When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Catholics (ITV Sunday Night Theatre) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholics_(ITV_Sunday...

    "Catholics" is a 1973 television play also known as Conflict, A Fable of the Future [1] and The Visitor, which was directed by Jack Gold. [2]Based on the novel of the same name by Brian Moore, who also wrote the screenplay for the film, it stars Trevor Howard, Martin Sheen and Cyril Cusack [2] and was originally presented on the ITV Sunday Night Theatre.

  3. Ranking of liturgical days in the Roman Rite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ranking_of_liturgical_days...

    However, when a Sunday was thus outranked, it was always commemorated, generally at Lauds, Vespers and Mass after the prayer of the day, and by having its Gospel as Last Gospel of the Mass. The reform by Pope Pius X (1911) made a systematically rather small change here which had very much effect: from now on, even minor Sundays would outrank ...

  4. Lectio Divina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lectio_Divina

    Therefore, the brethren should have specified periods of manual labor as well as for prayerful reading [lectio divina]." [16] The Rule of Saint Benedict (chapter #48) stipulated specific times and manners for Lectio Divina. The entire community in a monastery was to take part in the readings during Sunday, except those who had other tasks to ...

  5. Matins - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matins

    Matins (also Mattins) is a canonical hour in Christian liturgy, originally sung during the darkness of early morning (between midnight and dawn).. The earliest use of the term was in reference to the canonical hour, also called the vigil, which was originally celebrated by monks from about two hours after midnight to, at latest, the dawn, the time for the canonical hour of lauds (a practice ...

  6. Vigil (liturgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vigil_(liturgy)

    In Christian liturgy, a vigil is, in origin, a religious service held during the night leading to a Sunday or other feastday. [1] The Latin term vigilia, from which the word is derived meant a watch night, not necessarily in a military context, and generally reckoned as a fourth part of the night from sunset to sunrise. The four watches or ...

  7. Gospel (liturgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gospel_(liturgy)

    The Little Entrance during the Divine Liturgy (Church of the Protection of the Theotokos, Düsseldorf, Germany).. During the Little Entrance at Divine Liturgy (and sometimes at Vespers), the Gospel is carried in procession from the Holy Table, through the nave of the church, and back into the sanctuary through the Royal Doors.

  8. Nocturns - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nocturns

    Within the Carolingian Empire (800–888), a form of the liturgy of the hours, described by Amalarius, was imposed that can be called the "Roman-Benedictine Office". [25] [26] In this form, the first nocturn of the Sunday vigil or matins had twelve psalms sung in three groups of four psalms, each group treated as a single psalm with a single doxology at the end.

  9. Vespers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vespers

    After the psalms, there is a reading from the Bible. Following the reading, there is a short responsory consisting of a verse, a response, the first half only of the Gloria Patri, and then the verse again. The Magnificat follows – the canticle of the Blessed Virgin Mary from the Luke 1:46–55 – the key daily canticle of Vespers.