Avsnitt
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Daniel O'Connor is the author of Thy Will be Done, the greatest prayer, the Christian's mission, and the World's penultimate destiny. Go and buy this amazing book on amazon! https://www.amazon.co.uk/Thy-Will-Done-Christians-Penultimate/dp/1957168005/ref=sr_1_1?crid=1NU09VJ3T9RHG&keywords=thy+will+be+done&qid=1656621368&sprefix=thy+will+be+don%2Caps%2C462&sr=8-1
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Hope Ascough, the Admissions Counselor for Thomas Aquinas College in California, has offered to give a short introduction on the college and the Classical Tertiary education it offers. Thomas Aquinas College is one of the best known of the U.S. Liberal Arts colleges.
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Saknas det avsnitt?
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Great places to visit in the UK. Catholic Heritage to visit in the United Kingdom.
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Theology of the Body - Catechesis on the Book of Genesis
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A look at a message of theology of the body for schools. Why save sex for marriage?
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“From the beginning it was not so.” We have left the state of innocence irrevocably behind. To have a good understanding of our anthropology we have to have a good understanding of where we are from. A search into history plunges us into our roots. Christ calls man to refer to the beginning of human existence: theological prehistory. It is indispensable to look at the original human experience in order to construct a theology of the body.
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The theology of the body is comprised of 129 talks, 6 more of which were discovered at a later date. It answers the question: who we are by looking at the origin, present and destiny of man. It answers the question of how we are to live by looking at marriage, celibacy, love and fruitfulness. It helps us in different ways to see what it means to be human. Theology of the body answers who is man from the beginning, where are we now, and where are we going. It delivers an adequate anthropology because many of us have lost what it means to be human. It helps us to put Christ at the centre of our lives and to untwist the desires of our hearts, overcoming concupiscence and so that we are not left to our own desires.
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Theology of the body (TOTB) is a reference to 129 lectures that Pope John Paul II gave between 1979 and 1984. The work covers a variety of different issues but is mainly centred on God’s plan for life and love and the truth about God’s design for human sexuality. One of the most important points John Paul makes is that the body alone is capable of making the invisible visible, and thus spiritual qualities are made visible by the body.
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How to have fulfillment, fidelity and fruitfulness in married life.
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Joanna Bogle talks about appreciating Catholic Heritage in the United Kingdom.
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William Colquhoun
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ony Hickey also has a superb introductory booklet describing the Divine Will. Tony Hickey has been directing retreats in full time ministry since 1992. He is a Roman Catholic lay person from Manchester in the U.K. Read Tony Hickey's superb introduction to Living in the Divine Will HERE: https://www.livinginthedivinewill.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/10/LIDW-Resource-DivineWill-Introduction-Luisa-Piccarreta-1.pdf Tony's book has Ecclesiastical Approval and he explains that the purpose of the Gift of the Divine will is to allow God to receive perfect glory from the whole human family.
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The Gift of Living in the Divine Will in the Writings of Luisa Piccarreta An enquiry into the early ecumenical councils, and patristic, scholastic and contemporary theology By Rev Joseph Leo Iannuzzi Rev Joseph Iannuzzi is a doctoral alumnus of the Gregorian Pontifical University. He has 5 post graduate degrees. He has received a grant from the Pontifical Biblical University of Rome to study theology in Israel. He has assisted the exorcist of Rome, and written several books on prophecy and revelation. Father Iannuzzi first came across Luisa Piccarreta over 20 years ago in a holy hour in a Trappist monastery. A volume of Luisa lay open in front of him thanks to providence. The following day a nun asked if he wanted to translate some writings from Italian to English. He agreed. Father Iannuzzi has translated all of Luisa’s writings which are cited in his dissertation.
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Fr. Neil Brett, a priest and former headmaster, gives a talk on Lenten penance.
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Martyn Furbank, a convert from Judaism, talks about our Jewish ancestry and how the Eucharist fulfills the passover
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Listen about the Scouts of Europe and more about the world of scouts.
