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  2. Life Insurance: How to Choose The Best Option for You ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/life-insurance-choose-best-option...

    Term Life Insurance Policies . Term life insurance provides temporary coverage for a specific period, usually ranging from 5 to 30 years. These policies offer high coverage amounts, often up to $5 ...

  3. Life insurance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Life_insurance

    Life insurance (or life assurance, especially in the Commonwealth of Nations) is a contract between an insurance policy holder and an insurer or assurer, ...

  4. Consecration in Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consecration_in_Christianity

    Church buildings, chapels, altars, and Communion vessels are consecrated for the purpose of religious worship. A person may be consecrated for a specific role within a religious hierarchy, or a person may consecrate his or her life in an act of devotion. In particular, the ordination of a bishop is often called a consecration.

  5. Consecrated life - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consecrated_life

    What makes the consecrated life a more exacting way of Christian living is the public religious vows or other sacred bonds whereby the consecrated persons commit themselves, for the love of God, to observe as binding the evangelical counsels of chastity, poverty and obedience from the Gospel, or, in the case of consecrated virgins a holy resolution (sanctum propositum) of leading a life of ...

  6. Consecration in Eastern Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consecration_in_Eastern...

    Whenever new Chrism is consecrated, it is added to the existing stock. The Eastern Church believes that the same Chrism consecrated by the Apostles is still in use today, having been added-to by all generations of the Church. The earliest mention of the use of Chrism is by Saint Hippolytus of Rome (†235).

  7. Evangelical counsels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evangelical_counsels

    Apart from the consecrated life, Christians are free to make a private vow to observe one or more of the evangelical counsels; but a private vow does not have the same binding and other effects in church law as a public vow. Henriette Browne Nuns at work in the cloister

  8. Catholic laity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Laity

    Catholic laity are the ordinary members of the Catholic Church who are neither clergy nor recipients of Holy Orders or vowed to life in a religious order or congregation. Their mission, according to the Second Vatican Council, is to "sanctify the world". The laity forms the majority of the estimated over one billion Catholics in the world. [1]

  9. Religious profession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_profession

    Through the ministry of the Church they are consecrated to God, and are incorporated into the institute, with the rights and duties defined by law. [1] Catholic canon law also recognizes public profession of the evangelical counsels on the part of Christians who live the eremitic or anchoritic life without being members of a religious institute: