Autograph Collection

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Autograph Collection http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8pv6ps6 No online items Autograph Collection Mario A Gallardo, Clay Stalls William H. Hannon Library Loyola Marymount University One LMU Drive, MS 8200 Los Angeles, CA 90045-8200 Phone: (310) 338-5710 Fax: (310) 338-5895 Email: [email protected] URL: http://library.lmu.edu/ © 2015 Loyola Marymount University. All rights reserved. Autograph Collection 007 1 Autograph Collection Collection number: 007 William H. Hannon Library Loyola Marymount University Los Angeles, California Processed by: Mario A Gallardo, Clay Stalls Date Completed: July 2015 Encoded by: Mario A Gallardo, Clay Stalls © 2015 Loyola Marymount University. All rights reserved. Descriptive Summary Title: Autograph collection Dates: 1578-1959 Collection number: 007 Collector: Charlotte E. Field Collection Size: 4 autograph albums Repository: Loyola Marymount University. Library. Department of Archives and Special Collections. Los Angeles, California 90045-2659 Abstract: This collection consists of autographs of ecclesiastical figures, presidents, entertainers, and other personages, from the late sixteenth century to the mid twentieth century. Languages: Languages represented in the collection: English Access Collection is open to research under the terms of use of the Department of Archives and Special Collections, Loyola Marymount University. Publication Rights Materials in the Department of Archives and Special Collections may be subject to copyright. Unless explicitly stated otherwise, Loyola Marymount University does not claim ownership of the copyright of any materials in its collections. The user or publisher must secure permission to publish from the copyright owner. Loyola Marymount University does not assume any responsibility for infringement of copyright or of publication rights held by the original author or artists or his/her heirs, assigns, or executors. Preferred Citation [Identification of item], Box and Leaf number, Autograph Collection, 007, Department of Archives and Special Collections, William H. Hannon Library, Loyola Marymount University. Acquisition Information Charlotte E. Field donated part of this collection to then Loyola University in 1938. Accession number: 1995.12 Processing Information The autographs were mounted in archival-quality albums at unknown date, perhaps in 1995, when the current accession number was assigned to this collection. Mario A. Gallardo created the box and folder list for the collection in June 2015 and then encoded it in EAD in July that same year for inclusion in the Online Archive of California. Collection Description This collection consists of autographs of ecclesiastical figures, presidents, entertainers, and other personages, from the late sixteenth century to the mid twentieth century. An autograph collection that Charlotte E. Field assembled and other collections of unknown provenance were combined to create this artificial collection, perhaps in 1995, the year the accession number was assigned to the collection. Names of note are many and range from Harry S. Truman, to Catherine II, to Lucille Ball, to Pope Pius X. Autograph Collection 007 2 Numbers in parentheses besides a name indicates that there are two copies of that person's signature. Arrangement Box 1 contains autographs of United States politicians, especially presidents. Box 2 contains ecclesiastical figures, including popes; Box 3, entertainers; and Box 4, foreign rulers. Indexing Terms The following terms have been used to index the description of this collection in the library's online public access catalog. Autographs--Collectors and collecting Autographs Autographs--Collections box:leaf 1:1 Alexander Hamilton. 1800 box:leaf 1:2 Dolly Madison. undated box:leaf 1:3 John Quincy Adams (2) 29 May 1830 box:leaf 1:3 James Monroe. undated box:leaf 1:3 Andrew Jackson. undated box:leaf 1:4 John Adams. 12 November 1810 box:leaf 1:4 Thomas Jefferson. 8 May 1814 box:leaf 1:5 Daniel Webster 1826 box:leaf 1:6 William H. Harrison. undated box:leaf 1:6 John Tyler. undated box:leaf 1:7 Henry Clay. 1 August 1849 box:leaf 1:8 George Washington. 