1:58
Johannes Ciconia - French Ballads (1/3) Le ray au soleyl
Johannes Ciconia - French Ballads (1/3) Le ray au soleyl
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. Le ray au soleyl Andrea von Ramm, Mezzosopran Willard Cobb, Tenor Thomas Binkley, Sackbut Le ray du soleyl (The ray of the sun) is a reference to the arms of Galeazzo and his wife, Isabel of Valois, "the gentle turtle dove", and to the Duke's motto, "A bon droit". Isabel died giving birth to a son in 1371, so the composition of the canon, and Ciconia's stay at Padua, however short it may have been, can be dated slightly earlier. Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 are unknown. From this time until his <b>...</b>
3:59
CURRENCY CRISIS INEVITABLE !!! STOP GIVING TAXPAYER MONEY TO THIEVES !!! PETER SCHIFF CONNECTICUT
CURRENCY CRISIS INEVITABLE !!! STOP GIVING TAXPAYER MONEY TO THIEVES !!! PETER SCHIFF CONNECTICUT
The pious handmaid of Christ, Lady Birgitta of blessed memory, received the following revelations in a divinely inspired vision while she was at prayer. They are addressed to the Roman pontiffs Clement VI, Innocent VI, Urban V, and Gregory XI. They deal with the return of the Apostolic See and the Roman Curia to Rome and the reformation of the church by command of almighty God. Two years before the Jubilee Year, Christ gives the bride the words contained here and orders her to send them to Pope Clement in order that he should establish peace between the kings of France and England and come to Italy and proclaim the Jubilee Year. The Reverend Lord Hemming, bishop of Åbo, and Brother Peter, prior of the Cistercian monastery of Alvastra in the kingdom of Sweden. BOOK 4Chapter 136 SAINT BRIDGET PATRON SAINT OF EUROPE FINAL PART I shall seek an account from you with regard to your lukewarmness in reestablishing peace between the kings and your preferential treatment of one of the two parties. Moreover, it shall not be forgotten how greed and ambition flourished and increased in the church during your time, or that you could have reformed and set many things right but that you, lover of the flesh, were unwilling. Get up, therefore, before your fast approaching final hour arrives, and extinguish the negligence of your past by being zealous in your nearly final hour! If you are in doubt about to which spirit these words belong, that kingdom and that person are well known in which <b>...</b>
3:47
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Motets (2/5) Gloria
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Motets (2/5) Gloria
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. Gloria Studio der frühen Musik Leitung Thomas Binkley Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 are unknown. From this time until his death in 1412, he remained connected to the cathedral of Padua. It is unclear whether he arrived in Padua earlier than 1401. If his lament, Con lagrime bagnadome, described in one text source as written for the death of Francesco of Carrara, were written for Francesco il Nuovo, then it would date from after 1406; if, as earlier scholars had assumed, it were written for the death <b>...</b>
3:42
Le palais des papes (Avignon - Vaucluse - France)
Le palais des papes (Avignon - Vaucluse - France)
(F) fr.wikipedia.org (EN) Avignon became the residence of the Popes in 1309, when the Gascon Bertrand de Goth, as Pope Clement V, unwilling to face the violent chaos of Rome after his election (1305), moved the Papal Curia to Avignon, a period known as the Avignon Papacy. Clement lived as a guest in the Dominican monastery at Avignon, and his successor Pope John XXII set up a magnificent establishment there, but the reconstruction of the old bishops' palace was begun in earnest by Pope Benedict XII (1334--42) and continued by his successors to 1364. The site, on a natural rocky outcrop at the northern edge of Avignon, overlooking the river Rhône, was that of the old episcopal palace of the bishops of Avignon. The Palais was built in two principal phases with two distinct segments, known as the Palais Vieux (Old Palace) and Palais Neuf (New Palace). By the time of its completion, it occupied an area of 11000 m² (2.6 acres). The building was enormously expensive, consuming much of the papacy's income during its construction. The Palais Vieux was constructed by the architect Pierre Poisson of Mirepoix at the instruction of Pope Benedict XII. The austere Benedict had the old/new episcopal palace razed and replaced with a much larger building centred on a cloister, heavily fortified against attackers. Its four wings are flanked with high towers. Under Popes Clement VI, Innocent VI and Urban V, the building was expanded to form what is now known as the Palais Neuf. Jean de <b>...</b>
4:51
WAR S & FINANCIAL MAFIA THIEVING ON WALL STREET RESPONSIBLE FOR ECONOMIC CRASH !!! CELENTE
WAR S & FINANCIAL MAFIA THIEVING ON WALL STREET RESPONSIBLE FOR ECONOMIC CRASH !!! CELENTE
