You Are Cordially Invited

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

You Are Cordially Invited We appreciate the businesses below for advertising in our bulletin, please patronize these businesses. PARISH BULLETIN July11, 2021 And when you do, mention that you saw their ad in our bulletin! Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Immaculate Conception Parish St. Joseph Parish-Fairview 341 W Main St PO Box 188 N13740 Fairview Rd In Memory of Alma Center WI 54611-0188 Fairchild WI 54741-8514 John Selz FAMILY SUMMER COOK-OUT—TODAY!!!! SUNDAY, JULY 11 Selz-Pralle Dairy Family 11:15 AM Immaculate Conception Lunch - Fellowship - Games - Spiritual guidance from Fr Dan All are welcome! VFW Post 8494 NEIGHBORS IN NEED Bob Danke Post Cmdr 715-984-2478 Since 1993 more than 1000 Hall rental available helped. If you know of anyone St Joseph’s 150th Anniversary Celebration! (Ad donated in memory of with a special need, call Bernard & Dorothy Jeff Smith @ 715-334-3983 Laufenberg) 1870 - 2020 You are cordially 150 years invited To the Sesquicentennial Sponsors: James Forsting Dennis and Jan The Esser Family Anniversary Celebration for Families Elfering St Joseph - Fairview Catholic Parish Janke’s Never †Martin & Dorothy In Loving Memory of the †Ray & Lorraine Saturday, July 17, 2021 Rest Farms Kalina Laufenberg Family 11:00 AM Mass St Joseph Catholic PARISH - Fairview Immaculate Conception Annual Roast Beef Dinner There will be limited seating at the Mass FRIENDS’ SHARING FOOD Some of the ladies from Immaculate Conception met to dis- N13740 Fairview Rd ESSENTIAL NEEDS PROGRAM Dinner to follow-all are invited cuss the annual roast beef dinner, and how to hold it safely this Fairchild WI 54741 Located at 411 Gebhardt Rd, Black River Falls year. They came to the decision that a drive up dinner would Now available: personal care items such as shampoo, de- be best this time. It was decided the dinner will be held odorant, toothbrush, toothpaste, diapers, wipes, etc. If you Wednesday, August 11th from 4 to 6 pm. are in need of these items contact Kathy Laudon at 715- The cost of beef has doubled since the last dinner. We are PARISH SECRETARY, PASTOR MASS SCHEDULE 299-1992. Sun 8:30 am St Joseph asking all families of Immaculate Conception to please make a BOOKKEEPER Fr. Daniel Thelen donation of $20 instead of signing up to bring certain items for Dawn Kaufman 10:15 am Immaculate Con. 715-533-8344 715-964-5201 Facebook live at 10:15AM Humbird Pop-Up Food Pantry will take place every 2nd the dinner. Then they will take the donated funds to purchase Tue 5:30 pm Spanish DIR. OF SACRED MUSIC or 715-218-8391 the things needed for the drive up dinner. They are asking the Wed & Fri 9:00 am Immac Conc. and 4th Tuesday of the month! Pickup is in front of the Jolene Janke 715-964-6334 ladies to make pies or a refrigerated dessert. There is a sign OFFICE PHONE Thu 10:00 am St Joseph Humbird Fire Hall. Sponsored by American Legion Aux PARISH FACEBOOK up sheet on the bulletin board in the entryway. 