(Salisbury, NC). 1917-10-03

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

(Salisbury, NC). 1917-10-03 The Ca •< ilina Watchman A Horn® Newspaper Published in the Interest of the People and for Governmental Affairs 197. ESTABLISHED 1832 VOL. XICl. NO. 42. FOURTH SERIES SALISBURY, N. C., WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 3TH. ^ Tbi af Pa. Homs Grown Seed Are Best. Chanse in Past Offiso Matters. The Wonders of Science. American Law With Roman Exceptiins. Exemption Beard Still Busy. Romanizing Germantown, N. C 29. The S P the local to the West Raleigh, , Sept post office department has A camera man, working for Attorney-General Free- Beginning today According Independent Gazette of Germantown, Pa., —Pride is often expressed in been making considerable chang- the educational department of a ling of Oklahoma decides that by exemption board has orders there seems to be a rank and un- and home- made es the last few farmer state constitutional and home-grown during years, company, met an old provisiot to call the men accepted “ justifiable discrimination on the but when it comes to some of which seem to have a id bone law” of Oklabo products, coming out of a house in the dry send them right on to the part of certain officials against seed we are too ready to discard considerable merit and some look town where he was working and ma the u->e of wine for sacramen- at Columbia. |training camp the schools of German- the for otherwise, it is in these tal is in tha Sunday home-grown product however, gener- explained his presence purpose prohibited ■I As soon as ali the white men town. It has been the custom that from other sections of the ally easier to criticise than to un- words: state. Bishop '’eerschaert then the havn reached camp, to allow the use of the State or even from other States. derstand. The latest move is to sonu denounces the decisior city play- -I have just been taking Catholic, he sent. 1302 Negroes will grounds for civil and other this means, seed are often make the office in a on as “intolerable and pur- By leading given pictures ol liie out outrageous,’ moving men have be«n examined np .without or secured which are not a kind of and declares his intentions tc poses complaint hind adapted section, supply house, your lartn. to date out of the 3500 ranee. Fourth of celebra- to the local soil or climate. Many or This has of use the wine. Of course every July distributing point. ‘Did you ca.ch any my drafted from this county. tions were held in them, also times a high price is paid for been done in the case of Salis- laborers in motion? asked thy* old Oitholic priest in Oklahoma will athletic seed that are not so as the and it is now follow the priest-bishop in defy- Rowan’s quota is ordy 243 aud [various societies con- good bury, necessary for man curiously. all so their sports there. At one home-grown seed. By carefully other offices in this county to I did.’’ ing the law. it seems a little odd that duct ‘•Suie found of them the Hibernians were made tests, it has been get their supplies from the Salis- The fanner shook his head re- Many Protestant ministers use mauy are called when so few allowed to hold a carnival for that home-grown-seed of corn, bury office and also to make re- flectively. then said: Science is a unfermented wine or other sub- are needed, however, the two oats and clover re norts to it. This will for sacramental weeks, but when the Sunday cotton, wheat, make it wonderful thing.” stitutes purposes number needed may be mauy schools of the are better than seed in for this office to consider have no city asked use of a brought necessary carry and that they more thoBe named. a playground in which to hold a from other localities. larger supply and make it un- need for alcoholic wines, either The result of the examina* Stimach. historical the A few still believe that necessary for thejfother offices to Ssur by the bottle or the case, or bar- pageant showing people tions is as follows: masticate food religious life of the ‘‘run out” when planted carry as stocks as Eat slowly, your rel as do their papal brethren. community crops large they 85 were examined Thurs* in its seveial have thoroughly abstain from mea. early days they were re- in the same locality for heretofore. This seems and 71 the fused. The is far from true. to be a consolidation for a few days and in most