The pious handmaid of Christ, Lady Birgitta of blessed memory, received the following revelations in a divinely inspired vision while she was at prayer. They are addressed to the Roman pontiffs Clement VI, Innocent VI, Urban V, and Gregory XI. They deal with the return of the Apostolic See and the Roman Curia to Rome and the reformation of the church by command of almighty God. Two years before the Jubilee Year, Christ gives the bride the words contained here and orders her to send them to Pope Clement in order that he should establish peace between the kings of France and England and come to Italy and proclaim the Jubilee Year. The Reverend Lord Hemming, bishop of Åbo, and Brother Peter, prior of the Cistercian monastery of Alvastra in the kingdom of Sweden. BOOK 4Chapter 136 SAINT BRIDGET PATRON SAINT OF EUROPE PART I The Son of God speaks to the bride, saying: Write these words from me to Pope Clement: I exalted you and let you ascend through all the ranks of honor. Rise up and establish peace between the kings of France and England, who are like dangerous beasts, betrayers of souls. Then come to Italy and preach the word there and proclaim a year of salvation and divine love! Look on the streets paved with the blood of my saints, and I shall give you an everlasting reward. Think of times past when you had the audacity to provoke my anger, and I kept silent, when you did what you wanted and what you should not have done, and I was patient, as though I did not hear <b>...</b>
6:28
FINANCIAL CRISIS WARS FOUNDING FATHERS LIBERTARIANS FALSE ISSUES !!! RON PAUL
FINANCIAL CRISIS WARS FOUNDING FATHERS LIBERTARIANS FALSE ISSUES !!! RON PAUL
The pious handmaid of Christ, Lady Birgitta of blessed memory, received the following revelations in a divinely inspired vision while she was at prayer. They are addressed to the Roman pontiffs Clement VI, Innocent VI, Urban V, and Gregory XI. They deal with the return of the Apostolic See and the Roman Curia to Rome and the reformation of the church by command of almighty God. Two years before the Jubilee Year, Christ gives the bride the words contained here and orders her to send them to Pope Clement in order that he should establish peace between the kings of France and England and come to Italy and proclaim the Jubilee Year. The Reverend Lord Hemming, bishop of Åbo, and Brother Peter, prior of the Cistercian monastery of Alvastra in the kingdom of Sweden. BOOK 4Chapter 136 SAINT BRIDGET PATRON SAINT OF EUROPE PART I The Son of God speaks to the bride, saying: Write these words from me to Pope Clement: I exalted you and let you ascend through all the ranks of honor. Rise up and establish peace between the kings of France and England, who are like dangerous beasts, betrayers of souls. Then come to Italy and preach the word there and proclaim a year of salvation and divine love! Look on the streets paved with the blood of my saints, and I shall give you an everlasting reward. Think of times past when you had the audacity to provoke my anger, and I kept silent, when you did what you wanted and what you should not have done, and I was patient, as though I did not hear <b>...</b>
3:15
Johannes Ciconia - Italian Ballads (2/3) Chi nel servir
Johannes Ciconia - Italian Ballads (2/3) Chi nel servir
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. Chi nel servir Andrea von Ramm, Mezzosoprano Sterling Jones, Fidel Johannes Fink, Fidel Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 are unknown. From this time until his death in 1412, he remained connected to the cathedral of Padua. It is unclear whether he arrived in Padua earlier than 1401. If his lament, Con lagrime bagnadome, described in one text source as written for the death of Francesco of Carrara, were written for Francesco il Nuovo, then it would date from after 1406; if, as earlier scholars had <b>...</b>
3:18
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Motets (5/5) O Padua sidus precarium
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Motets (5/5) O Padua sidus precarium
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. O Padua sidus precarium Capella Antiqua München Leitung Konrad Ruhland Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 are unknown. From this time until his death in 1412, he remained connected to the cathedral of Padua. It is unclear whether he arrived in Padua earlier than 1401. If his lament, Con lagrime bagnadome, described in one text source as written for the death of Francesco of Carrara, were written for Francesco il Nuovo, then it would date from after 1406; if, as earlier scholars had assumed, it were <b>...</b>
6:03
Johannes Ciconia - French Ballads (2/3) Sus un' fontayne
Johannes Ciconia - French Ballads (2/3) Sus un' fontayne
