enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Female altar servers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Female_altar_servers

    In convents of nuns, women did serve within the chancel. [ 5 ] In his encyclical Allatae sunt of 26 July 1775, Pope Benedict XIV renewed the prohibition, "Women should not dare to serve at the altar; they should be altogether refused this ministry", stated more than five centuries earlier by Pope Innocent IV in his letter Sub catholicae ...

  3. Nun - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nun

    Traditionally, nuns are members of enclosed religious orders and take solemn religious vows, while sisters do not live in the papal enclosure and formerly took vows called "simple vows". [4] As monastics, nuns living within an enclosure historically commit to recitation of the full Divine Office throughout the day in church, usually in a solemn ...

  4. Dominican Order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dominican_order

    Nuns were to be silent in places of prayer, the cloister, the dormitory, and refectory. Silence was maintained unless the prioress granted an exception for a specific cause. Speaking was allowed in the common parlor, but it was subordinate to strict rules, and the prioress, subprioress or other senior nun had to be present. [36]

  5. French law on secularity and conspicuous religious symbols in ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_law_on_secularity...

    The full or Afghan burka, which covers the entire body except for a slit or grille to see through, occurs more commonly as the dress of an adult woman than that of a schoolgirl. A recent controversy occurred when a mother who wore a full burka became a representative of parents in a city school.

  6. Parlour - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parlour

    A parlour (or parlor) is a reception room or public space. In medieval Christian Europe, the "outer parlour" was the room where the monks or nuns conducted business with those outside the monastery and the "inner parlour" was used for necessary conversation between resident members. In the English-speaking world of the 18th and 19th century ...

  7. Anglican religious order - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anglican_religious_order

    Members of religious communities may be known as monks or nuns, particularly in those communities which require their members to live permanently in one location; they may be known as friars or sisters, a term used particularly (though not exclusively) by religious orders whose members are more active in the wider community, often living in smaller groups.

  8. Consecrated virgin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Consecrated_virgin

    Thus, the Order of Virgins has members who live in the world and members who are nuns. Both the consecration of a virgin living in the world and that of a nun are reserved to their diocesan bishop; it is for him to decide on the conditions under which a virgin living in the world is to undertake a life of perpetual virginity.

  9. Ursulines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ursulines

    Especially in France, groups of the company began to re-shape themselves as cloistered nuns, under solemn vows, and dedicated to the education of girls within the walls of their monasteries. [1] In the following century, the Ursuline nuns were strongly encouraged and supported by Francis de Sales. They were called the "Ursuline nuns" as ...