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Search Results for "pope's trip"
There are 111 Retriever pages mentioning "pope's trip":
  1. Popes -- Smoking Popes
    Smoking Popes' first album, Get Fired, was released on a small indie label in 1994 and the recordings aren't the best, but it's fast and furious and the songs are great. They were signed to a major label (Capitol) shortly there after and released their second album and major label debut, Born To Quit. The lead single, "Need You Around," got huge airplay on the big alternative rock radio stations, such as KROQ (in LA), and the Popes toured the country. Life on the road, travelling and partying, took its toll. A follow up to Born To Quit was recorded with some hardship and their label wasn't happy. The album was released with no support from the label, and while touring for the label Josh Caterer had a dramatic conversion to christianity.
  2. Pope Paul Vi -- Pope John Paul Ii
    In 1984 John Paul II became the first Pope to visit Korea and Puerto Rico. In 1988 he made a trip to Lesotho to beatify Joseph Gerrad. On 15 January 1995 he offered Mass to an estimated crowd of between four and eight million in Luneta Park, Manila, Philippines, the largest ever papal crowd, and considered the largest single event in human history. On January 20, 1998, Pope John Paul II became the first pontiff to visit Cuba. During his visit, John Paul sharply criticized Cuba's stance on religious expression, as well as US sanctions against Cuba. In 1995 he took a trip to South Africa, on which he met the former President Nelson Mandela.
  3. Pope (Catholicism) -- Catholic Church
    The Pope expresses the long held teaching of the Church that contraception is not permitted. Benedict doesn’t read polls, look to be “relevant” as the fleeting whips of the world wants to understand things. He speaks the truth based on a moral tradition grounded in reason and faith. Those that disagree are free to abandon the Faith. But you know he is right, so you complain ....
  4. Pope John Paul I -- Pope John Paul Ii
    Following the funeral of Pope John Paul II, the succession process began. Members of The College of Cardinals below 80 years of age at the time of John Pauls's death will be eligible to vote for the next Pope. The new pope will receive investiture through the simplified Papal Installation, unless he wishes to return to the tradition of Papal Coronation with the triregnum.
  5. Pope John Paul I -- Visits
    In 1984, John Paul became the first Pope to visit Puerto Rico. Stands were especially erected for him at Luis Munoz Marin International Airport in San Juan, where he met with governor Carlos Romero Barceló, and at Plaza Las Americas.
  6. Pope John Paul I -- History
    The funeral of Pope John Paul II saw the single largest gathering of heads of state in history who had come together to pay their respects. A rare solar eclipse at sunset throughout Central and South America closed the day of John Paul II's burial.
  7. Pope Paul Vi -- Vatican Council
    Pope Paul VI was Bishop of Rome from 1963 to 1978. His tenure was dominated by the Second Vatican Council and the critical post-conciliar years of implementation. He had much to say on social justice issues in such major statements as his address to the United Nations in 1965 and his apostolic letter, Evangelii Nuntiandi in 1975, and his travels to the Holy Land and to faraway places like Colombia and India gave him the opportunity to call attention to social injustices firsthand. But he made two major contributions to the tradition of Catholic social teaching: a 1967 encyclical, Populorum Progressio, and a 1971 apostolic letter, Octogesima Adveniens. When all the above contributions are combined with his leading role in the production of Gaudium et Spes in 1965 and Justice in the World in 1971, Paul VI emerges as a truly major figure in the history of the Church's tradition of social teaching.
  8. Pope Paul Vi -- Catholic Church
    The fifteen-year reign of Pope Paul VI (1963-1978) was marked with great successes as well as great tragedies for the Church. During his reign, the Church began to hold dialogue with the world. In his first encyclical, Ecclesiam Suam, Paul said he had no intention of excluding Communists from dialogue with the Church even though it would probably be incomplete and very difficult. One purpose of the Secretariat for Non-Believers, which Pope Paul VI authorized and established April 8, 1965, is to study relations and initiate discussions with Communists and others on atheism.
  9. Pope John Paul I -- John Paul Ii
    With regard to the relations with the Serb Orthodox Church, Pope John Paul II could not escape the controversy of the involvement of Croatian Catholic clergy with the Ustasa regime of World War II. He beatified Aloysius Stepinac in 1998, the Croatian war-time archbishop of Zagreb, a move seen negatively by those who believe that he was an active collaborator with the Ustaše fascist regime. On June 22, 2003, he visited Banja Luka in Bosnia and Herzegovina, a city inhabited by many Catholics before the 1992-1995 war, but since then predominantly Orthodox. He held a mass at the Petricevac monastery, a place of considerable controversy and distress, both during the World War II and during the Yugoslav wars.
  10. Pope John Paul I -- Catholic Church
    Pope John Paul II becomes the first pope ever to preach in a Lutheran church; Rome, December 1983John Paul II was considered a conservative on doctrine and issues relating to reproduction and the ordination of women. His collected writings on human sexuality, called the Theology of the Body, are an extended meditation on the nature of masculinity and femininity and the resulting implications for love and sex. These teachings represent a significant development of the Catholic teaching about sexuality. This development has origins in the Song of Songs, and the church's teaching on Sacraments.
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