715-964-5201 Sat 4:30 pm IC Spanish Post 320 and Feed My People Food Bank. Immaculate Joseph John CONFESSION PARISH EMAIL ID They also need people to work! People will be needed to fun ADORATION Tue 6:15-6:45 pm at IC [email protected] the food from the basement to the cars, and to help assemble Tue 6:00—6:45 pm at IC Thu 10:30-11:00 am at SJ the meals. We appreciate your donation and participation! Thu 10 :30 am at St Joseph PARISH WEBSITE Sat 4:00-4:30 pm at IC Thu 5:30—7:30 pm at IC www.catholic-parishes-of-almacenter-fairchild.org Sun 8:00-8:25 am at SJ Saturday July 10 CONTINUED FROM LAST WEEK ADULT FAITH FORMATION OPPORTUNITIES 4:30 PM Mass Immaculate Conception-Hispanic A church just south of Rome called Domine Quo Vadis retains the location †Members of Both Parishes Parish—Bible Study where Christ allegedly appeared to St Peter following the persecutions of Nero. We will hold Bible Study on Thursday evenings Sunday July 11 Fifteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time Upon seeing the Lord, St Peter asked, “Domine, Quo Vadis?” (Lord, where are at 6 PM in person and through the internet. If 8:30 AM Mass St Joseph you going?) to which Jesus replied, “I am going to Rome to be crucified again.” you are interested, let us know and we will †Nancy Dimmitt Flynn (R&P Dimmitt) send you an email to join in through the Spurred on by this encounter St Peter returned to Rome where he became a mar- 10:15AM Mass Immaculate Conception ZOOM app on your laptop, phone or tablet. tyr. You can download the app anytime from your †Marcel Kujak playstore: ZOOM Cloud Meetings Mass live-streamed through Facebook at 10:15 AM The church of San Pietro in Vincoli maintains a tradition that St Peter was con- Family Summer Cookout after Mass demned and imprisoned near this site. Within the confessio of this church are the Monday July 12 chains used to bind St Peter. A tradition holds that these chains are a result of the Confessions We will hold Confessions at Private Mass chains from St Peter’s imprisonment in Jerusalem coming into contact with the these times, or call Fr Dan. Tuesday July 13 chains from St Peter’s imprisonment in Rome. Miraculously these two chains 6:15 pm—6:45 pm—Tuesday at IC were fused into the one inseparable chain that is now found in the confessio. 5:30 PM Mass Immaculate Conception-Hispanic 10:30—11:00 am—Thursday at St Joseph †Deceased Members of the Putman Family Another church near the catacombs called San Sebastiano Fuori Le Mura main- 4:00 pm—4:30 pm—Saturday at IC Wednesday July 14 St Kateri Tekawitha tains another ancient tradition connecting St Peter and St Paul. An ancient work 8:00 am-8:30 am—Sunday at St Joseph 8:40 AM Rosary Immaculate Conception called the Depositio Martyrum shows that in the year 258 pilgrims came to San 9:00 AM Mass Immaculate Conception Congratulations to Mateo Noe Rodriguez Lugo on his Adoration †Ron Degenhardt (J&D Stephens) Baptism this past weekend! Sebastiano Fuori Le Mura on June 29th, the Feast Day of Saints Peter and Paul, 6:00 pm—6:45 pm—Tuesday at IC Thursday July 15 St Bonaventure He is pictured here with his parents, Leticia and Aquilino, to honor these two great saints. 10:30 am Thursday at St Joseph 10:00 AM Mass St Joseph Fr Dan, and his Godparents, Martin and Eutimia. The church of Santa Pudenziana marks the spot where it is believed that St Peter 5:30 pm—7:30 pm—Thursday at IC †James Ulesich (R&P Dimmitt) 10:30 AM Adoration St Joseph lodged while he was in Rome. The house in which he stayed was owned and pro- vided for by St Pudens, a Roman Senator. Since early Christians did not have Rosary Join Valentyna Pavsyukova, the found- 6:00 PM Bible Study Immaculate Conception er of Chalice of Mercy, and Fr Dan on Wednes- public places for worship it is also presumed that St Peter celebrated Mass here. 5:30-7:30 PM Adoration Immaculate Conception Sun. Jul. 11, 8:30 am, SJ Sun. Jul. 11, 10:15 am, IC day, Friday and Sunday evenings at 8pm for an online Rosary. If you are interested in joining Friday July 16 Our Lady of Mount Carmel Lector: Leanna Cernohous Lector: Kathy Laudon The remains of St Paul are buried within the Basilica of St Paul Outside the Walls. 