Sunday, October 6, 2013

CANADA MILITARY NEWS: Oct 2013-POPE FRANCIS-cover of Rolling Stone-Time-The Advocate winning the hearts of billions Jan 2014- Our Catholic-Christian Faith in Canada/Pope Francis and Canada's love of our CANADA GAY MILITARY CHAPLAIN GENERAL and our military/love of our Jewish and Muslim brothers and sisters and our Canadian history/Dr.Lockeridge 1976/Latin/Rosary - we are Canadian -God is Angry- WATER MORE PRECIOUS THAN GOLD- Pope Francis

JULY 28 2014


Pope reaches out to Pentecostal believers

Pope Francis has become the first pope to visit a Pentecostal church, pressing his outreach to evangelic­als who represent Catholicism’s greatest competition for Christian souls around the globe.

Francis flew by helicopter Monday to visit the under-con­struction Pentecostal Church of Reconciliation in Caserta. He met privately with a Pentecostal preacher who is an old friend, Giovanni Traettino.

Speaking to some 350 Pente­costal faithful, he apologized for Catholic persecution of Pentecost­als during Italy’s fascist regime and said there was unity in di­versity within Christianity. (AP)
VATICAN CITY


JULY 27, 2014


Pope Francis
Pope Francis speaks of first world war centenary and says his thoughts are on the Middle East, Iraq and Ukraine in particular 
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Ash Wednesday (the first day of Lent) 2014


Wednesday, March 5

Ash Wednesday-By Jon Jakoblich


Ash Wednesday Mass

Ash Wednesday is the first day of Lent, celebrated next on March 5, 2014. The name “Ash Wednesday” comes from the blessed ashes that are applied to the forehead of the faithful who receive them as a sign of the beginning of the season of Lent, the season of penance and preparation for Easter.






Being marked with ashes is a public acknowledgement that one is a sinner, as we all are.

Ash Wednesday History

In the fourth century, public penitents dressed in sackcloth and were sprinkled with ashes to show their repentance. The practice of public penance gradually fell into disuse from the eighth to the tenth centuries. Our current celebration of Ash Wednesday began to develop in the eleventh century where it had become customary to receive ashes at the beginning of Lent. The Christian use of ashes is rooted in the Jewish custom of sprinkling ashes on the head as a sign of repentance.

Contrary to popular belief, Ash Wednesday is not a holy day of obligation although it is a spiritually and liturgically significant celebration which sets the penitential tone for the next six weeks before Easter.

Significance of Ashes

The ashes are a symbol of penance and reconciliation, which are used in the Catholic Church not only on Ash Wednesday, but also in the rite for the consecration of an altar and the dedication of a church. The ashes are the burnt palms used on Passion Sunday/Palm Sunday of the previous year. Many parishes allow for you to bring back your palms so that they may be used on the next Ash Wednesday.

Distribution of Ashes

On Ash Wednesday, ashes may be distributed during Mass, usually after the homily, or outside of Mass. When done outside of Mass ashes are distributed as part of a Liturgy of the Word. Ashes are typically placed on ones forehead in the shape of a cross. The traditional formula for placing the ashes on the forehead is, “Remember you are dust and will return to dust,” however, “Turn away from sin and live the gospel” is typically what is said today. Ash Wednesday is a day of fast and abstinence from meat.

http://www.aboutcatholics.com/beliefs/ash-wednesday/

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 The Holy Rosary



I finally think, always praying and am so thankful that POPE FRANCIS IS WAKING UP THE WORLD 2 WOMEN AND CHILDREN IN SUCH DIRE POVERTY

...  on this day... our Pope Francis- asking us 2 embrace each other.... and calling out to our gay brothers and sisters with love and devotion saying,- who are we 2 judge u as we embrace each other and the world - help the innocents - feed them, clothe them, help them with shelters, education... a life...the poorest of the poor, education 4 each and all- basic freedoms and basic decency and respect 2 each other.. Our Mother Church- helping and loving each and all... life is messy..... embrace the poor.. always. Pope Francis speaks against FRACKING-  Water is more precious than Gold...
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POPE FRANCIS UPDATES- JANUARY 2014



Pope Francis' Gentle Revolution: Inside Rolling Stone's New Issue
The times they are a-changin’ at the Vatican


January 28, 2014 7:15 AM ET
Pope Francis on the cover of Rolling Stone.
Pope Francis on the cover of Rolling Stone.
Stefano Spaziani

Sarah Palin has described Pope Francis as "kind of liberal." Rush Limbaugh has used the phrase "pure Marxism" to describe the pope's idea that a modern "culture of prosperity" has deadened people to the miseries of the poor. And many more conservatives have questioned his comment on homosexual priests – "Who am I to judge?" So just who is Pope Francis?