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. Lizadra donna Andrea von Ramm, Mezzosopran Sterling Jones, Fidel Thomas Binkley, Laute Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 are unknown. From this time until his death in 1412, he remained connected to the cathedral of Padua. It is unclear whether he arrived in Padua earlier than 1401. If his lament, Con lagrime bagnadome, described in one text source as written for the death of Francesco of Carrara, were written for Francesco il Nuovo, then it would date from after 1406; if, as earlier scholars had <b>...</b>
3:53
Johannes Ciconia - French Ballads (3/3) Aler m'en veus
Johannes Ciconia - French Ballads (3/3) Aler m'en veus
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. Aler m'en vues Andrea von Ramm, Mezzosopran Willard Cobb, Tenor When Ciconia left his native country he composed a moving song of farewell: Alers mens veux. "I wish to go to a foreign land, because pity is dead; to you, dear lady, for whom I yearn day and night..." It was a farewell to his native land at a time when there was no more pity in the world (Prince John of Bavaria was surnamed "the Pitiless"), and to the wife he loved whom he was never to see alive again... Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 <b>...</b>
2:57
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Motets (4/5) Venetia mundi splendor
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Motets (4/5) Venetia mundi splendor
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. Venetia mundi splendor Capella Antiqua München Leitung Konrad Ruhland Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 are unknown. From this time until his death in 1412, he remained connected to the cathedral of Padua. It is unclear whether he arrived in Padua earlier than 1401. If his lament, Con lagrime bagnadome, described in one text source as written for the death of Francesco of Carrara, were written for Francesco il Nuovo, then it would date from after 1406; if, as earlier scholars had assumed, it were <b>...</b>
10:03
AVIGNON France
AVIGNON France
A famous song that features a bridge takes us into the French Provencal town of Avignon. 'Sur le Pont d'Avignon' begins the world famous French song that is familiar with both young and old alike. It is a song of dance on the Pont St. Benezet Bridge. Internal disputes, in addition to power struggles in Rome, transformed Avignon into the new seat of the Pontificate. The impressive Palais des Papes, 'Pope's Palace', dominates the centre of the town. Its exterior resembles a military fortress rather than a religious residence. A coat of arms above the main entrance is reminiscent of the papal court that was founded by Clement The Sixth. In 1348, he bought Avignon for 80000 florins from Johanna the First, Queen of Sicily. During his term of office he added a new, more luxurious building to the Old Palace that was constructed between 1334 and 1342. The beauty of the palace manifests itself in the numerous terraces and towers that were used for defensive purposes during the 14th and 15th centuries. Seven successive French popes transformed Avignon into one of the most glamorous medieval courts in Europe. The town's expansion gradually became increasingly more splendid and the pontificate's dependence on French royalty became further entrenched.
4:18
Johannes Ciconia - Italian Ballads (3/3) Lizadra donna
Johannes Ciconia - Italian Ballads (3/3) Lizadra donna
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. Lizadra donna Richard Levitt, Altus Sterling Jones, Fidel Thomas Binkley, Sackbut Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 are unknown. From this time until his death in 1412, he remained connected to the cathedral of Padua. It is unclear whether he arrived in Padua earlier than 1401. If his lament, Con lagrime bagnadome, described in one text source as written for the death of Francesco of Carrara, were written for Francesco il Nuovo, then it would date from after 1406; if, as earlier scholars had assumed, it <b>...</b>
2:52
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Ballads (1/5) Albane misse celitus
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Ballads (1/5) Albane misse celitus
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. Albane misse celitus Andrea von Ramm, Mezzosopran Willard Cobb, Tenor Thomas Binkley, Sackbut Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 are unknown. From this time until his death in 1412, he remained connected to the cathedral of Padua. It is unclear whether he arrived in Padua earlier than 1401. If his lament, Con lagrime bagnadome, described in one text source as written for the death of Francesco of Carrara, were written for Francesco il Nuovo, then it would date from after 1406; if, as earlier scholars had <b>...</b>
5:43
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Motets (3/5) Credo
Johannes Ciconia - Latin Motets (3/5) Credo
