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7243 E. 10th St, Indianapolis Parish founded in 1946 [34] Our Lady of Lourdes 5333 E. Washington St, Indianapolis Current church dedicated in 1942 [35] St. Mary: 311 N. New Jersey St, Indianapolis Founded in 1858, current church dedicated in 1910 [36] St. Michael the Archangel 3354 W. 30th St, Indianapolis Current church dedicated in 1954 [37]
The Basilica of St. Louis de Montfort is a Roman Catholic basilica at Saint-Laurent-sur-Sèvre in the Vendée department, in the Pays de la Loire region in France.. Thousands of pilgrim arrive at the basilica each year for it is the burial place of two well known Roman Catholic figures: Saint Louis de Montfort and Blessed Marie Louise Trichet.
After the French Revolution Montfort's community was reorganised by Father Gabriel Deshayes, elected superior general in 1821. He received from Pope Leo XII a brief of praise for the Company of Mary and for the Daughters of Wisdom, which had also been formed by de Montfort with the help of Blessed Marie Louise Trichet. Father Dalin who was ...
1987 translation by The Montfort Missionaries; St. Louis de Montfort's Total Consecration to Jesus through Mary - New Easier-to-Read Translation by Scott L. Smith, Jr., Holy Water Books, 2019, ISBN 1-95078-205-0; 33 Days to Morning Glory variant by Father Michael E. Gaitley
The book title is based on the fact that God Alone was the motto of Saint Louis de Montfort, and was repeated over 150 time in his writings.Through the influence of the French school of spirituality, and authors such as Henri Boudon, Montfort advocated a withdrawal from the world to seek God Alone.
A fire tore through the 70-year-old Our Savior Evangelical Lutheran Church in Indianapolis, Indiana, on the morning of August 7, causing $1 million in damages, according to the Indianapolis Fire ...
The Basilica of Saint Louis de Montfort at Saint-Laurent-sur-Sèvre is an impressive structure that attracts a good number of pilgrims each year. On September 19, 1996, Pope John-Paul II visited the town to meditate and pray on the adjacent tombs of Saint Louis and Blessed Marie Louise.
When Bishop de St. Palais visited Indianapolis in the early 1870s, he stayed at the church rectory and used the parish church as the pro-cathedral for the diocese. [48] [81] [82] His successor, Bishop Chatard, requested permission from Leo XIII in 1878 to establish the bishop's residence and chancery at Indianapolis. [47]