9:00 AM Mass Immaculate Conception Server: R Dimmitt Server: Easton Esser., Isiah contact Fr Dan and he will send you the link †Fr Albert of St Theresa (Rothschild-Schofield) Birthday and Usher: Joe Kutchera, D Laufenberg Above his tomb are the chains that were used to imprison him prior to his mar- for the ZOOM app. Good Health (C Gwidt) Scheffer Usher: J Esser, B Leis, C Cray, tyrdom. His body was transferred here following his martyrdom by decapitation. We pray the Rosary before Mass on Wednes- Gifts: J Jr & K Kutchera R Laufenberg day and Friday as well. Saturday July 17 Count: C&G Eisberner Gifts: Matt & Stephanie Esser A church located in the southern part of Rome called San Paolo alle Tre Fontane, 11:00 AM Sesquicentennial Celebration Mass St Joseph Count: J&M Esser, John Esser is believed to mark the spot of St Paul’s martyrdom. Another church on this †Fr D Ziegelmaier, Fr J Cassidy, L Zurowski (M&C Kaufman) Sun. Jul. 18, 8:30 am, SJ Sun. Jul. 18, 10:15 am, IC property, Santa Maria Scala Coeli, is believed to mark the spot of St Paul’s impris- Lunch following Mass 4:30 PM Mass Immaculate Conception-Hispanic Lector: Jan Elfering Lector: Barb Meacham onment prior to his martyrdom. Numerous other churches in Rome also mark Server: Doug Scheffer Server:E&E Esser †Members of Both Parishes other locations where he is believed to have been held in prison. One must re- Usher: B Connelly, Usher: G Seichter, L Anibas, Sunday July 4 Fourteenth Sunday in Ordinary Time R Dimmitt E Olson, K Ripp member that St Paul's entire time in Rome was passed under arrest. The Acts of Our thoughts and prayers are with the 8:30 AM Mass St Joseph Gifts: V&B Firkus Gifts: G&K Esser the Apostles detail how he was imprisoned in Jerusalem and then sent to Rome to family of †Spec.
Recommended publications
  • The Annunciation Red Chalk on Light Brown Paper, Laid Down
    Giuseppe Cesari Cavaliere d'Arpino (Arpino 1568 - Rome 1640) The Annunciation Red chalk on light brown paper, laid down. Indistinctly inscribed B. Ellins[?] Vices[?] at the lower left and, in a different hand, Corregio at the lower right. Numbered 30 at the lower right. 245 x 213 mm. (9 5/8 x 8 3/8 in.) ACQUIRED BY THE CHAPEL ART CENTER, ST. ANSELM COLLEGE, MANCHESTER, NEW HAMPSHIRE. This fine sheet is an exceptional example of Arpino’s confident draughtsmanship. The drawing is a preparatory study for an altarpiece of The Annunciation, painted between 1594 and 1596 for the Cappella Aldobrandini in the church of Santa Maria in Via in Rome. The decoration of the chapel had been left unfinished by Jacopo Zucchi in 1594, and Arpino was commissioned by Cardinal Pietro Aldobrandini to paint the altarpiece and two frescoes on the lateral walls of the chapel, which served as the resting place of his father, also called Pietro Aldobrandini. A related compositional drawing by Arpino for the Aldobrandini Annunciation, also in red chalk and formerly in the Maranzi collection in Rome, appeared at auction in London in 1967 and 2008. Of the two drawings, the present sheet is closer to the final painting in the poses of the figures, though the ex- Maranzi drawing more faithfully reproduces the architectural background of the altarpiece. Herwarth Röttgen has noted of the former drawing (and, by extension, the present sheet) that it shows Arpino’s tendency to make his figures quite youthful in appearance, endowing them with a sense of innocence and charm.
