripod.com/catholicsvslavery.htm   (2631 words)

  
 MIQ Center: Encyclicals, Papal Decrees
The Pope urges his children to turn to the ever-Virgin Mother of God, and to that powerful model and protector, St. Joseph, to sustain us in the conflict against the enemies of the Faith.
As a complement to his many social encyclicals, the Pope of Social Justice offers the Rosary as a remedy for three great social evils: dislike of a simple life of labor, repugnance to suffering, and forgetfulness of eternal life.
The Church has always had great regard for the Sacred Scriptures and is anxious to have them widely read by her children.
http://www.cmri.org/0-encyc1.shtml   (440 words)

  
 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of January 22, 1844
Exposed in Gesù church, Rome; the funeral took place on January 16, 1867, with the participation of Pope Pius IX; and was buried, according to his will, in the church of S. Croce in Gerusalemme, Rome.
Created cardinal priest in the consistory of January 22, 1844
Opted for the order of cardinal bishops and the suburbicarian see of Frascati, June 23, 1854.
http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/bios1844.htm   (701 words)

  
 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Biographical Dictionary - Consistory of December 14, 1840
Named garde-robe by Pope Pius VIII before April 4, 1829.
In the pontificate of Pope Gregory XVI he was named chamberlain; coppiere maggiore; Qualificator of the Holy Office; vicar of the School of S. Maria in Via Lata; and finally, secretary of the S.C. of Studies.
Consecrated, July 17, 1836, Rome, by Pope Gregory XVI.
http://www.fiu.edu/~mirandas/bios1840.htm   (600 words)

  
 Patron Saints Index: Pope Gregory XVI
Privately, and as pope, he was pious, kind, loyal, and a fierce conservative, both in politics and theology, and he devoted his papacy to supporting legitimate governments and the repression of rebellion.
Movements formed to politically unify Italy; Rome was to be capital, and the pope's temporal power abolished; moderate reformers proposed that the pope retain his sovereignty in Rome, and become the president of a constitutional state.
He declared his total opposition to liberalism, his determination to preserve the traditional form of the temporal sovereignty, and his support of the legitimist monarchies, Catholic or non-Catholic, clerical or anticlerical.
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/pope0254.htm   (627 words)

  
 Pope Gregory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pope Gregory I, also called Gregory the Great
This is a disambiguation page — a list of articles associated with the same title.
Pope Gregory has been the name of sixteen Roman Catholic Popes:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Gregory   (103 words)

  
 Pope Gregory XVI's encyclical "Singulari nos" published June 25 in History
Pope Gregory XVI's encyclical "Singulari nos" published June 25 in History
If I had to give young writers advice, I would say don't listen to writers talking about writing or themselves.
http://www.brainyhistory.com/events/1834/june_25_1834_50124.html   (44 words)

  
 Pope Gregory XVI (Bartolomeo Alberto (Mauro) Cappellari) [Catholic-Hierarchy]
Pope Gregory XVI (Bartolomeo Alberto (Mauro) Cappellari) [Catholic-Hierarchy]
Pope Pietro Francesco (Vincenzo Maria) Orsini de Gravina, O.P. Paluzzo Cardinal Paluzzi Altieri Degli Albertoni † (1666)
Pope Bartolomeo Alberto (Mauro) Cappellari, O.S.B. Bartolomeo Cardinal Pacca † (1786)
http://www.catholic-hierarchy.org/bishop/bcapb.html   (69 words)

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