Read our full cover story on Pope Francis here now

Rolling Stone sent contributing editor Mark Binelli inside the Vatican to deliver a portrait of His Holiness, a man who was born Jorge Mario Bergoglio 77 years ago in Buenos Aires, for the cover story in our new issue (on stands Friday). What he learned was that Pope Francis is making a noticeable break from Vatican tradition, facing political issues head on and presenting a more all-inclusive attitude toward human rights – and that Catholics are appreciative.

In less than a year since his papacy began, Pope Francis has done much to separate himself from past popes and establish himself as a people's pope. Francis chose not to reside in the papal palace, but to stay in the Vatican guest house, freeing himself of the insulation of Vatican clergymen. He opts to ride around town in a Ford Focus instead of a chauffeured limo. He pays his own hotel bills and keeps his agenda. And, while Binelli was in Italy, he told a congregation in the piazza that was weathering a storm that he wished he could come down to be with them. "He seems to really mean it," Binelli reported.

Beyond Pope Francis: 10 conservatives who have gone liberal

A Vatican insider commented on the way Francis has opted for privacy and independence in a way his predecessors haven't. "John Paul II and Benedict both had an inner circle so this is very disconcerting to the people on the inside," he told Rolling Stone. "Does Francis have a war room? No, probably not. But who is he talking to back there? No one really knows."

Beyond offering a friendlier alternative to Benedict XVI – his predecessor, who was the first pope to resign from his post in 700 years and who had a far more draconian outlook on homosexuality – Pope Francis has begun investigations into possible corruption within the church. He has explored ways to deal with the problem of pedophilia, looking into ways to take measures and counsel victims.

"Francis is already changing the church in real ways through his words and symbolic gestures," Father Thomas J. Reece, a senior analyst at the left-leaning National Catholic Reporter told Rolling Stone. "He could sit in his office, go through canon law and start changing rules and regulations. But that's not what people want him to do."

Since the papal election, attendance at papal events in the Vatican have tripled to 6.6 million people, Binelli reports. Through quotations from Vatican experts and an engaging biography that shows how the pope struggled through dark times to emerge as the frontrunner for papacy, Rolling Stone presents the pope as a man tied to religious tradition on one hand and fighting to bring the church into a new era with the other. As the cover suggests, "The times, they are a-changin'."

Also in this issue: Tim Dickinson on how the U.S. exports global warming, Jonah Weiner profiles 12 Years a Slave director Steve McQueen, Stephen Roderick catches up with David Crosby and David Kushner reports on the dead end on Silk Road.

Look for the issue on stands and in the iTunes App Store this Friday, January 31st.

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Water more precious than Gold.... NO FRACKING...
Pope Francis: "Thou shalt not frack!"


Pope Francis holding up anti-fracking t-shirts following a meeting with a group of Argentinian environmental activists to discuss water and fracking issues. The shirts read “No To Fracking” and “Water Is More Precious Than Gold.”
Meet the Newest Anti-Fracking Activist: Pope Francis.

I haven't seen this covered prominently here, but thought it's worth a mention when the guy with a direct line to 1.2 billion people's ears says that it's not cool to frack. This week the Twitterverse went ablaze when Pope Francis met with Argentine filmmaker Fernando “Pino” Solanas (La Guerra del Fracking -- The Fracking War) and environmental activist Juan Pablo Olsson at the Vatican to discuss fracking and water pollution. Olsson posted the photo of himself, Solanas and Pope Francis.

Next Up For Pope Francis: Anti-Fracking Activist?

Finally, a logical pope. If your belief tells you that God gave us the Earth to be stewards of, then injecting millions of gallons of water and chemicals into the ground to fracture massive rocks for their extra oil and gas and in the process threatening the air we breathe, the water we drink, the communities we love and the climate on which we all depend, seems like a really bad idea.