    [Show full text]
  • Università Degli Studi Di Macerata Dipartimento Di Scienze Della Formazione, Dei Beni Culturali E Turismo Corso Di Dottorato Di
    UNIVERSITÀ DEGLI STUDI DI MACERATA DIPARTIMENTO DI SCIENZE DELLA FORMAZIONE, DEI BENI CULTURALI E TURISMO CORSO DI DOTTORATO DI RICERCA IN HUMAN SCIENCES CICLO XXXI TITOLO DELLA TESI L'antica Via Lauretana: itinerario «sì corporale, come spirituale» da Roma a Loreto. Parte prima: il percorso laziale RELATORE DOTTORANDO Chiar.mo Prof. Roberto Sani Dott. Giacomo Alimenti COORDINATORE Chiar.mo Prof. Angelo Ventrone ANNO 2019 «O noi felici, ò noi fortunati di qua a poche miglia vedremo Maria, entreremo in quella Casa, ove alberga un Dio. Ove ei più volte impresse con humanato piede orme celesti». (F.M. Gerunzio, Sagro pellegrinaggio sì corporale, come spirituale a Maria di Loreto, 1671) BCMC, 2. 7. A. 27 (2), risg.: “Pellegrino del XVI secolo” (1580). INDICE DEL VOLUME Presentazione 11 Prefazione 12 Introduzione 14 1. Il pellegrinaggio lauretano 19 2. Loreto e la Via Lauretana 35 3. Descrizione delle Poste 61 Premessa metodologica 61 3.a Da Roma a Prima Porta 64 3.b Da Prima Porta a Malborghetto 85 3.c Da Malborghetto a Castelnuovo di Porto 93 3.d Da Castelnuovo di Porto a Rignano Flaminio 104 3.e Da Rignano Flaminio a Civita Castellana 115 3.f Da Civita Castellana a Borghetto 137 4. Apparato critico 151 5. Indice dei nomi 164 6. Indice dei luoghi 168 Postfazione 176 SIMONE LONGHI Progetto “Cammini Lauretani” L'opera, che si inaugura col presente volume, costituisce un'organica trilogia che nasce e si iscrive nell’alveo del progetto Distretto Culturale Evoluto “I Cammini Lauretani”, iniziativa promossa dal Tavolo di concertazione per il recupero, gestione e valorizzazione dell' Antica Via Lauretana.
    [Show full text]
  • Angeli Su Roma Quanti Angeli Volano Su Roma? E Dove? Andiamo a Scoprirli
    ANGELI SU ROMA QUANTI ANGELI VOLANO SU ROMA? E DOVE? ANDIAMO A SCOPRIRLI INTRODUZIONE In molte religioni, non solo in quella cristiana cattolica, esistono gli angeli, sono esseri spirituali che assistono e servono Dio oppure sono al servizio dell'uomo nella sua vita terrena e nel suo percorso di progresso spirituale. Il termine latino angelus deriva dal greco anghelos (già attestato nel dialetto miceneo del XIV/XII sec) significa inviato, messaggero e nelle credenze religiose della civiltà classica appare come messaggero degli Dei. Hermes o Mercurio è indicato come anghelos. Con la stessa funzione lo indica Platone nel Cratilo, i filosofi pitagorici consideravano che i sogni erano inviati agli uomini dagli angeli, anche Platone - nel Convivio - parla di daimon, ministri di Dio che sono vicini agli uomini per ben ispirarli. Ma la figura dell'angelo nella visione cristiana deriva certamente dal pensiero religioso ebraico dove il termine angelo è usato nei testi biblici sempre con il significato di "inviato" di "messaggero". Il Cristianesimo ha ereditato la nozione di angeli dalla cultura religiosa biblico ebraica, soprattutto di lingua greca, ma le figure degli angeli sono ridisegnate secondo il Nuovo Testamento. Così l'angelo ebraico nominato nel libro di Daniele Gabiel, è nei Vangeli il Gabriele angelo dell'Annunciazione. Anche nel Cattolicesimo gli angeli sono creature di Dio spirituali, incorporee ma personali, cioè dotate di intelligenza e volontà propria, tra gli esseri visibili sono quelli con il più alto grado di perfezione. La loro esistenza è una verità di fede. Gli angeli hanno anche la funzione di assistere e proteggere la Chiesa e la vita umana.