8 June 1789 box:leaf 1:9 James K. Polk. 1 June 1840 box:leaf 1:10 Abraham Lincoln. undated box:leaf 1:10 Jefferson Davis. 19 January 1888 box:leaf 1:10 Andrew Johnson. undated box:leaf 1:11 Rutherford B. Hayes. undated box:leaf 1:11 William McKinley. undated box:leaf 1:11 James A. Garfield. undated box:leaf 1:11 Benjamin Harrison. undated box:leaf 1:11 Woodrow Wilson. 31 December 1910 box:leaf 1:12 Franklin D. Roosevelt. undated box:leaf 1:12 Warren G. Harding. undated box:leaf 1:12 Calvin Coolidge. undated box:leaf 1:12 Herbert Hoover. undated box:leaf 1:13 Zachary Taylor. 22 May 1835 box:leaf 1:14 John Jay. undated box:leaf 1:14 Albert Gallatin. undated box:leaf 1:15 Joseph "Joe" Gurney Cannon. undated box:leaf 1:15 James G. Blaine. undated box:leaf 1:16 Millard Fillmore. 23 September 1862 box:leaf 1:16 Franklin Pierce. undated box:leaf 1:17 Alfred Smith. undated box:leaf 1:17 Stephen W White. undated box:leaf 1:18 Jo Garfield (2). 2 February 1875 box:leaf 1:19 Daniel Webster. undated box:leaf 1:19 William H. Seward. undated box:leaf 1:19 S. A. Douglas. undated box:leaf 1:20 Chester A. Arthur (2). 27 February 1885 box:leaf 1:21 Harry S. Truman. 1 February 1946 box:leaf 1:21 Dwight D. Eisenhower. 6 September 1956 box:leaf 2:1 Catherine de' Medici. undated box:leaf 2:2 Anne, Queen of Great Britain (2). 4 June 1706 box:leaf 2:3 Maria Theresa. 12 February 1760 Autograph Collection 007 3 box:leaf 2:4 Catherine II of Russia. 1781 box:leaf 2:5 Marie Antoinette. undated box:leaf 2:6 William IV. undated box:leaf 2:7 Simon Bolivar. 7 April 1827 box:leaf 2:8 James II of England. undated box:leaf 2:9 King of Sweden. undated box:leaf 2:10 Queen Victoria. undated box:leaf 2:10 Empress Carlotta. undated box:leaf 2:11 Francisco Franco (2). 24 March 1949 box:leaf 2:12 Empress Eugenie. undated box:leaf 2:13 Benito Mussolini. undated box:leaf 2:14 Adolf Hitler. 1 October 1935 box:leaf 2:15 Porfirio Diaz. 1904 box:leaf 2:16 Marie de' Medici. undated box:leaf 2:17 Cosimo de' Medici. undated box:leaf 2:18 King Kalakaua. undated box:leaf 2:18 Queen Kapiolani. undated box:leaf 2:18 Queen Emma of Hawaii. undated box:leaf 2:19 Lord Thomas Howard. undated box:leaf 2:19 Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury. undated box:leaf 2:19 Alfonso Borbon, Prince of Asturias. 4 February 1938 box:leaf 2:19 John Sheffield, 1st Duke of Buckingham. 1715 box:leaf 2:19 Lord John Russell. 1838 box:leaf 2:20 Sir William Herbert, 1st Earl of Pembroke. undated box:leaf 2:20 Lord Palmerston. undated box:leaf 2:20 Nancy Astor, Viscountess Astor. undated box:leaf 2:20 Robert Walpole. undated box:leaf 3:1 John Barrie. undated box:leaf 3:1 Henry W. Longfellow. 1876 box:leaf 3:2 Albert Bierstadt. undated box:leaf 3:2 Albert Fitch Bellows. undated box:leaf 3:3 Louella O. Parsons. undated box:leaf 3:4 Shana Leslie (2). undated box:leaf 3:5 Ellen Terry. 4 February 1902 box:leaf 3:5 Otis Skinner. undated box:leaf 3:6 Lillian Gish. undated box:leaf 3:6 Basil Rathbone. undated box:leaf 3:6 Preston Sturges. 8 February 1946 box:leaf 3:7 Freeman F. Gosden. 26 October 1954 box:leaf 3:7 Anna Klumpke. undated box:leaf 3:8 Walt Disney. undated box:leaf 3:9 Maurice Chevalier. undated box:leaf 3:9 Liberace. 27 September 1954 box:leaf 3:9 Katharine Cornell. undated box:leaf 3:9 Kirsten Flagstad. 6 February 1935 box:leaf 3:10 Katharine Cornell. undated box:leaf 3:10 Jane Cowl. undated box:leaf 3:10 Jose Iturbi. April 1935 box:leaf 3:10 Deanna Durbin. 30 July 1937 box:leaf 3:10 Benita Hume. undated box:leaf 3:11 Ginger Rogers. 1 November 1930 box:leaf 3:11 Shirley Temple. 11 October 1934 box:leaf 3:11 Claudette Colbert. undated box:leaf 3:11 Gene Autry. undated box:leaf 3:12 Lucille Ball. undated box:leaf 3:12 Desi Arnaz. undated box:leaf 3:12 Vivian Vance. undated Autograph Collection 007 4 box:leaf 3:12 William Frawley. undated box:leaf 3:13 Will H. Hays. 25 March 1952 box:leaf 3:14 Charles M. Schwab. 1 April 1920 box:leaf 3:15 Ballington Booth (2). 