Johannes Ciconia (c. 1370 - between June 10 and July 12, 1412) was a late medieval composer and music theorist who worked most of his adult life in Italy, particularly in the service of the Papal Chapels and at the cathedral of Padua. Credo Studio der frühen Musik Leitung Thomas Binkley Ciconia was born in Liège, the son of a priest also named Johannes Ciconia and a woman of high standing. That the composer had the same name as at least three other men from the area around Liège has created much confusion about the biography of the composer. A Johannes Ciconia, probably the composer's father, was probably born around 1335, and worked in Avignon in 1350 as a clerk for the wife of the nephew of Pope Clement VI. A second person by the name of Johannes Ciconia appears in records in Liège in 1385 as a duodenus, generally a person of young age; thus contemporary scholars are in agreement that this is the composer himself. Papal records suggest that this Ciconia was in the service of Pope Boniface IX in Rome in 1391. His whereabouts between the early 1390s and 1401 are unknown. From this time until his death in 1412, he remained connected to the cathedral of Padua. It is unclear whether he arrived in Padua earlier than 1401. If his lament, Con lagrime bagnadome, described in one text source as written for the death of Francesco of Carrara, were written for Francesco il Nuovo, then it would date from after 1406; if, as earlier scholars had assumed, it were written for the death <b>...</b>
1:12
OBAMA !!! YOU WILL WORSHIP THE BEAST AS WE DO !!! CONQUERED ON CALVARY !!!
OBAMA !!! YOU WILL WORSHIP THE BEAST AS WE DO !!! CONQUERED ON CALVARY !!!
The pious handmaid of Christ, Lady Birgitta of blessed memory, received the following revelations in a divinely inspired vision while she was at prayer. They are addressed to the Roman pontiffs Clement VI, Innocent VI, Urban V, and Gregory XI. They deal with the return of the Apostolic See and the Roman Curia to Rome and the reformation of the church by command of almighty God. Two years before the Jubilee Year, Christ gives the bride the words contained here and orders her to send them to Pope Clement in order that he should establish peace between the kings of France and England and come to Italy and proclaim the Jubilee Year. The Reverend Lord Hemming, bishop of Åbo, and Brother Peter, prior of the Cistercian monastery of Alvastra in the kingdom of Sweden. BOOK 4Chapter 136 SAINT BRIDGET PATRON SAINT OF EUROPE FINAL PART I shall seek an account from you with regard to your lukewarmness in reestablishing peace between the kings and your preferential treatment of one of the two parties. Moreover, it shall not be forgotten how greed and ambition flourished and increased in the church during your time, or that you could have reformed and set many things right but that you, lover of the flesh, were unwilling. Get up, therefore, before your fast approaching final hour arrives, and extinguish the negligence of your past by being zealous in your nearly final hour! If you are in doubt about to which spirit these words belong, that kingdom and that person are well known in which <b>...</b>
7:47
Blessed Virgin Mary OUR LADY OF OCOTLAN Miraculous Image & Basilica Tlaxcala Mexico. Miracle cure
Blessed Virgin Mary OUR LADY OF OCOTLAN Miraculous Image & Basilica Tlaxcala Mexico. Miracle cure
For free miraculous water (for those in need of miracle healing) from Our Lady of Ocotlan's well, go to ourladyofocotlan.net. This is a video of the miraculous image of Our Lady of Ocotlan, and her Basilica in Ocotlan, city of Tlaxcala, Mexico. In 1541, Juan Diego Bernardino was going to draw water from a river believed at the time to have healing properties. The Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to him and led him to a miraculous spring of water. She also told Juan Diego that an image of herself could be found within a tree. Juan Diego and the Franciscans misionaries discovered the image from a burnt oak tree near the well with miraculous water. "Advise the religious, on my behalf, that on this site they will find an image of me representing my perfections. Through it I will distribute my mercies and clemencies. Once found, I desire that it be placed in the chapel of San Lorenzo." Five Popes have affirmed the appearance of Our Lady of Ocotlan - Pope Clement X11 in 1735, Pope Benedict XIV in 1746, Pope Pius VI in 1799, Saint Pius X in 1906 and Pope Pius XII in 1941. The face of the Virgin of Ocotlán has a reputation for changing color from red rose to pale and back again. In 1987 the Bishop of Tlaxcala, presiding at the procession of the statute, the face of the Virgin changed vividly from a pale to a rose color, and left everyone astonished. Father Loyzaga, the great historian of Ocotlán, saw this for himself and confirms that the Virgin perspires. Father Escobar reports <b>...</b>
2:18
WHAT IS THAT ?? !!! IF NOT ..... DON'T LEAVE THE SAFETY OF GOD PRAY & OBEY HIM !!!
