enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Solemn vow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solemn_vow

    A solemn vow is a certain vow ("a deliberate and free promise made to God about a possible and better good") taken by an at least 18 year old person individual after completion of the novitiate in a Catholic religious institute. It is solemn insofar as the Church recognizes it as such.

  3. Religious order (Catholic) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_order_(Catholic)

    Another difference was that a professed religious of solemn vows lost the right to own property and the capacity to acquire temporal goods for themselves, but a professed religious of simple vows, while being prohibited by the vow of poverty from using and administering property, kept ownership and the right to acquire more, unless the ...

  4. Religious vows - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_vows

    Depending on the order, temporary vows may be renewed a number of times before permission to take final vows is given. There are exceptions: the Jesuits' first vows are perpetual, for instance, and the Sisters of Charity take only temporary but renewable vows. Religious vows are of two varieties: simple vows and solemn vows. The highest level ...

  5. Religious profession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_profession

    St. Ignatius of Loyola laid down that in his order there should be a simple profession, followed by more or less frequent renewal of vows until such time as the candidate should be prepared for the solemn or definitive profession; this under Pius IX and Leo XIII has become the common law of all religious orders. [7]

  6. Religious congregation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_congregation

    For women, those with simple vows were simply "sisters", with the term "nun" reserved in canon law for those who belonged to an institute of solemn vows, even if in some localities they were allowed to take simple vows instead. [5] However, it abolished the distinction according to which solemn vows, unlike simple vows, were indissoluble.

  7. Enclosed religious orders - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enclosed_religious_orders

    In the Roman Rite of the Catholic Church, once a person has made solemn, perpetual religious vows, the release from these monastic vows has to be approved by the ecclesiastical authorities. Normally there is a transitional period, called exclaustration , in which the person looks to establish a new life and determine if this is what they are ...

  8. Ad universalis Ecclesiae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ad_Universalis_Ecclesiae

    Ad universalis Ecclesiae is a papal constitution dealing with the conditions for admission to Catholic religious orders of men in which solemn vows were prescribed. It was issued by Pope Pius IX on 7 February 1862.

  9. Religious institute - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_institute

    Solemn vows once meant those taken in what was called a religious order. "Today, in order to know when a vow is solemn it will be necessary to refer to the proper law of the institutes of consecrated life." [10] Should the members want to leave the institute after perpetual vows, they would have to seek a papal indult of dispensation.