28 June 1897 box:leaf 4:1 Pope Marcellus II. undated box:leaf 4:2 Pope Pius VIII. undated box:leaf 4:3 Pope Pius X. 4 September 1912 box:leaf 4:4 Frederick the Great. June 1743 box:leaf 4:5 Giuseppe Garibaldi. 19 March 1878 box:leaf 4:6 Pope Clement IX. 1674 box:leaf 4:7 Penance for Adultery for Sarah Rundal. 1728 box:leaf 4:8 Pope Bendict XIII. undated box:leaf 4:9 Pope Leo XI. 1597 box:leaf 4:10 Pope Innocent XII. undated box:leaf 4:11 Pope Leo XI. undated box:leaf 4:12 St. Vincent de Paul. 27 July 1642 box:leaf 4:13 Pope Alexander VIII. 1688 box:leaf 4:14 Pope Alexander VIII. undated box:leaf 4:15 Fulton J. Sheen. 4 November 1953 box:leaf 4:16 Cardinal Henry Edward Manning. 29 July 1885 box:leaf 4:16 Cardinal James Gibbon. undated box:leaf 4:17 Stephen Schappler. 3 May 1954 box:leaf 4:18 Pope John XXIII. 28 October 1959 box:leaf 4:19 Cardinal of Guise. undated box:leaf 4:20 Pope Clement VII. undated box:leaf 4:21 Pope Benedict XIV. 1749 box:leaf 4:22 Pope Clement XI (2).
Recommended publications
  • Pope St. Pius V: Pope of the Rosary Pope St
    Did you know . Pope St. Pius V: Pope of the Rosary Pope St. Pius V is one of the foremost leaders of the Catholic Reformation. He was born Antonio Ghislieri in Bosco, Italy, to a poor family; he worked as a shepherd until the age of fourteen when he joined the Dominicans, and was ordained in 1528. He studied at Bologna and Genoa, and then taught theology and philosophy for sixteen years. He was known for his long hours of prayer and fasting, and his holy speech. Due to his reputation for holiness and his great intelligence, he rose to a number of prominent positions in the Church, including Inquisitor and bishop. When Pope Pius IV died in 1565, he was unanimously elected Pope and took the name Pope Pius V. As pope, Pius was a great reformer and saw as his main objective the full implementation of the decrees of the Council of Trent. He also supported the foreign missions and worked for the reform of the clergy. He published the Roman Catechism, the revised Roman Breviary, and the Roman Missal; he also declared Thomas Aquinas a Doctor of the Church, commanded a new edition of the works of Thomas Aquinas, and created a commission to revise the Vulgate. Pope Pius V was especially known for his devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary and for being a great promoter of the Holy Rosary. He was given the title of “The Pope of the Rosary” for issuing a papal bull, Consueverunt Romani Pontifices, in which he secured the uniformity of the Holy Rosary for recitation throughout the Catholic Church and for establishing the feast of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary.
    [Show full text]
  • The Rule of Ten Virtues of the B.V.M.” Historical Brief
    The Genesis of “The Rule of Ten Virtues of the B.V.M.” Historical Brief Br. Andrew R. Mączyński, MIC Author The Rule of the Ten Virtues of the Most B.V.M., or the Rule of the Ten Pleasures of the Most B.V.M. (Regula Decem Beneplacitorum Beatissimae Virginis Mariae), is one of the few religious rules approved in spite of the decree issued by the IV Lateran Council in 1215. This decree forbade the approval of the newly founded religious orders on any other than one of the previously approved rules. The Rule was composed by a Franciscan, Fr. Gilbert Nicolas, better known as Gabriel Maria, the name he received from Pope Leo X by his brief (breve) of June 11, 1517. By this act, the Pope wished to emphasize the special devotion that Fr. Gilbert had for the mystery of the Annunciation of the B.V.M. Gilbert Nicolas, who also appears in history under the name of Johanes Molezius, was born around 1460 in Riom in the Province of Auvergne, France. Influenced as a 16-year old youth by a sermon by a certain Franciscan preacher on the topic of the Immaculate Conception of the B.V.M., he discerned his vocation to the religious life. In 1475, in Lafond, near La Rochelle, he joined the Franciscans of the Strict Observance. After completing his novitiate and pronouncing his religious vows, he was sent to the monastery in Amboise in order to continue his education that concluded at his priestly ordination and taking the post of a lector of theology.
