Mass of Paul VI

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    History of the Eucharist

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    History of the Eucharist The Sacrament of Eucharist is the most frequently received Sacraments in the Catholic Church. The matter in the Sacrament of Eucharist is the bread and wine, which changes into the body and blood of Jesus Christ. The Sacrament of Eucharist is dated in the Bible as far back to the Old Testament, indirectly as the Israelites flee from Egypt in the desert, and God gives them manna to eat. This happens multiple times while the Israelites are searching for

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    Among the institutions established throughout the span of human history intended to govern the lives of men, perhaps none have been more lasting or have exerted more influence on the course of history than that of the papacy. As the recognized successor to St. Peter, who was ordained by Jesus Christ as the bishop of Rome and the leader of the universal church, the pope represents the spiritual authority of Christendom and stands as a symbol of union within the Catholic Church. The continual succession

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    Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton was born on August 28, 1774 in New York City, New York. Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton parents were Catherine and Richard Bayley. She married a wealthy man named William Seton and they had 5 kids. Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton was canonized on September 14, 1975. Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton was the first native-born citizen of the United States to be canonized by the Roman Catholic. She came to the catholic church after her husband died. Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton was the first to create

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    these feelings, "we have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it (The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness, Michelle Alexander, 2012). Michelle Alexander, explains in her book, that the criminal justice system is a "contemporary system of racial control" where the war on drugs has served as a justification for police brutality and injustice vis-à-vis the black community. Obama is not to blame for this injustice, as brilliant as he may be, he is just a man

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    When, in 1965, the Second Vatican Council was coming to an end, the message of Pope Paul VI aimed at sealing the closure by perpetuating St. Augustine's advise to "set forth authentic doctrine on divine revelation and how it is handed on, so that by hearing the message of salvation the whole world may believe, by believing it may hope, and by hoping it may love." (Pope Paul VI, 1965). It seems as though the Church's leader and, with him, the whole representative body of the Catholic Church had felt

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    the Western tradition of clerical celibacy (priest allowed to be married after ordination) and the unleavened bread used for Eucharist. He took it to the extent of closing all Latin Churches in Constantinople and excommunicating any priest that gave mass in Latin. This was the final straw in the rift between the East and the West (Latin vs. Greek). This effectively marks the split between the two sides. A positive relationship between the two Christian groups has not been restored though there

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    Constantine was converted and legitimatized the church. The church, which had been a private and underground movement, now went public with a more structure. It was in this period also that the church had to define itself and its parameters of faith vis-à-vis the pagan world and from struggles within. Here in the latter half of this period the great creeds of the church, Apostles’ and Nicene, were written. C. The Medieval Church—AD 600-1500. In the medieval church scholasticism was the dominate philosophy

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    State of Research on the "Snowball Earth Hypothesis" The "Snowball Earth Hypothesis" also known as the "Varangia glaciation" is a hypothesis presented in 2001 by Geologist Paul Hoffman. (Wikipedia, 2002) The hypothesis purposes that 540 million years ago during the Neoproterozic, a meter thick of ice covered the oceans and glaciers the continents for 100 million years. Albedo; when ice and snow reflect solar radiation into space, in absents of greenhouse gases, which don't exist within

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    when Cardinal Karol Jozef Wojtyla assumed the papacy as Pope:(Points : 4) John Paul II Paul VI John XXIII John Paul I Question 12.12.(TCO 4) The only Eastern European country that had widespread bloodshed in 1989 was: (Points : 4) Romania Czechoslovakia Bulgaria Poland Question 13.13.(TCO 7) One reason that the United States invaded Iraq in 2003 was: (Points : 4) Iraq was thought to have WMDs (Weapons of Mass Destruction) Iraq had invaded Israel Iraq was home to al-Qaeda Iraq invaded

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    focused on physical depiction, and more on giving off a feeling or emotion. It was first sprung in early 20th century Germany, influences in expressionist art of the time such as Ernst Kirchner's "Davos under snow", can be traced back to Vincent van Goh, Paul Gauguin, and artists alike. Expressionism in many ways feels like a minimalist form of realism, avoiding tedious figure or an overbearing level of detail. An image may be distorted or exaggerated for emotional effect while still being representative

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