ca*es day passed physi- Hibernians were an years. This and simpli- Mrs. Smith Recommends Chamberlain's Tab- Irish fication of sour stomach will cal test aud 14 failed to do so. Catholic organization and become beuer adapted business and most the disappear. lets. Crops + hnaii nQQUuH QabflH tnr could a are will be If it does not, take one of Cham- get playground for two to the locality in which they likely of much help and “I have had more or less stom- berlain’s Tablets immediatly af exemption and 18 did not. weeks. grown. The condition known as convenience to the public. ach trouble for eight or ten The out” is duo to ter supper. Red meats are most Friday 83 men were exam- Sunday schools are com- “running usually years” writes Mrs G H Smith, of seed each likely to cause sour stomach and 62 and 21 posed protestants and couldn’t a failure to save good FAITH N. Y. “When suf- ined, passed failed, them Brewerton, get the use of a you may find it best to cut 48 asked for exemption and playground for year. tering from attacks of indigestion an Se;,b 29 —Charley Boat has out. historicalipageant for one 1 13 did not. day. moved to and after eating, one or two ack Faith to be What kind of officials does the Rowan. 88 men were ex?- Girls at the Normal from neat his work. He- is one of of Chamberlain’s Tablets have Saturday of city Germantown have? eh-. ... ,.A ....... of New York. The is a list of the ■ r~ ^ w n 11 O’Leary For Major always relieved me. I have also amined, 63 passed and 23 following who arc Them is no like <>f Aim* found Rowan county place Faith Jeremiah O’Leary them a pleasant laxative.” failed. 50 asked for exemp- State of girls'from Ohio, City of Toledo, the State Normal after all. and of These tablets tone the stom- tion and 10 did not. now attending lean Truth [?] Society, up Lucas * s t County, ss. at Green IJ B C Fagle ip confined ach and enable it to its and Industrial College the fam us letter writing epi perform 'lhe examination of the* Frank J. *o her room wiih a sore Cheney makes oath boro: very W ii»oi, functions naturally. If you are throat sode with President three hundred Rowan men that he is senoir partner of the troubled with Miss Ruth Blackwelder, China to the late election, is indigestion give called for examination before firm of F. J. & Co J T peven prior Cheney , doing Misses M H Bes- Wyatt shipped them a well and Grove; ary Blair, trial, get stav business in the Cit.v nf millstones talked of as the fntu'e m;ro> the local exemption-board Camile pair today. well. sie Brant Brown, Camp- One of the He is backed and that said firm will citizens of Faith of New York. took place last Thursday, pa-*- the bell, Flossie Marie Foster, Mable sum of ONE contemplates weaving some in his ihe and one HUNDRED DOL- Ruth up aspiratious by Friday Satarday, Linn Foster. Margaret cloth on an old time Tbs Usual to LARS for loom and of Irish Freedom -ud Injustice tbi Fair. each and every case of Marie Frieuds hundred per day. It is Heilig, Jaunita Keder, wants us to put up one ot our At a of the board of Catarrh that cannot be cured other haters of Fug laud and meeting thought enough will be ses by Kinard, Jaunita Koontz, Beulah looms iu oue of their build- alderman last week it was de the use of HALL’S CATARRH of *he soap box cured out of this lot to fur- Linker, Agnes McAdams, Ellen ings to weave on. When we pro'Hermaue MEDICINE. cided to give three per cent off Sadie it in we variety. The idea strike," u* nish the full quato Marsh, Rebekah Marsh, get operation can taxes required PRANK. J. the of the rich who have the CHENEY. Lola J show it to visitors when they as a at the of the from this Moyle, Philips, Margaret joke expense county. Sworn to before money and will pay their taxes me snd sub- Marie and come to see our collection 0’L‘Jur\ B Ramsey, Richards, New Yorkers. Yet. this month. The who A reward of $50 is offered scribed in this and can see the poor my presance, 6th Laura Linn Wiley. they lady a Bhade remov ed f cm is but can’t come across will have to by the government f:r those day of December, A. W.Gleason. weaving on it. There is a m? and some other noted politic the full amouut or have their who were drafted and failed A. D.1886. great many young girls pay YOST ITEVS boys who never saw an old of that Romanized town. property sold with an assess- to for their (Seal) Notary appeaer delivery public.