    [Show full text]
  • Tables of Contemporary Chronology, from the Creation to A. D. 1825
    : TABLES OP CONTEMPORARY CHUONOLOGY. FROM THE CREATION, TO A. D. 1825. \> IN SEVEN PARTS. "Remember the days of old—consider the years of many generations." 3lorttatttt PUBLISHED BY SHIRLEY & HYDE. 1629. : : DISTRICT OF MAItfE, TO WIT DISTRICT CLERKS OFFICE. BE IT REMEMBERED, That on the first day of June, A. D. 1829, and in the fifty-third year of the Independence of the United States of America, Messrs. Shiraey tt Hyde, of said District, have deposited in this office, the title of a book, the right whereof they claim as proprietors, in the words following, to wit Tables of Contemporary Chronology, from the Creation, to A.D. 1825. In seven parts. "Remember the days of old—consider the years of many generations." In conformity to the act of the Congress of the United States, entitled " An Act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts, and books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during the times therein mentioned ;" and also to an act, entitled "An Act supplementary to an act, entitled An Act for the encouragement of learning, by securing the copies of maps, charts and books, to the authors and proprietors of such copies, during the times therein mentioned ; and for extending the benefits thereof to the arts of designing, engraving, and etching historical and other prints." J. MUSSEV, Clerk of the District of Maine. A true copy as of record, Attest. J MUSSEY. Clerk D. C. of Maine — TO THE PUBLIC. The compiler of these Tables has long considered a work of this sort a desideratum.
    [Show full text]
  • The New York City Draft Riots of 1863
    University of Kentucky UKnowledge United States History History 1974 The Armies of the Streets: The New York City Draft Riots of 1863 Adrian Cook Click here to let us know how access to this document benefits ou.y Thanks to the University of Kentucky Libraries and the University Press of Kentucky, this book is freely available to current faculty, students, and staff at the University of Kentucky. Find other University of Kentucky Books at uknowledge.uky.edu/upk. For more information, please contact UKnowledge at [email protected]. Recommended Citation Cook, Adrian, "The Armies of the Streets: The New York City Draft Riots of 1863" (1974). United States History. 56. https://uknowledge.uky.edu/upk_united_states_history/56 THE ARMIES OF THE STREETS This page intentionally left blank THE ARMIES OF THE STREETS TheNew York City Draft Riots of 1863 ADRIAN COOK THE UNIVERSITY PRESS OF KENTUCKY ISBN: 978-0-8131-5182-3 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 73-80463 Copyright© 1974 by The University Press of Kentucky A statewide cooperative scholarly publishing agency serving Berea College, Centre College of Kentucky, Eastern Kentucky University, Georgetown College, Kentucky Historical Society, Kentucky State University, Morehead State University, Murray State University, Northern Kentucky State College, Transylvania University, University of Kentucky, University of Louisville, and Western Kentucky University. Editorial and Sales Offices: Lexington, Kentucky 40506 To My Mother This page intentionally left blank Contents Acknowledgments ix
    [Show full text]
  • Blessed Sacrament Church "I Am the Living Bread Come Down from Heaven
    Blessed Sacrament Church "I am the Living Bread come down from Heaven. If any man eats of this Bread, he shall live forever; and the Bread I will give, is My Flesh." John 6:51-52 SCHEDULE OF MASSES LORD’S DAY: Saturday: 4:00 p.m. Sunday: 8:00 and 10:30 a.m. HOLYDAYS: Vigil: 6:00 p.m. Holyday: 7:00 a.m. & 9:00 a.m. WEEKDAYS: 9:00 a.m. SATURDAYS: First Saturdays only: 8:00 a.m. SACRAMENT OF RECONCILIATION: Saturday 2:45 to 3:30 p.m. and by appointment BAPTISM: As part of the preparation process an interview with the Pastor and two instructional sessions are required. Please contact the rectory to schedule. ENGAGED COUPLES: Arrangements for your marriage must be made at least nine months in advance of the marriage date. NEW PARISHIONERS: We welcome you and ask that you register at the Rectory. We want to know and serve you! We hope that you will favor your parish with your prayers, your presence and your talents. Pastor Rev. Timothy J. Campoli Church Rectory 221 Federal Street 182 High Street Greenfield, MA 01301 Greenfield, MA 01301 blessedsacramentgreenfieldma.org (413) 773-3311 Deacons Deacon John Leary Deacon George Nolan (413) 219-2734 (C) (508) 304-2763 (C) [email protected] [email protected] Director of Organist Religious Education Choir Director Laurie Tilton Stephen Glover 774-2918 772-0532 [email protected] Alternatives Pregnancy Ctr. Calvary Cemetery Pregnancy Tests, Counseling, Support Wisdom Way Post Abortion Support Greenfield (413) 774-6010 773-3311 “Whosoever shall eat this Bread, or drink this Hispanic Ministry Sr.