For a pope who has demonstrated that he is able and willing to connect some serious dots by coming out against poverty, inequality, and bigotry, stepping into the environmental arena is the next logical move. After all, it is the poor and underprivileged who have not only been taking the brunt of industrial pollution and environmental degradation that comes with the fossil fueled life but are also at the forefront of suffering the consequences of climate change. He reportedly told the group he "is preparing an encyclical about nature, humans, and environmental pollution."

I'm really digging on Francis who is actually living up to his name as the patron saint of the poor. What I didn't know is that St. Francis was named the patron saint of ecology by John Paul II in 1979, because of his theological connection to poverty.

    “It is my hope that the inspiration of Saint Francis will help us to keep ever alive a sense of ‘fraternity’ with all those good and beautiful things which Almighty God has created,” Pope John Paul II later explained. “And may he remind us of our serious obligation to respect and watch over them with care, in light of that greater and higher fraternity that exists within the human family.”

And, of course, simply by pissing off Sarah Palin you know you're moving humanity in the right direction.

    According to one report of the meeting, His Holiness's concern was "clear" when hearing about the Chevron deal in Argentina and other environmental disputes in the region. On Tuesday, Sarah Palin said she was shocked by the pontiff's "liberal" statements. Wait 'til she hears about his new role as the face of Argentina's environmentalist movement.

Pope Francis to visit the Holy Land



Pope Francis will make his first trip to the Holy Land, visiting Amman, Bethlehem and Jerusalem from May 24 to 26.

Last updated: 05 Jan 2014 13:19

Pope Francis has made many appeals for peace in the Middle East, calling for "a just and lasting solution." [Reuters]
Pope Francis said he will make his first trip to the Holy Land, visiting Amman, Bethlehem and Jerusalem over two days from May 24.
The pontiff made the announcement on Sunday while addressing crowds gathered in St Peter's Square for the traditional Angelus prayer.
"In the climate of joy typical of this Christmas period, I would like to announce that from May 24 to 26, God willing, I will carry out a pilgrimage to the Holy Land," he said.
Francis said the date of the announcement, January 5, was significant because it "commemorates the historic meeting between Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras I of Constantinople," that happened 50 years ago.
Their meeting in 1964 in Jerusalem led to the rescinding of the excommunications of 1054 that caused the Great Schism between the churches of the East and West.
During the visit, the Pope Francis said he would hold an "ecumenical meeting with all the representatives of the Christian Churches in Jerusalem" at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in East Jerusalem, venerated as the place where Jesus was buried.
Francis was invited to visit the Holy Land by Israeli President Shimon Peres and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who said he would "walk in the footsteps of Jesus Christ."
The 77-year-old pontiff has made many appeals for peace in the Middle East. During his meeting with Abbas, he called for "a just and lasting solution" to the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians.
Bethlehem mass
Israeli newspaper Yediot Aharonot has reported Francis will celebrate a high mass in Bethlehem.
The daily said Israeli authorities were unhappy with the brevity of the visit and the fact that the prelate will not celebrate mass in Israel, but in the West Bank, in the Palestinian territories.
Francis made no mention of plans to hold a mass in Bethlehem in his Sunday announcement.
Unconfirmed information from Roman Catholic sources in the Holy Land had earlier indicated a possible papal visit to a refugee camp for Syrians in Jordan.
Israel and the Vatican first established full diplomatic relations in 1993, but have been engaged in years of thorny diplomatic negotiations over property rights and tax exemptions for the Catholic Church.
The Vatican used the term "State of Palestine" for the first time in January 2013.

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Pope Francis to visit the Holy Land in May 2014!

Pope Francis has announced a short official visit to Israel in May 2014!
In what will be his first visit to Israel, Pope Francis will be following his predecessor’s footsteps, Pope Benedict, who visited Israel back in 2009.
As experienced on that 2009 visit, there are likely to be huge crowds of Christian pilgrims in attendance, even though Pope Francis is officially visiting for a quickie only – May 24-26.
Pope Francis is expected to visit Bethlehem and Yad Vashem, with another couple of stopovers also likely. We can point the Pope in the direction of the must-see Christian sites in Israel, just in case he’s not sure…
Francis recently wrote that the Catholic Church holds “the Jewish people in special regard because their covenant with God has never been revoked.”