Recommended publications
  • The Lives of the Saints
    Itl 1 i ill 11 11 i 11 i I 'M^iii' I III! II lr|i^ P !| ilP i'l ill ,;''ljjJ!j|i|i !iF^"'""'""'!!!|| i! illlll!lii!liiy^ iiiiiiiiiiHi '^'''liiiiiiiiilii ;ili! liliiillliili ii- :^ I mmm(i. MwMwk: llliil! ""'''"'"'''^'iiiiHiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiii !lj!il!|iilil!i|!i!ll]!; 111 !|!|i!l';;ii! ii!iiiiiiiiiiilllj|||i|jljjjijl I ili!i||liliii!i!il;.ii: i'll III ''''''llllllllilll III "'""llllllll!!lll!lllii!i I i i ,,„, ill 111 ! !!ii! : III iiii CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY l,wj Cornell Unrversity Library BR 1710.B25 1898 V.5 Lives ot the saints. Ili'lll I 3' 1924 026 082 572 Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924026082572 THE ilibes? of tlje t)atnt0 REV. S. BARING-GOULD SIXTEEN VOLUMES VOLUME THE FIFTH THE ILities of tlje g)amt6 BY THE REV. S. BARING-GOULD, M.A. New Edition in i6 Volumes Revised with Introduction and Additional Lives of English Martyrs, Cornish and Welsh Saints, and a full Index to the Entire Work ILLUSTRATED BY OVER 400 ENGRAVINGS VOLUME THE FIFTH LONDON JOHN C. NFMMO &-• NEW YORK . LONGMANS, GREEN. CO. MDCCCXCVIll / , >1< ^-Hi-^^'^ -^ / :S'^6 <d -^ ^' Printed by Ballantyne, Hanson &> CO. At the Ballantyne Press *- -»5< im CONTENTS PAGE Bernardine . 309 SS. Achilles and comp. 158 Boniface of Tarsus . 191 B. Alcuin 263 Boniface IV., Pope . 345 S. Aldhelm .... 346 Brendan of Clonfert 217 „ Alexander I., Pope .
    [Show full text]
  • Christ Our Savior
    Christ Our Savior Roman Catholic Parish in the Diocese of Pittsburgh May 23, 2021 SAINT BONIFACE CHURCH SAINT CYRIL CHURCH SAINT PETER CHURCH 2208 East Street 3854 Brighton Road 720 Arch Street Pittsburgh, PA 15212 Pittsburgh, PA 15212 Pittsburgh, PA 15212 Sunday Masses Daily Masses %& '( %&) !"# !" "'$#7 vtuShq Qvi tuQ6 $! ! Qur)# !&% $$! Ah)# !# $&& $$$! Fr. Nicholas Vaskov, Pastor Fr. Dam Nguyen, Senior Parochial Vicar Fr. Lawrence DiNardo, in residence Fr. Louis DeNinno, in residence Fr. Ferdinand Okafor, in residence Deacon Gery Pielin Entrance Hymn: Come, Holy Ghost Come, Holy Ghost, Creator blest, Thou font of life and fire of love, And in our hearts take up thy rest; And sweet anointing from above; Come with thy grace and heav’nly aid And sweet anointing from above. To fill the hearts which thou hast made; To fill the hearts which thou hast made. Praise be to thee, Father and Son, And Holy Spirit, with them one; O Comforter, And may the Son on us bestow to thee we cry, The gifts that from the Spirit flow; Thou heav’nly gift of God most high; The gifts that from the Spirit flow. Reading I: Acts 2:111 When the time for Pentecost was fulfilled, language. they were all in one place together. They were astounded, and in amazement they And suddenly there came from the sky asked, a noise like a strong driving wind, “Are not all these people who are speaking and it filled the entire house in which they were. Galileans? Then there appeared to them tongues as of fire, Then how does each of us hear them in his native which parted and came to rest on each one of language? them.
