Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The second prayer is O Blood and Water (Polish: O krwi i wodo), also known as conversion prayer. It is repeated three times in succession, while remaining on the first large bead, and may be used along with the first opening prayer to begin the chaplet. Its full text, as reported in the Diary, is:
The following other wikis use this file: Usage on ms.wikisource.org Page:The Lord’s prayer in five hundred languages.pdf/114; Usage on wikisource.org
Quatre petites prières de saint François d'Assise, FP 142 (Four small prayers of Saint Francis of Assisi) [1] is a sacred choral work by Francis Poulenc for a cappella men's chorus, composed in 1948. Written on a request by Poulenc's relative who was a Franciscan friar, the work was premiered by the monks of Champfleury.
The prayer was circulating in the United States by January 1927, when its first known English version (slightly abridged from the 1912 French original) appeared in the Quaker magazine Friends' Intelligencer, under the misattributed and misspelled title "A prayer of St. Francis of Assissi".
It's clear that it's not actually a prayer of St. Francis, but it's almost invariably known by that title in English, so I think it should be moved back there. --SarekOfVulcan (talk) 15:07, 22 September 2014 (UTC) I think the disambig page that's there now can be removed. --SarekOfVulcan (talk) 15:18, 22 September 2014 (UTC)
English: Book of Common Prayer, title page of 1662 French language version for use in the Channel Islands. This edition 1892 by SPCK This edition 1892 by SPCK Licensing
The Basilica of the Holy Cross in Warsaw in Warsaw, where the devotion was first held in 1704, as painted by Bernardo Bellotto, 1778 [1]. Gorzkie żale (Polish pronunciation: [ˈɡɔʂkʲe ˈʐalɛ] Lenten (or Bitter Lamentations) is a Catholic devotion containing many hymns that developed out of Poland in the 18th century.
The Liturgy of Saint James is a form of Christian liturgy used by some Eastern Christians of the Byzantine rite and West Syriac Rite.It is developed from an ancient Egyptian form of the Basilean anaphoric family, and is influenced by the traditions of the rite of the Church of Jerusalem, as the Mystagogic Catecheses of Cyril of Jerusalem imply.