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Pope Francis: Use internet to offer "real reasons for hope"



Pope FrancisPope Francis on Saturday met with the participants of the 26th Plenary Assembly of the Pontifical Council for the Laity, meeting under the theme “Proclaiming Christ in the digital age.”

 Pope Francis said the rise and development of the internet raises the question of the relationship between faith and culture.

 Looking back to the first centuries of Christianity, the Pope pointed out Christians encountered the “extraordinary legacy” of Greek culture.

 “Faced with philosophies of great profundity and educational methods of great value – although steeped in pagan elements, the Fathers did not shut them out, nor on the other hand, did they compromise with ideas contrary to the Faith,” Pope Francis said. “Instead, they learned to recognize and assimilate these higher concepts and transform them in the light of God’s Word, actually implementing what Saint Paul asks: Test all things and hold fast to that which is good.”

 He said this also applies to the internet.

 “You must test everything, knowing that you will surely find counterfeits, illusions and dangerous traps to avoid,” Pope Francis said. “But, guided by the Holy Spirit, we will discover valuable opportunities to lead people to the luminous face of the Lord. Among the possibilities offered by digital communication, the most important is the proclamation of the Gospel.”

 He said it is not enough to acquire technological skills, however important. He said the internet must be used to meet “often hurting or lost” real people and offer them “real reasons for hope.”

 “The announcement [of the Gospel] requires authentic human relationships and leads along the path to a personal encounter with the Lord,” he said.

 “Therefore, the internet is not enough; technology is not enough,” Pope Francis continued. “This, however, does not mean that the Church's presence online is useless; on the contrary, it is essential to be present, always in an evangelical way, in what, for many, especially young people, has become a sort of living environment; to awaken the irrepressible questions of the heart about the meaning of existence; and to show the way that leads to Him who is the answer, the Divine Mercy made flesh, the Lord Jesus.”

http://clericalwhispers.blogspot.ca/2013/12/pope-francis-use-internet-to-offer-real.html
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“Veni Veni Emmanuel” (Oh Come, Oh Come, Emmanuel” in English) is one of the most solemn Advent hymns. The melody may perhaps be a old Jewish-Christian Hanuka liturgy chant from the 5th century. It is believed that the final form of the traditional music stems from a 15th Century French processional for Franciscan nuns, but it may also have 8th Century Gregorian origins. . The text is based on the biblical prophecy from Isaiah 7:14 that states that God will give Israel a sign that will be called “Emmanuel” meaning “God With Us”.


Veni Veni Emmanuel

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRi1GDoaQu4



Latin Veni, veni, Emmanuel Captivum solve Israel, Qui gemit in exsilio, Privatus Dei Filio. Gaude, Gaude, Emmanuel Nascetur pro te, Israel. Veni, O Iesse virgula, ex hostis tuos ungula, de spectu tuos tartari educ et antro barathri. Gaude, gaude Emmanuel Nascetur pro te, Israel. Veni, veni O Oriens, Solare nos adveniens, Noctis depelle nebulas, Dirasque mortis tenebras. Gaude, gaude Emmanuel Nascetur pro te Israel. Veni, Clavis Davidica, Regna reclude caelica, Fac iter tutum superum, Et claude vias inferum. Gaude, gaude Emmanuel Nascetur pro te Israel. Veni, veni, Adonai, Qui populo in Sinai Legem dedisti vertice In maiestate gloriae. Gaude, gaude Emmanuel Nascetur pro te Israel.

English Come, O come, Emmanuel, and ransom captive Israel, that morns in lonely exile here until the Son of God appear. Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel shall come to thee, O Israel! O come, Thou Rod of Jesse’s stem, form ev’ry foe deliver them that trust Thy mighty power to save, and give them vict’ry o’er the grave. Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel shall come to thee, O Israel! O come, Thou Dayspring from on high, and cheer us by thy drawing nigh; disperse the gloomy clouds of night and death’s dark shadow put to flight. Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel shall come to thee, O Israel! O come, Thou Key of David, come, and open wide our heav’nly home, make safe the way that leads on high, that we no more have cause to sigh. Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel shall come to thee, O Israel! O come, o come, Thou Lord of might, who to thy tribes on Sinai’s height in ancient times did give the law, in cloud, and majesty, and awe. Rejoice! Rejoice! Emmanuel shall come to thee, O Israel!
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Pope Francis's personal appeal rebuilds his flock
Man of the people brings new vibrancy to the church, parishioners say
By Tom Parry, CBC News Posted: Dec 24, 2013 4:27 PM ET Last Updated: Dec 24, 2013 4:27 PM ET