    [Show full text]
  • Timeline1800 18001600
    TIMELINE1800 18001600 Date York Date Britain Date Rest of World 8000BCE Sharpened stone heads used as axes, spears and arrows. 7000BCE Walls in Jericho built. 6100BCE North Atlantic Ocean – Tsunami. 6000BCE Dry farming developed in Mesopotamian hills. - 4000BCE Tigris-Euphrates planes colonized. - 3000BCE Farming communities spread from south-east to northwest Europe. 5000BCE 4000BCE 3900BCE 3800BCE 3760BCE Dynastic conflicts in Upper and Lower Egypt. The first metal tools commonly used in agriculture (rakes, digging blades and ploughs) used as weapons by slaves and peasant ‘infantry’ – first mass usage of expendable foot soldiers. 3700BCE 3600BCE © PastSearch2012 - T i m e l i n e Page 1 Date York Date Britain Date Rest of World 3500BCE King Menes the Fighter is victorious in Nile conflicts, establishes ruling dynasties. Blast furnace used for smelting bronze used in Bohemia. Sumerian civilization developed in south-east of Tigris-Euphrates river area, Akkadian civilization developed in north-west area – continual warfare. 3400BCE 3300BCE 3200BCE 3100BCE 3000BCE Bronze Age begins in Greece and China. Egyptian military civilization developed. Composite re-curved bows being used. In Mesopotamia, helmets made of copper-arsenic bronze with padded linings. Gilgamesh, king of Uruk, first to use iron for weapons. Sage Kings in China refine use of bamboo weaponry. 2900BCE 2800BCE Sumer city-states unite for first time. 2700BCE Palestine invaded and occupied by Egyptian infantry and cavalry after Palestinian attacks on trade caravans in Sinai. 2600BCE 2500BCE Harrapan civilization developed in Indian valley. Copper, used for mace heads, found in Mesopotamia, Syria, Palestine and Egypt. Sumerians make helmets, spearheads and axe blades from bronze.
    [Show full text]
  • World Mourns Pope John's Deo Cardinals Begin to Select Successor
    DltfrfbutJon Jdght,«, WcdKMby, fair, Mfb- wt temperature, M degrees. DIAL SH 1-0010 Intul 4*Ur, Monday throoib Friday; B»«m4 C1M* Potffcc* PAGE ONE KJ 4t ft*4 Bui «od «1 AMItlenil HOUn* OfflCM. RED BANK. N. J., TUESDAY, JUNE 4, 1963 7c PER COPY World Mourns Pope John's Deo Cardinals Begin to Select Successor By GERALD ROLLER ' j ed to the Vatican came to the als, sent formal notice of the VATICAN CITY (AP)-Count- bier to pay homage. Pope's death to the other 81 mem- less millions around "the world The Pope's body was to be car- Seeks Canonization ers of the. sacred college and mourned Pope John XXIII today ried later across St. Peter's summoned them to Rome. Square and into St. Peter's Basil BOSTON (AP) — Richard Cardinal Cushing, Roman Major decisions left over from as the cardinals .of. the Roman Catholic 'archbishop of Boston, says he will begin immedi- Catholic Church began prepara- ica, the largest church, in Chris- the reign of Pope John await the tendom. It will lie in state there ately a campaign for canonization pf Pope John XXIII. ew Pope., .. tions to pick his successor. ' the'cardinal said yesterday shortly after the death of until Thursday night. : He must decide whether to.'ooji- The 81-year-old spiritual ruler of the Pope: ••"•••• . ... half a billion Catholics died Moo- The public will be admitted to nue the Ecumenica 1 - Council St. Peter's Wednesday and Tours- ' "I am going to solicit prayers and all Information con- which Pope John convened' last day to pay homage.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction
    Demacopoulos-00intro_Layout 1 7/31/15 8:57 AM Page 1 Introduction Pope Gregory I, known among Western Christians as St. Gregory the Great and by Eastern Christians as St. Gregory the Dialogist, was born around the year 540 to an aristocratic family well connected to the Roman Church. Gregory’s great-great-grandfather was likely Pope Felix III (bishop of Rome from 483– 492), and Pope Agapetus (bishop of Rome from 533– 536) was presumably a distant uncle. 1 Three of Greg - ory’s aunts (on his father’s side) are known to have been estate-dwelling ascetics. 2 Gregory’s father, Gordianus, held the administrative rank of de - fensor in the Church of Rome, which would typically mean that he served as a property and legal manager for a portion of the Church’s extensive landholdings. 