    [Show full text]
  • American Catholicism and the Political Origins of the Cold War/ Thomas M
    University of Massachusetts Amherst ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014 1991 American Catholicism and the political origins of the Cold War/ Thomas M. Moriarty University of Massachusetts Amherst Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses Moriarty, Thomas M., "American Catholicism and the political origins of the Cold War/" (1991). Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014. 1812. Retrieved from https://scholarworks.umass.edu/theses/1812 This thesis is brought to you for free and open access by ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. It has been accepted for inclusion in Masters Theses 1911 - February 2014 by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks@UMass Amherst. For more information, please contact [email protected]. AMERICAN CATHOLICISM AND THE POLITICAL ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR A Thesis Presented by THOMAS M. MORI ARTY Submitted to the Graduate School of the University of Massachusetts in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS May 1991 Department of History AMERICAN CATHOLICISM AND THE POLITICAL ORIGINS OF THE COLD WAR A Thesis Presented by THOMAS M. MORIARTY Approved as to style and content by Loren Baritz, Chair Milton Cantor, Member Bruce Laurie, Member Robert Jones, Department Head Department of History TABLE OF CONTENTS Chapter Page 1. "SATAN AND LUCIFER 2. "HE HASN'T TALKED ABOUT ANYTHING BUT RELIGIOUS FREEDOM" 25 3. "MARX AMONG THE AZTECS" 37 4. A COMMUNIST IN WASHINGTON'S CHAIR 48 5. "...THE LOSS OF EVERY CATHOLIC VOTE..." 72 6. PAPA ANGEL I CUS 88 7. "NOW COMES THIS RUSSIAN DIVERSION" 102 8. "THE DEVIL IS A COMMUNIST" 112 9.
    [Show full text]
  • Exploring the Distinctiveness of Neo-Latin Jesuit Didactic Poetry in Naples: the Case of Nicolò Partenio Giannettasio
    chapter 2 Exploring the Distinctiveness of Neo-Latin Jesuit Didactic Poetry in Naples: The Case of Nicolò Partenio Giannettasio Claudia Schindler The Jesuit Nicolò Partenio Giannettasio (1648–1715) was one of the most intriguing and influential authors of seventeenth-century Naples.1 Born in 1648, in Parthenope (i.e., Naples), as he used to call his home city, he entered the Jesuit order at the age of sixteen, having lost his family during the plague of 1656. Like other members of the Society of Jesus, Giannettasio was a highly educated man with a wide range of interests: he studied Scholastic philosophy at Palermo, taught mathematics at the Collegio Massimo in Naples for more than ten years, traveled in Egypt,2 and designed the Santa Maria del Gesù church in Sorrento, which was built near the Jesuit residence La Cocumella and is still extant today.3 1 This chapter is a revised version of my German-language article, “Wissen ist Macht! Nicolò Partenio Giannettasio (1648–1715) und die neulateinische Jesuitenkultur in Neapel,” Scientia poetica 18 (2014): 28–59. For the revision of the English text and for the Latin–English transla- tions, I would like to thank Ronald Mayer-Opificius. For Giannettasio’s biography, cf. Claudia Schindler, “Nicolò Partenio Giannettasios Nauticorum libri viii. Ein neulateinisches Lehrgedicht des 17. Jahrhunderts,” Neulateinisches Jahrbuch 3 (2001): 146–48; Yasmin Haskell, Loyola’s Bees: Ideology and Industry in Jesuit Latin Didactic Poetry (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003), 70–76. The information provided by the biographical and bibliographical dic- tionary of Christian Gottlieb Jöcher (Allgemeines Gelehrten-Lexikon [Leipzig: Gleditsch, 1751], 3:309) and by the Nouvelle biographie générale (Paris: Firmin Didot frères, 1861), 34:col.