► Pope Francis holds his 1st Christmas Eve mass
>The Vatican radical: James Carroll on Pope Francis
>Pope Francis is Time's Person of the Year
>Pope Francis lauded by gay-rights magazine on 77th birthday



The last Sunday before Christmas was cold and grey in Ottawa, with a storm bringing in snow and freezing rain.
Despite the weather, the hearty parishioners at St. Patrick's Basilica downtown filed in, stamping snow off their boots, for morning mass.
Outside the basilica, Glen Goss stopped to admire the nativity scene on the front lawn. He also paused to speak about a subject that's caught the attention of Catholics and non-Catholics alike: the new pope. Goss calls him an honest and true man.
"The previous pope was a significant intellectual and also a very holy man," Goss said.
"But Francis is more a people's man."
That sentiment is common among parishioners.
"He's more into the ordinary people and that's what we're striving for in our church," said Jovy Salas as she hurried in for mass.
Pope Francis has caused a stir within the church in Canada and around the world. Since becoming Pope in March, Francis hasn't changed church doctrine, but he has set a new tone at the Vatican.
He's rejected many of the luxuries that go with his title and focused instead on caring for the poor. He has railed against unbridled capitalism and invited homeless men to breakfast to celebrate his birthday.
Observers say the new style is making a difference in the way the church is perceived.

Pope Francis's common touch is part of his charm and what appeals to many Roman Catholics. (Claudio Peri/Pool/Associated Press)
"What's most attractive about Francis is the simplicity and the authenticity of his own witness. People get it," said Prof. Catherine Clifford of St. Paul University in Ottawa.
"He's cutting through the jargon of things and really communicating the heart of the Gospel message in a very direct way."
Person of the Year
Francis has become something of a media sensation. Time magazine named him its Person of the Year for 2013. So did The Advocate, a leading gay rights journal. Church leaders are welcoming the good publicity and positive headlines.
"I would say it certainly gives us some breathing room," said Archbishop Paul-Andre Durocher, president of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.
"I think what is happening now generally is that there's a more kind of openness to the possibility that the church might have something to offer to this world. And I'm very glad that there's this openness, because I personally believe that the church has much to offer to this world," he said.

Pope Francis gets a kiss during his visit at the Bambino Gesu pediatric hospital in Rome, on Dec. 21. The pontiff visited the hospital's chapel and met with young patients and their families. (Gregorio Borgia/Associated Press)
The question that remains is whether Francis can draw in Catholics who have drifted away. No figures are available for Canada, but some churches in Europe have reported a spike in attendance. For some, though, the numbers are secondary.
"I don't think it's just a question of how many people are at mass. You can have a church full of the standing dead," said Mary Jo Leddy, a theologian and lecturer at the University of Toronto.
"But it's the sense of joy and sense of life that you get in conversations among Catholics now. There's something fresh. There's something really exciting that's happening. And none of us know quite what it is. We're as surprised by this Pope as anybody. And maybe he's surprising himself."
Challenges remain
The Catholic Church, of course, still faces significant challenges. They include a legacy of sexual abuse and coverup as well as doctrine and practices that critics say exclude women, gays and other members of society.
For now, the focus is on the new face of a new Pope. The fundamental change some are looking for may still be a long way off. Outside St. Patrick's Basilica, however, there's no mistaking a sense of optimism.
"I was brought up in the Roman Catholic Church and lots of times I found it very routine," said parishioner Rose Bechamp.
"But since Pope Francis has entered the picture, there is a new vibrancy," she added.
"If you came to church on Sunday, you would see for yourself."

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/pope-francis-s-personal-appeal-rebuilds-his-flock-1.2475864
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Pope is person of year, Time decrees

Francis has changed tone, perception of church ‘in an extraordinary way’


DAVID BAUDER ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK — Time magazine selected Pope Francis as its Per­son of the Year on Wednesday, saying the Catholic Church’s new leader has changed the perception of the 2,000-year-old institution in an extraordinary way in a short time.