3 Gregory’s family was wealthy, and he possessed all of the advantages of an aristocratic youth, including a palatial estate on the Caelian Hill and the best education available at that time. 4 Unfortunately, Gregory tells us little about his youth or the specifics of his studies. 5 At the time of his birth, Italy and the city of Rome were shadows of their former selves. For most of his childhood, the “Roman” armies of the East waged a destructive war against the Ostrogoths for supremacy of the Italian peninsula. Between 546 and 547 alone, control of the city of Rome switched three times between imperial and Gothic hands. 6 We 1 Demacopoulos-00intro_Layout 1 7/31/15 8:57 AM Page 2 2 – Gregory the Great know nothing about how Gregory’s family responded to the calamity of the initial siege of the capital in 546, when famine is said to have en - snared even the wealthiest of the city’s districts.
    [Show full text]
  • A Study of the Antecedents of in Persona Christi Theology in Ancient Christian Tradition
    The Representation of Christ by the Priest: A Study of the Antecedents of in persona Christi Theology in Ancient Christian Tradition G. Pierre Ingram, CC Thesis submitted to the Faculty of Theology, Saint Paul University, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor in Theology Ottawa, Canada April 2012 © G. Pierre Ingram, Ottawa, Canada, 2012 To my parents: Donald George Ingram († 1978) and Pierrette Jeanne Ingram († 2005) Contents Abbreviations ...................................... .......................... vi INTRODUCTION ....................................... .............................1 1 Contemporary Context ............................. ............................1 2 Statement of the Problem ......................... ..............................2 3 Objectives....................................... ............................5 4 Research Hypothesis .............................. ............................5 5 Methodological Approach .......................... ............................6 6 Structure of the Dissertation . .................................7 CHAPTER 1 THE USE OF "IN PERSONA CHRISTI" IN CATHOLIC TEACHING AND THEOLOGY . 9 1 Representation of Christ as a Feature of the Theology of Ministry in General . 9 2 The Use of the Phrase in persona Christi in Roman Catholic Theology . 11 2.1 Pius XI ........................................ ....................13 2.2 Pius XII ....................................... ....................14 2.3 The Second Vatican Council ..................... ......................21
    [Show full text]
  • Prayer for the Dead from Ambrose to Gregory The
    Laszlo Illes Kaulics PRAYER FOR THE DEAD FROM AMBROSE TO GREGORY THE GREAT (THEOLOGY AND LITURGY) MA Thesis in Medieval Studies CEU eTD Collection Central European University Budapest May 2011 PRAYER FOR THE DEAD FROM AMBROSE TO GREGORY THE GREAT (THEOLOGY AND LITURGY) by Laszlo Illes Kaulics (Hungary) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Medieval Studies Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU ____________________________________________ Chair, Examination Committee ____________________________________________ Thesis Supervisor ____________________________________________ Examiner ____________________________________________ Examiner CEU eTD Collection Budapest May 2011 PRAYER FOR THE DEAD FROM AMBROSE TO GREGORY THE GREAT (THEOLOGY AND LITURGY) by Laszlo Illes Kaulics (Hungary) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Medieval Studies Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU ____________________________________________ External Examiner CEU eTD Collection Budapest May 2011 PRAYER FOR THE DEAD FROM AMBROSE TO GREGORY THE GREAT (THEOLOGY AND LITURGY) by Laszlo Illes Kaulics (Hungary) Thesis submitted to the Department of Medieval Studies, Central European University, Budapest, in partial fulfillment of the requirements of the Master of Arts degree in Medieval Studies Accepted in conformance with the standards of the CEU ________________________ Supervisor ____________________________________________ External Supervisor CEU eTD Collection Budapest May 2011 I, the undersigned, Laszlo Illes Kaulics, candidate for the MA degree in Medieval Studies declare herewith that the present thesis is exclusively my own work, based on my research and only such external information as properly credited in notes and bibliography.