    [Show full text]
  • Religious Basis of U.S. Law Uader Attack, Expert Warns
    Moscow Chapel fo Get Flag From U.S. Capitol Religious Basis of U.S. Law Washington.—An American hope for all people who yearn flag that has flown over the for tre^om . It is more than CapiUd Jbuildi^ will adorn a a challenge to those who seek Catholic chapel in Moscow. to dominate and control the The reqi^est was made by Fa­ lives and souls of men. “To you, to the personnel of Uader Attack, Expert Warns ther Joseph Richard, A.A., at the American Embassy, and a meeting with U.S. Sen. Hu­ to the people of the Soviet New York.—“A powerful, well-financed bert Humphrey (Minn.), be- Union, I send this flag with group in America” is “seeking by court action to Bishop Shoon Soys fmre leaving for Moscow to as­ the wish that it be seen as a a a /waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaau sume bis duties as chapiain at a symbol of America’s love destroy every moral support whidh the state now the Uil. Embassy. for freedom, America’s quest bestows on religion,” charged Father Robert F. In a letter to the chaplain, for peace, and America’s con­ Senator Humphrey said: cern for the progress of all Drinan, S.J., dean of Boston College Law School. Softening “This flag is a message of peoples.” In a sermon at the 33rd annual Red M*ass sponsored by the New York Supplement to the Denver Catholic Register Guild of Catholic Lawyers, Fa­ Of Morality ther Drinan warned that this N atio n al group is attempting to persuade National the judiciary that America must Seen in d.S.
    [Show full text]
  • Facts for the Times
    Valuable Historical Extracts. ,,,,,,, 40,11/1/, FACTS FOR THE TIMES. A COLLECTION —OF — VALUABLE HISTORICAL EXTRACTS ON A GR.E!T VA R TETY OF SUBJECTS, OF SPECIAL INTEREST TO THE BIBLE STUDENT, FROM EMINENT AUTHORS, ANCIENT AND MODERN. REVISED BY G. I. BUTLER. " Admissions in favor of troth, from the ranks of its enemies, constitute the highest kind of evidence."—Puss. Ass Mattatc. Pr This Volume contains about One Thousand Separate Historical Statements. THIRD EDITION, ENLARGED, AND BROUGHT DOWN TO 1885. REVIEW AND HERALD, BATTLE CREEK, MICH. PACIFIC PRESS, OAKLAND, CALIFORNIA. PREFACE. Tax object of this volume, as its name implies, is to furnish to the inquirer a large fund of facts bearing upon important Bible subjects, which are of special interest to the present generation, • While "the Bible and the Bible alone" is the only unerring rule of faith and practice, it is very desirable oftentimes to ascertain what great and good men have believed concerning its teachings. This is especially desirable when religious doctrines are being taught which were considered new and strange by some, but which, in reality, have bad the sanction of many of the most eminent and devoted of God's servants in the past. Within the last fifty years, great changes have occurred among religious teachers and churches. Many things which were once con- sidered important truths are now questioned or openly rejected ; while other doctrines which are thought to be strange and new are found to have the sanction of the wisest and best teachers of the past. The extracts contained in this work cover a wide range of subjects, many of them of deep interest to the general reader.