    [Show full text]
  • CPR Newsletter Issue 7Full
    CONFRATERNITY OF PILGRIMS TO ROME NEWSLETTER August 2009 No. 7 Contents 3 Editorial Alison Raju Chris George 4 Why me? Chris George 6 Rome for the modern pilgrim, 4: the Christianisation of Rome – churches built between Constantine’s move to the east and the fall of Rome in 410. Howard Nelson 25 Notes from a Pilgtim in England Jim Peele 26 The final stage of the Via Francigena into Rome from the south along the Appian Way Alberto Alberti 29 Santiago to Rome via Lourdes – reprise Ann Milner 36 Book Reviews William Marques Ann Milner 38 Letter to the Editor William Marques 39 Secretary's Notebook Bronwyn Marques Editorial This is the seventh issue of the Confraternity of Pilgrims to Rome's Newsletter. There are five articles, two book reviews, one Letter to the Editor and the section entitled “Secretary's Notebook,” containing short items of information likely to be of interest to our members. For technical reasons it has not been possible to include the customary list of additions to the CPR library but this will be rectified in the December issue. Chris George, asking “Why me?”, writes about writes about the gift of friendship, hospitality and unmerited kindness that pilgrims can experience along their way. Howard Nelson resumes his series of articles exploring the extraordinary richness that Rome presents to the modern pilgrim, with the fourth one dealing with the Christianisation of Rome and the churches built between Constantine’s move to the east and the fall of Rome in 410. Jim Peele tells us briefly about his walk not from but towards Canterbury, Alberto Alberti describes the final stage of the Via Francigena into Rome from the south along the Appian Way while Ann Milner writes about a re-exploration of part of the Pyrenean section her journey from Santiago to Rome via Lourdes.
    [Show full text]
  • 178-SS Quirico E Giulitta.Pages
    (178/15) SS Quirico e Giulitta SS Quirico e Giulitta is an 18th century convent and titular church of ancient foundation at Via Tor dei Conti 31/A in the rione Monti, tucked away next to the Hotel Forum just south of the Piazza del Grillo and facing over the remains of the Forum of Nerva. The dedication is to SS Quiricus and Julitta. The name is often given as Santi Quirico e Giuditta. This is historically inaccurate. History Origins This is a very old foundation. The first church here was built by the 6th century, because an ancient epigraph (lost at the start of the 17th century, but transcribed) records that Pope Vigilius (537-555) consecrated an altar here dedicated to SS Stephen and Lawrence. (These two were venerated together as deacons who had been martyred.) The pope also apparently commissioned an apse mosaic featuring the two saints, as this was mentioned by mediaeval writers. The orientation of this first church was the reverse to what it is now, with the apse separated by a short space from the temenos wall of the Forum of Augustus. Also, it has been noticed that the floor level was the same as that of the Temple of Mars Ultor in the Forum. Both of these facts hint that the Forum was still clear of the massive amount of debris about to bury the Roman and Imperial Fora in subsequent centuries, and further that the Forum was still perhaps functioning as a civic space. Saints The present dedication to SS Quiricus and Julitta is first mentioned in the Itinerarium Einsiedeln, a pilgrims' guide of the late 8th century.
