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  2. Religious order (Catholic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_order_(Catholic)

    These orders were confederations of independent abbeys and priories, who were unified through a loose structure of leadership and oversight. Later the mendicant orders such as the Carmelites, the Order of Friars Minor, the Order of Preachers, the Order of the Most Holy Trinity and the Order of Saint Augustine formed. These Mendicant orders did ...

  3. Catholic order liturgical rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_order_liturgical_rite

    The early-twentieth-century Catholic Encyclopedia, in its article entitled "Rites", [1] applied the term "rite" loosely to some practices that certain religious orders followed at that time, while stating that they in fact used the Roman Rite.

  4. Forty Hours' Devotion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forty_Hours'_Devotion

    This document is an adaptation of the Roman Ritual. [11] Although the forty-hour period should be continuous, some Churches break-up the time, reposing the Blessed Sacrament at night for security reasons. [12] Other Eucharistic devotions such as Perpetual Adoration and the Holy Hour are outgrowths of the Forty Hours Devotion.

  5. Carmelite Rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carmelite_Rite

    The rite in use among the Carmelites beginning in about the middle of the twelfth century is known by the name of the Rite of the Holy Sepulchre, the Carmelite Rule, which was written about the year 1210, ordering the hermits of Mount Carmel to follow the approved custom of the Church, which in this instance meant the Patriarchal Church of Jerusalem: "Hi qui litteras noverunt et legere psalmos ...

  6. Order of Mass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Order_of_Mass

    Order of Mass is an outline of a Mass celebration, describing how and in what order liturgical texts and rituals are employed to constitute a Mass. . The expression Order of Mass is particularly tied to the Roman Rite where the sections under that title in the Roman Missal also contain a set of liturgical texts that recur in most or in all Eucharistic liturgies (the so-called invariable texts ...

  7. Liturgical book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liturgical_book

    The Roman Ritual contains the texts for administering some sacraments other than the Mass such as baptism, the sacrament of penance, the anointing of the sick, and the sacrament of marriage. The texts for the sacraments and ceremonies normally reserved to bishops, such as Confirmation and Holy Orders, are contained within the Roman Pontifical.

  8. Catholic particular churches and liturgical rites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_particular...

    A diocese is a section of the People of God entrusted to a bishop to be guided by him with the assistance of his clergy so that, loyal to its pastor and formed by him into one community in the Holy Spirit through the Gospel and the Eucharist, it constitutes one particular church in which the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church of Christ is ...

  9. Holy orders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holy_Orders

    The sequence in which holy orders are received are: minor orders, deacon, priest, bishop. For Catholics, it is typical in the years of seminary training that a man will be ordained to the diaconate, which Catholics since the Second Vatican Council sometimes call the "transitional diaconate" to distinguish men bound for priesthood from permanent ...