    [Show full text]
  • PDF (Senior Thesis)
    Joseph S. Jewell H 99 Thesis Final Draft June 7, 2004 Prof. Warren Brown Violence in the Medieval Church Before the First Crusade The history of violence and attitudes towards violence within the medieval Catholic Church has often been interpreted through the lens of the Crusades.1 The beginning of campaigns to counter growing Muslim influence in the Middle East provides a defining moment when a certain class of full-scale war was not only explicitly endorsed, but also declared holy at the highest levels of the institutional church.2 However, the early and medieval church’s attitudes on violence before Pope Urban II called the first crusade in 1095 were often ambivalent, and in some cases directly contradictory. At different points throughout the period between the New Testament in the 1st Century A.D. and the Peace of God movement at the turn of the 11th, various churchmen both endorsed and condemned violence under a wide variety of circumstances. The institutional church’s stance on violence often seemed to depend as much on temporal conditions as it did on spiritual principles. However, the work of Augustine of Hippo, who influentially interpreted the Bible in a substantial corpus of books, sermons, and other writings, can be shown to provide the basis for many of the medieval church’s actions and positions on violent activity. Augustine’s teachings on violence, just war, and the duties of Christians with respect to both give us a common th thread to follow from the 5 Century to the eve of the Crusades. 1 F.
    [Show full text]
  • St. Francis Xavier
    St. Francis Xavier Francis Xavier was born into a wealthy and noble family in Spain. While at university in Paris, Francis roomed with Ignatius of Loyola. Initially, Francis and Ignatius did not get along, but eventually Ignatius won him over with his simple way of life and preaching of the Gospel. The pair, along with five other men, soon took vows of poverty, chastity, and obedience to the pope. Together they founded a new religious order, the Society of Jesus, or the Jesuits, and lived under a rule of life written by 1506–1552 Ignatius. Pope John III requested that the Jesuits be sent out as missionaries around the world. Feast Day: December 3 Francis was sent on the first Jesuit mission, which brought him to Goa in western India. There, he preached to the Portuguese settlers who lived there, many of whom led sinful lives. He cared for the sick, catechized children, and built almost 40 churches. He evangelized a group of nearby natives who had been baptized Christians a decade before but had never really been taught about Jesus or the Faith. Over the next eight years, Francis pushed eastward, spreading the Gospel to parts of Malaysia. Eventually, Francis became the first Jesuit missionary in Japan. To overcome the language barrier, he used simple paintings of Mary and the child Jesus to preach the Good News. He also used the Rosary, his catechism, and above all the example of his own life to evangelize. Francis Xavier died of a fever while waiting for a boat to take him to China to continue his missionary work.
    [Show full text]
  • Catholic Church History Caesaro-Papist Imperialism (313-565) V
    Catholic Church History Caesaro-Papist Imperialism (313-565) V. Theological Definition (313-95) 26. The City of God and Caesaro-Papism V Theological Definition 26. THE CITY OF GOD AND CAESARO-PAPISM A. Nature of Caesaro-Papism Caesaro-papism, etymologically, is the regime in which Caesar would be pope. It particularly designates the Church-state relationship of the later and Christian Roman Empire, especially after it had been based upon Constantinople and largely restricted to the Byzantine or Greek world. Secondarily and less perfectly the Teutonic revival of the Roman Empire in the West would advance similar pretensions, though the unique position of the bishop of Rome would prove a bar to the faithful reproduction in the West of the system of Justinian the Great. In varying degrees, then, Caesaro-papism will be the alternative faced by the Church during the Feudal period to the anarchical tendencies of the age. Imperial protection afforded the Church many advantages in the temporal order: immunities for the clergy from secular tasks, subsidies for the liturgical and charitable works of the Church, protection for missionaries, facilities for communication-to mention but a few of the more obvious. In turn the Church made her contribution by inculcating respect for authority, patriotic loyalty, observance of morality, and promoting imperial unity and cultural homogeneity. But the price paid for this was a high one, since the imperial rulers always tended to make of the Church a department of the state and to make use of ecclesiastical institutions for political purposes. B. Evolution of Caesaro-papism (1) PRE-CIMISTIAN SOURCES "Before Christ's coming there were some who were justly and rightly both kings and priests, such as Melchizedech, and Satan imitated this among unbelievers; therefore pagan emperors were called pontifex maximum." Thus Pope St.