    [Show full text]
  • The Streets of Rome Walking Through the Streets of the Capital
    Comune di Roma Tourism The streets of Rome Walking through the streets of the capital via dei coronari via giulia via condotti via sistina via del babuino via del portico d’ottavia via dei giubbonari via di campo marzio via dei cestari via dei falegnami/via dei delfini via di monserrato via del governo vecchio via margutta VIA DEI CORONARI as the first thoroughfare to be opened The road, whose fifteenth century charac- W in the medieval city by Pope Sixtus IV teristics have more or less been preserved, as part of preparations for the Great Jubi- passed through two areas adjoining the neigh- lee of 1475, built in order to ensure there bourhood: the “Scortecchiara”, where the was a direct link between the “Ponte” dis- tanners’ premises were to be found, and the trict and the Vatican. The building of the Imago pontis, so called as it included a well- road fell in with Sixtus’ broader plans to known sacred building. The area’s layout, transform the city so as to improve the completed between the fifteenth and six- streets linking the centre concentrated on teenth centuries, and its by now well-es- the Tiber’s left bank, meaning the old Camp tablished link to the city centre as home for Marzio (Campus Martius), with the northern some of its more prominent residents, many regions which had risen up on the other bank, of whose buildings with their painted and es- starting with St. Peter’s Basilica, the idea pecially designed facades look onto the road. being to channel the massive flow of pilgrims The path snaking between the charming and towards Ponte Sant’Angelo, the only ap- shady buildings of via dei Coronari, where proach to the Vatican at that time.
    [Show full text]
  • The Stephan Kuttner Institute of Medieval Canon Law München 2013
    THE STEPHAN KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW MÜNCHEN 2013 BULLETIN OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW NEW SERIES VOLUME 30 AN ANNUAL REVIEW PUBLISHED BY THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA PRESS FOR THE STEPHAN KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW BULLETIN OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW THE STEPHAN KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW MÜNCHEN 2013 BULLETIN OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW NEW SERIES VOLUME 30 AN ANNUAL REVIEW PUBLISHED BY THE CATHOLIC UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA PRESS FOR THE STEPHAN KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW Published annually at the Stephan Kuttner Institute of Medieval Canon Law Editorial correspondence should be addressed to: STEPHAN-KUTTNER INSTITUTE OF MEDIEVAL CANON LAW Professor-Huber-Platz 2 D-80539 München PETER LANDAU, Editor Universität München [email protected] or KENNETH PENNINGTON, Editor The School of Canon Law The Catholic University of America Washington, D.C. 20064 [email protected] Advisory Board PÉTER CARDINAL ERDŐ PETER LINEHAN Archbishop of Esztergom St. John’s College Budapest Cambridge University JOSÉ MIGUEL VIÉJO-XIMÉNEZ ORAZIO CONDORELLI Universidad de Las Palmas de Università degli Studi Gran Canaria Catania FRANCK ROUMY KNUT WOLFGANG NÖRR Université Panthéon-Assas Universität Tübingen Paris II Inquiries concerning subscriptions or notifications of change of address should be sent to the Journals Manager, BMCL, The Catholic University of America Press, Washington D.C. 20064. Notifications can also be sent by email to [email protected] telephone (202) 319 5052; or fax (202) 319 4985. Subscription prices: United States $75 institutions; $35 individuals. Single copies $80 institutions, $40 individuals. The articles in the Bulletin of Medieval Canon Law are abstracted in XXX.