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Robert Colquhoun talks about what is new for the pro-life world in Warrington, England.
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Frances Hogan is a lay missionary and educator working in the Catholic Church since the late 60's. She worked as a missionary in West Africa for some years. She has taught in schools in Africa and Ireland. From the mid-80's she lectured in the Milltown Institute of Philosophy and Theology in Dublin, and served four years on the Theological Commission of the Bishops. She is also trained as a Spiritual Director and Retreat giver. Since the '80s Frances has written ten books, now out of print. Over the years Frances has made many teachings on Scripture and the Spiritual Life available for sale on hundreds of cassettes. The current list is available on cd and dvd. Frances continues to give Missions in parishes, as well as Retreats and Seminars to people mainly in the English-speaking world. She also continues to give Scripture classes, spiritual direction, and guidance on the spiritual life in her home parish. Background Frances comes from a family of nine children all living. Her parents, now deceased, were called Mary and Joseph, which she considers significant! Her father was the main influence in her life teaching her the scriptures from her infancy. She never knew a time when the scriptures were not her daily fare. Her father encouraged the habit of daily Mass since early childhood, and he, himself, was a man of prayer, especially in the latter years of his life. The family Rosary was a daily event in youth. God was a big part of the equation in everyday life. From the age of 10 Frances was taught scripture by her parish priest, who was a scripture scholar of note in the diocese of Dublin. He was the professor of oriental languages in UCD, and translated the New Testament by himself. His library of 10,000 books was donated to the University after his death. Another priest acted as spiritual director to her in these difficult teenage years. It was during this time Frances decided to follow the Irish tradition of 'exile for Christ', and became a missionary. This was not unusual for she had promised the Lord to 'take the gospel to the ends of the Earth' at the tender age of 3 when she experienced God personally for the first time. Like St. Paul, Frances has a sense of "woe is me if I do not preach the gospel; it is a burden that has been laid upon me" (1 Corinthians 9:16). She agrees with Paul that it is not a matter of boasting or claiming to be better than anyone else. It is her duty given by God.
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Frances Hogan is a lay missionary and educator working in the Catholic Church since the late 60's. She worked as a missionary in West Africa for some years. She has taught in schools in Africa and Ireland. From the mid-80's she lectured in the Milltown Institute of Philosophy and Theology in Dublin, and served four years on the Theological Commission of the Bishops. She is also trained as a Spiritual Director and Retreat giver. Since the '80s Frances has written ten books, now out of print. Over the years Frances has made many teachings on Scripture and the Spiritual Life available for sale on hundreds of cassettes. The current list is available on cd and dvd. Frances continues to give Missions in parishes, as well as Retreats and Seminars to people mainly in the English-speaking world. She also continues to give Scripture classes, spiritual direction, and guidance on the spiritual life in her home parish. Background Frances comes from a family of nine children all living. Her parents, now deceased, were called Mary and Joseph, which she considers significant! Her father was the main influence in her life teaching her the scriptures from her infancy. She never knew a time when the scriptures were not her daily fare. Her father encouraged the habit of daily Mass since early childhood, and he, himself, was a man of prayer, especially in the latter years of his life. The family Rosary was a daily event in youth. God was a big part of the equation in everyday life. From the age of 10 Frances was taught scripture by her parish priest, who was a scripture scholar of note in the diocese of Dublin. He was the professor of oriental languages in UCD, and translated the New Testament by himself. His library of 10,000 books was donated to the University after his death. Another priest acted as spiritual director to her in these difficult teenage years. It was during this time Frances decided to follow the Irish tradition of 'exile for Christ', and became a missionary. This was not unusual for she had promised the Lord to 'take the gospel to the ends of the Earth' at the tender age of 3 when she experienced God personally for the first time. Like St. Paul, Frances has a sense of "woe is me if I do not preach the gospel; it is a burden that has been laid upon me" (1 Corinthians 9:16). She agrees with Paul that it is not a matter of boasting or claiming to be better than anyone else. It is her duty given by God.
- Visa fler