WHAT IS THAT ?? !!! IF NOT ..... DON'T LEAVE THE SAFETY OF GOD PRAY & OBEY HIM !!!
The pious handmaid of Christ, Lady Birgitta of blessed memory, received the following revelations in a divinely inspired vision while she was at prayer. They are addressed to the Roman pontiffs Clement VI, Innocent VI, Urban V, and Gregory XI. They deal with the return of the Apostolic See and the Roman Curia to Rome and the reformation of the church by command of almighty God. Two years before the Jubilee Year, Christ gives the bride the words contained here and orders her to send them to Pope Clement in order that he should establish peace between the kings of France and England and come to Italy and proclaim the Jubilee Year. The Reverend Lord Hemming, bishop of Åbo, and Brother Peter, prior of the Cistercian monastery of Alvastra in the kingdom of Sweden. BOOK 4Chapter 136 SAINT BRIDGET PATRON SAINT OF EUROPE FINAL PART I shall seek an account from you with regard to your lukewarmness in reestablishing peace between the kings and your preferential treatment of one of the two parties. Moreover, it shall not be forgotten how greed and ambition flourished and increased in the church during your time, or that you could have reformed and set many things right but that you, lover of the flesh, were unwilling. Get up, therefore, before your fast approaching final hour arrives, and extinguish the negligence of your past by being zealous in your nearly final hour! If you are in doubt about to which spirit these words belong, that kingdom and that person are well known in which <b>...</b>
2:05
Rome molds experts on the rebel saint, Saint Catherine of Siena
Rome molds experts on the rebel saint, Saint Catherine of Siena
One could say that Saint Catherine of Siena was one of the great heroines of Christianity. She was a philosopher, a theologian, a clairvoyant and she devoted her life to the poor. Apart from all her virtues, she went down in history for her work as a diplomat and peace mediator. If it wasnt for Saint Catherine, Avignon, France would still be the center of the Roman Catholic Church. In 1377, she convinced the pope to bring the papacy back to Rome. Diega Giunta Centro Internazionale di Studi Cateriniani Gregory XI decided to bring the papacy back to Rome after speaking with Saint Catherine of Siena. She revealed to him a special vow hed made. The pope had promised that if elected pontiff, his papacy would return to Rome. Saint Catherine also fought for peace during the Western Schism that began in 1378, a period in which the Church was divided. Diega Giunta Centro Internazionale di Studi Cateriniani At that time the cardinals who had elected Urban VI repented of their election. They said it was invalid, so they elected another pope, Clement VII, a Swiss cardinal. Thats why the Church was divided. Saint Catherines life and work led her to become one of the first women named a Doctor of the Church. Thats why theres a study center in Rome dedicated especially to her. The study center is in the same building where Saint Catherine lived the last years of her life. Giovanna Catalano Centro Internazionale di Studi Cateriniani Theres lots of international interest, many foreign <b>...</b>
10:25
The Black Death
The Black Death
A Movie about the Black (bubonic) plague that Me and a friend did for science!
3:04
Call me crazy, but...
Call me crazy, but...
Call me crazy but, wasn't it the Pope who lied to the Africans about condoms in the midst of an AIDS epidemic? Call me crazy but wasn't it the Pope who attempted to cover up the pedophilia going on in the Vatican? Call me crazy but, isn't the Pope a homophobic, sexist, lying, bigot? The Pope should STFU about 'morality', because he's a very immoral guy. Pope blames 'atheist extremism' for Hitler-ism; blogs.telegraph.co.uk www.youtube.com Adolf Hitler - Wikiquote en.wikiquote.org "I am now as before a Catholic and will always remain so." - Adolf Hitler, 1941 Points made by DefenderOfAllMankind: "Favorited this! And to every Catholic apologetic: If you'll protest that the Nazis sent priests to the camps, you're correct. But Popes Alexander VI, Clement VIII and many others executed priests that pissed them off. It's your doctrine that they were infallible, so maybe Hitler knew what he was doing. And if you'll talk about Catholic resistance to Nazism, what about the support? The deeply Catholic regimes of Vichy France, Slovakia and off course the murderous Croat Ustase?"