    [Show full text]
  • Painting in Rome in the Time of Paschal I: S. Prassede All'esquilino and S. Cecilia in Trastevere
    No. 9 (Spring 2017), 197-234 ISSN 2014-7023 PAINTING IN ROME IN THE TIME OF PASCHAL I: S. PRASSEDE ALL’ESQUILINO AND S. CECILIA IN TRASTEVERE1 Giulia Bordi Università degli Studi Roma Tre e-mail: [email protected] Carles Mancho Institut de Recerca en Cultures Medievals (IRCVM), Universitat de Barcelona e-mail: [email protected] Valeria Valentini Università degli Studi della Tuscia (Viterbo) e-mail: [email protected] Received: 07 March 2017 | Revised: 31 March 2017 | Accepted: 26 April 2017 | Available online: 21 June 2017 | doi: 10.1344/Svmma2017.9.15 Resum Il complesso basilicale di S. Prassede, realizzato da Pasquale I (817-824) all’inizio del suo pontificato, conserva uno dei cicli affrescati più importante della città di Roma altomedievale, e che insieme all’architettura e ai mosaici di questa stessa basilica, concorrono a creare un monumento privilegiato per lo studio della produzione artistica di inizio IX secolo. In questa sede proponiamo un primo approccio allo studio di questi affreschi finora poco indagati e una revisione di quanto detto fino ad oggi su un altro complesso legato alla figura di Pasquale I, S. Cecilia in Trastevere, e più precisamente sulla decorazione del suo battistero. Questa ricerca fa parte di un progetto più ambizioso in cui si punta ad approfondire la Roma di Pasquale I in occasione del 12º centenario dell’insediamento del pontefice. Paraules clau: Santa Prassede, Santa Cecilia, Pasquale I, Mosaico, Affreschi, Roma, Pontefice, Martiri Abstract The basilical complex of S. Prassede, commissioned by Paschal I (817-824) at the beginning of his papacy, houses one of the most important frescoe cycles of early medieval Rome, which, together with the architecture and mosaics of this same basilica, turn it into a privileged monument for the study of the artistic production of the early ninth century.
    [Show full text]
  • May 6, 2018 the LIVING CHURCH CATHOLIC EVANGELICAL ECUMENICAL
    AA and the Church Paul’s New Perspective Avis on Anglicanism May 6, 2018 THE LIVING CHURCH CATHOLIC EVANGELICAL ECUMENICAL “Not silence, but a different kind of bubbling resonance” The Music of Sound $5.50 Book and Music livingchurch.org Travel and Learn with Uhe Living Church Institute Christian Unity in Rome: Anglican Ecclesiology and Ecumenism Travel Course Hosted by Nashotah House Seminary & Uhe Living Church Institute January 17-25, 2019 Held at the Anglican Centre and the Centro Pro Unione, Rome oin Living Church Executive Director t Worship at St. Paul’s within the Walls, an Episcopal Jand Editor Dr. Christopher Wells, the parish in Rome Rev. Dr. Matthew S.C. Olver of Nashotah t Tour the Colosseum House eological Seminary, and the Rev. Dr. John Yueh-Han Yieh of Virginia t Visit the Sistine Chapel eological Seminary for this Rome- t Tour the Vatican Museums based seminar course on the history and t Worship with the ecumenical community of Sant’Egidio development of Anglican ecclesiology as Tour the Scavi, the burial site of St. Peter underneath the an ecumenical enterprise. t famed basilica that stands at the heart of the Vatican Participants will share in the daily Oce Visit the Catacombs and share in a celebration of the Eucharist and Mass, and participate in events around t Rome in observance of the Week of Prayer t Visit the excavations under Santa Maria in Via Lata, where for Christian Unity, as well as the following: St. Paul was held under house arrest Registration Deadline is ursday, May 31, 2018.