    [Show full text]
  • The Popes and Saints on the Catholic Doctrine of No Salvation Outside the Church by Raymond Taouk
    The Popes and Saints on the Catholic Doctrine of No Salvation Outside the Church By Raymond Taouk This dogma has been affirmed many times over by the Churches Magisterium. It has been affirmed by Pope Innocent III (DS 423), The IV Lateran Council (DS 430), Pope Boniface VIII (DS 468), The Council of Florence (DS 714), Pope Pius IX (DS 1647), Pope Clement VI (DS 5706), The Council of Trent (DS 861) etc. We shall list some of the Popes and Saints of the Church and what they taught on this Catholic Dogma. Pope St. Clement I, A. D. 88-97: “Heretical teachers pervert Scripture and try to get into heaven with a false key, for they have formed their human assemblies later than the Catholic Church. From this previously- existing and most true Church, it is very clear that these later heresies, and this which have come into being since then, are counterfeit and novel inventions.” (Epistle to the Corinthians) St. Ignatius of Antioch: “Do not deceive yourselves, he who adheres to the author of a schism will not possess the kingdom of God.” [Epistle to the Philadelphians, 3 (CH 158)]. Saint Cyprianus: “Whosoever is separated from the Church is united to an adulteress. He has cut himself off from the promises of the Church, and he who leaves the Church of Christ cannot arrive at the rewards of Christ (…) He who observes not this unity observe not the law of God, holds not the faith of the Father and Son, clings not to life and salvation.” [De Cath.
    [Show full text]
  • The Unigenitus of Clement XI
    Theological Studies 49 (1988) THE UNIGÉNITOS OF CLEMENT XI: A FRESH LOOK AT THE ISSUES JACQUES M. GRES-GAYER The Catholic University of America HERE is an enigma about Unigenitus, the ill-fated bull issued by Pope TClement XI (1713) against the resurgence of Jansenism. If the Jansenist movement in general has continued to attract scholars, whose recent contributions are changing perspectives,1 the constitution that condemned 101 "Jansenist propositions" extracted from the Réflexions morales was until recently left scrupulously untouched. It seemed taken for granted as an inevitable pivot—either a terminus ad quern, the logical conclusion of a century of theological and political disputes, or a terminus a quo, the origin of a movement of rebellion that eventually developed into a revolution.2 In other words, it was considered more a catalyst or an excuse for a latent social and political conflict than its real cause; hence the interest manifested in its prolegomena or later development rather than in the document itself. It was the document itself, however, the solemn exercise of the papal magisterium, that stimulated what was then perceived as the major crisis in Catholic history. The animosities, the political schemes, and the negotiations which accompanied its preparation, the uproar, the renewed negotiations, and the conflicts which followed its publication, suggest that there was more to this document than a collection of 101 condemned extracts from a spiritual book. But what was Unigenitus all about? In what appears to be a healthy reaction to a quasi-exclusive emphasis on the social and political elements of the conflicts surrounding the bull, major scholars of Jansenism have lately advocated an approach that 1 See the review article by William H.
    [Show full text]
  • Anrh^At^R Letif Baralb CERAMIC TILE INSTALLED IN
    jal V ^ • >»T • THURSDAY, DECEMBER 7, PACUS TWflSfry-BIGOT illanrbieBtpr , Evpttins V^roUi “4 ' £ 3 ■ M The Ladies ot St. James will Town to Enter Finley of 888 Avery Bt., W«p- About Town have a Christmas party Mon­ plng, estimated the loe* of the Authority Revietps Policy The W esO if day after a btisiness meeting at money and property dantagO to ~^Falr tonight. Xjom In Mi lIanoiiest«r Jayc««k and Jay- Report in Test 8 p.m. in tha upstairs hall at be a total of about $200. morrow fair. EDgh 40 to $0. CM W^ttm will aponaor a Christ- St. James’ School. Students of Three full aeta of hubcaps For tiousing Applicajits anrh^at^r lEtif Baralb mas party for member's chil­ the Beveriy Bollino Byrton Manchester'' once again will valued at $280 were taken from enter its annual report in the 15,541 dren Sunday from S to B p.m. Dance Studio wilt entertain the three cars at Manchester Olds- The Manchester Housing Au­ felt that the length of time on Town and City Reports Contest, Mtmche$ter—“A City of VUlage Charm at the VFW Home, 608 E. Cen­ group. Mrs. Frank Philopena is mobile Inc., 012 W. Center St thority reviewed its aidmlaslon application bad been filed was ter St. There will be cartoons, in charge of arrangements and conducted by the UConn Insti­ The hubcaps were of the wire an'important ffustor and under tute of Public Service. policy for elderly housing appli­ MANCHESTER, C»NN., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1967 (OlaoMfled Advertiaing oa Page 28) PRK7E SBVBN CXNTB cookies and punch, and a visit Mrs.
    [Show full text]