    [Show full text]
  • Abbot Holzherr's the Rule of Benedict Has Not Only Brought Forward The
    “Abbot Holzherr’s The Rule of Benedict has not only brought forward the careful literal, symbolic, and moral imperatives embedded in the Rule but also raised up a clear and compelling mystical voice that gives meaning and significance to all of us who claim Benedict as teacher. The Rule prescribes spiritual journey for those of us in the monastic way of life. Holzherr lifts up the contemplative experience of this lifetime while we are on our way.” —Meg Funk, OSB “I heartily recommend the commentary of Abbot Georg Holzherr on the Rule of Benedict. Abbot Georg was abbot of Einsiedeln Abbey when he first published this commentary about 1980. Even as a busy abbot, he must have continued to keep abreast with the new research on the Rule, because after his retirement he published a new edition, which we have here. Holzherr is especially good on the patristic background of the Rule, but he is an overall judicious commentator.” —Terrence G. Kardong, OSB Assumption Abbey “Georg Holzherr clarifies and deepens our understanding of Benedict’s Rule through his knowledge of many other monastic rules available in Benedict’s time. He shows Benedict’s intention to shape cenobitic life as an extension of baptismal vows, revealing why the Rule is a reliable guide to the Christian life not only for monastics but also for oblates and others. This is not a dry tome but rather a book evoking the love Benedict mentions so often. My heart leapt in me at times when reading Holzherr’s book.” —Norvene Vest, PhD, Obl. OSB Author of Preferring Christ and What Is Your Practice: Lifelong Growth in the Spirit “In his commentary on the Rule of Saint Benedict Georg Holzherr combines contemporary, accessible language, long experience of monastic life, and an exhaustive grasp and judicious use of the ancient Christian sources of Benedict’s Rule.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 the Papacy and Byzantium in the Seventh- and Early Eighth-Century
    1 The papacy and Byzantium in the seventh- and early eighth-century sections of the Liber pontificalis Rosamond McKitterick, Faculty of History, University of Cambridge, West Road, Cambridge CB3 9EF, England. [email protected] accepted 5th May 2016 for publication in the Papers of the British School at Rome, 2016 (Cambridge University Press) ABSTRACT The Liber pontificalis, the serial biography of the popes running from St Peter to the end of the ninth century, first compiled in Rome during the ‘Gothic wars’ in the sixth century and continued at various stages in the next three centuries, offers a distinctive narrative of the history of Rome and of the papacy in the early middle ages. This paper argues that the seventh- and early eighth-century sections, too often simply mined for nuggets of information about church buildings, represent the pope in a particular way both in relation to Byzantium in theological and political terms, and as the successor to St Peter in Rome. The papal narrative undermines the usual assumptions about the so-called Byzantine Reconquest and the Roman perception, if not the reality, of the degree to which ‘Byzantine rule’ was exercised in Italy between the middle of the sixth and first half of the eighth century. Lastly, these ‘continuations’ have important implications for any interpretation of the purpose and construction of the Liber pontificalis, and of its dissemination beyond Rome in the seventh and eighth centuries. The Life of John VII (1 March 705-18 October 707) in the Liber pontificalis begins with the
    [Show full text]