    [Show full text]
  • A Hundred Churches in Rome. an Archival Photogrammetric Project
    The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Volume XLII-2/W15, 2019 27th CIPA International Symposium “Documenting the past for a better future”, 1–5 September 2019, Ávila, Spain “CENTOCHIESE”: A HUNDRED CHURCHES IN ROME. AN ARCHIVAL PHOTOGRAMMETRIC PROJECT G. Fangi *1, C.Nardinocchi 2, G.Rubeca 2 1Ancona, Italia - [email protected] 2 DICEA, Sapienza University of Rome, 00184 Roma, [email protected], [email protected] Commission II, WG II/8 KEY WORDS: Documentation, Churches, Data Base, Panorama, Spherical Photogrammetry ABSTRACT: Rome is the city where two different cultures have found their greatest architectural achievement, the Latin civilization and the Christian civilization. It is for this reason that in Rome there is the greatest concentration in the world of Roman buildings, monuments and Christian buildings and churches. Rome is the seat of the papacy; say the head of the Christian Church. Every religious order, every Christian nation has created its own headquarters in Rome, the most representative possible, as beautiful, magnificent as possible. The best artists, painters, sculptors, architects, have been called to Rome to create their masterpieces.This study describes the photogrammetric documentation of selected noteworthy churches in Rome. Spherical Photogrammetry is the technique used. The survey is limited to the facades only, being a very significant part of the monument and since no permission is necessary. In certain cases, also the church interior was documented. A total of 170 Churches were surveyed. The statistics that one can derive from such a large number is particularly meaningful. Rome is the ideal place to collect the largest possible number of such cases.
    [Show full text]
  • Shifting Definitions of Movement and Place in Early Modern Rome
    THE PALACE-CITY INTERFACE: SHIFTING DEFINITIONS OF MOVEMENT AND PLACE IN EARLY MODERN ROME by MATTHEW G. MCKINNON A THESIS Presented to the Department of History of Art and Architecture and the Robert D. Clark Honors College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts June 2019 An Abstract of the Thesis of Matthew G. McKinnon for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in the Department of History of Art and Architecture to be taken June 2019 The Palace-City Interface: Shifting Definitions of Movement and Place in Early Modern Rome Approved: _______________________________________ James G. Harper This essay considers four seventeenth-century Roman palaces in the contexts of topographical setting and city circulation, with particular attention to the façade as a definer of place. It draws on seventeenth-century guidebooks, etchings, and maps, analyzing them within the frameworks of papal urbanism and dynastic self- representation. The results of the analysis show that, during each pontificate from 1605-67, the pope encouraged his relatives to develop or redevelop the family palace in a way that would inscribe their image onto the city. Once constructed, each palace became the center of an urban node, symbolically connected with other monumental landmarks by the viewer’s movement through the city. The space around the palace façade was also subject to design, and each pope utilized different strategies to enhance the location and context of his family’s palace. Comparing the cases, the essay argues that Innocent X and Alexander VII integrated public-welfare urbanism more fully into the family palace project.
    [Show full text]
  • Conclave 1492: the Election of a Renaissance Pope
    Conclave 1492: The Election of a Renaissance Pope A Reacting to the Past Microgame Instructor’s Manual Version 1 – August 2017 William Keene Thompson Ph.D. Candidate, History University of California, Santa Barbara [email protected] Table of Contents Game Summary 1 Procedure 3 Biographical Sketches and Monetary Values 4 Role Distribution and Vote Tally Sheet 6 Anticipated Vote Distributions 7 Conclave Ballot Template 8 Role Sheets (23 Cardinals) 9 Additional Roles 33 Extended Gameplay and Supplementary Readings 34 William Keene Thompson, UC Santa Barbara [email protected] Conclave 1492: The Election of a Renaissance Pope The Situation It is August 1492. Pope Innocent VIII has died. Now the Sacred College of Cardinals must meet to choose his successor. The office of Pope is a holy calling, born of the legacy of Saint Peter the first Bishop of Rome, who was one of Christ’s most trusted apostles. The Pope is therefore God’s vicar on Earth, the temporal representation of divine authority and the pinnacle of the church hierarchy. However, the position has also become a political role, with the Holy Father a temporal ruler of the Papal States in the center of the Italian peninsula and charged with protecting the interests of the Church across Christendom. As such, the position requires not only spiritual vision but political acumen too, and, at times ruthlessness and deception, to maintain the church’s position as a secular and spiritual power in Europe. The Cardinals must therefore consider both a candidate’s spiritual and political qualifications to lead the Church.
    [Show full text]