The pope beat out NSA leaker Edward Snowden for the distinc­tion, which the newsmagazine has been giving each year since 1927.

The former Argentine Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was elected in March as the first pope from Latin America and the first Jesuit.

Since taking over at the Vatican, he has urged the Catholic Church not to be obsessed with “small­minded rules" and to emphasize compassion over condemnation in dealing with touchy topics like abortion, gays and contraception.

He has denounced the world’s “idolatry of money" and the “global scandal" that nearly one billion people today go hungry, and has charmed the mass es with his simple style and wry sense of humour. His appear­ances draw tens of thousands of people and his (at)Pontifex Twit­ter account recently topped 10 million followers.

“He really stood out to us as someone who has changed the tone and the p erception and the focus of one of the world’s largest institutions in an extraordinary way," said Nancy Gibbs, the magazine’s managing editor.

The Vatican said the honour wasn’t surprising given the reson­ance in the general public that Francis has had, but it neverthe­less said the choice was a “p osit­ive" recognition of spiritual values in the international media .

“The Holy Father is not looking to become famous or to receive honours," said the Vatican spokes­man, the Rev. Federico Lombardi. “But if the choice of Person of Year helps spread the message of the Gospel — a message of God’s love for everyone — he will cer­tainly be happy about that."

It was the third time a Catholic pope had been Time’s selection.

John Paul II was selected in 1994 and John XXIII was chosen in 1962 .

In Argentina on Wednesday, Padre Toto, one of the many “slum priests" the pope supported for years as archbishop of Buenos Aires, praised Time magazine’s s election .

“I think the recognition o f Time magazine is good news, because Pope Francis embodies one of the values of a church that’s more missionary, closer to the people, more austere, more in keeping with the gospel," Toto said.

“He had the genius of knowing how to express this sense of the church and hopefully his way of being will catch on with other p olitical leaders, business execut­ives, sports figures. His leadership is inspiring ."

Besides Snowden , Time had narrowed its finalists down to Syrian President Bashar Assad, Republican U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, and gay rights activist Edith Windsor, whose Supreme Court case led to the fall of the Defence of Marriage Act, which prevented same-sex couples from federal benefits.

President Barack Obama was Time’s selection for 2012. Time editors make the selection.

The Holy Father is not looking to become famous or to receive honours.

Rev. Federico Lombardi Vatican spokesman


Pope Francis listens to a speaker during his weekly general audience in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican on Wednesday. Pope Francis has been selected by Time magazine as the Person of the Year.

ALESSANDRA TARANTINO AP

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Pope Francis delivers his Urbi et Orbi, or "to the city and to the world," message from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on Wednesday, December 25. Francis spoke to tens of thousands of tourists, pilgrims and Romans in the square below. He said he was joining in the song of Christmas angels with all those hoping "for a better world," and with those who "care for others, humbly."
Pope Francis delivers his Urbi et Orbi, or "to the city and to the world," message from the central balcony of St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on Wednesday, December 25. Francis spoke to tens of thousands of tourists, pilgrims and Romans in the square below. He said he was joining in the song of Christmas angels with all those hoping "for a better world," and with those who "care for others, humbly."

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Pope Francis lauded by gay-rights magazine on 77th birthday

Pontiff has birthday breakfast with four homeless people

Thomson Reuters Posted: Dec 17, 2013 7:45 AM ET Last Updated: Dec 17, 2013 9:58 AM ET

Pope Francis and Archbishop Konrad Krajewski welcome homeless men at the Vatican to celebrate Francis's 77th birthday.

The oldest gay rights magazine in the United States named Pope Francis its "Person of the Year" as the pontiff marked his 77th birthday on Tuesday by inviting homeless people to join him for breakfast in the Vatican.
The Advocate magazine said it gave Francis the honour because, although he is still against homosexual marriage, his pontificate so far had shown "a stark change in [anti-gay] rhetoric from his two predecessors".


It hailed as a landmark his famous response last July to a reporter who asked about gay people in the Church: "If a person is gay and seeks God and has good will, who am I to judge?"




The Advocate noted that the Catholic gay organization Equally Blessed called the phrase "some of the most encouraging words a pontiff has ever spoken about gay and lesbian people."
The Vatican has stressed the Pope's words did not change Church teachings that homosexual tendencies are not sinful but homosexual acts are.
Still, the gay community and many heterosexuals in the Church have welcomed what they see as a shift in emphasis and a call for the Church to be more compassionate and less condemning.
The Advocate said no one should "underestimate any pope's capacity for persuading hearts and minds in opening to LGBT (lesbian, gay, bisexual and transsexual) people".

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Pope Francis travels to home of namesake saint

October 4, 2013 - 6:26pm NICOLE WINFIELD THE ASSOCIATED PRESS




Pope Francis smiles during his meeting with cloistered nuns at the St. Chiara Basilica, in Assisi, Italy, on Friday. Pope Francis broke bread with the poor and embraced the disabled on a pilgrimage to his namesake’s hometown. (AP)
  .






ASSISI, Italy — Pope Francis broke bread with the poor and embraced the disabled on a pilgrimage to his namesake’s hometown Friday, urging the faithful to follow the example of the 13th-century St. Francis, who renounced a wealthy, dissolute lifestyle to embrace a life of poverty and service to the poor.

According to tradition, God told St. Francis to “repair my house,” and the first pope to take the saint’s name has made clear that he sees that as his own mission as well.

For Francis, that means reaching out to the most marginalized among the church’s 1.2 billion followers, reforming the broken Vatican bureaucracy, and allowing the faithful to shake things up in their dioceses — even at the annoyance of their bishops — if that’s what it takes to better spread God’s word.

After all, the pope said, St. Francis was a radical himself in his complete devotion to his faith — a model that can serve Catholics today.

Here are the main goals Pope Francis has set out for his church, highlighted during his visit to the hilltop town of Assisi, whose native son has inspired his papacy:



A CHURCH ‘THAT IS POOR AND FOR THE POOR’



Francis had lunch with a group of poor at a soup kitchen after demanding that the faithful “strip” themselves of their worldly attachment to wealth, which he said is killing the church and its souls. He delivered that exhortation during the most evocative stop of the day, in the simple room where St. Francis stripped off his clothes, renounced his wealth and vowed to live a life of poverty. Since becoming pope in March, Francis has made it clear that one of his principal objectives is a church that is humble, looks out for the poorest and brings them hope. The “slum pope,” as he is known because of his work in Argentina’s shantytowns, recently denounced the “idolatry” of money and encouraged those without the “dignity” of work.



A CHURCH THAT WELCOMES AND DOESN’T JUDGE



Francis’ first stop in Assisi was to an institute that cares for gravely disabled children, who in the words of the director are often seen as “stones cast aside,” invisible and neglected by the world. Francis caressed and kissed each child, saying their “scars need to be recognized and listened to.” It was part of the simple message of love that he has brought to others often considered outcasts, such as drug addicts and convicts. His “who am I to judge?” comment about gays over the summer was another reflection of this message of merciful welcome.

It represented a radical shift in tone for the Vatican. Catholic teaching holds that all people should be treated with dignity and respect, so Francis was making no change in doctrine. But church teaching also holds that gay acts are “intrinsically disordered” — a point Francis has neglected to emphasize in favour of a message of inclusion.



A FEMININE CHURCH



Francis has called for a greater role for women in the governance of the church, while ruling out female ordination. He says the church itself is female, that Jesus Christ was married to the church and that Mary is more important than all the apostles. On Friday, Francis paid special attention to the women of the church, visiting the cloistered Sisters of St. Clare, an order founded by one of St. Francis’ followers. In the Basilica of St. Clare, Pope Francis told the nuns that they must be mothers to the church and be joyful. “It makes me sad when I find sisters who aren’t joyful,” he lamented. “They might smile, but with just a smile they could be flight attendants!” He showed that same sense of humour later when he told a story about a mother who lamented that her 30-year-old son still hadn’t gotten married — a reference to a generation of Italian men who seem unwilling to move out: “Signora,” Francis recalled telling her. “Stop ironing his shirts!”



A CHURCH THAT IS ‘MESSY’ AND GOES OUTSIDE THE SACRISTY



St. Francis was considered a radical disobedient for having renounced everything and given himself entirely to his faith, but that’s just the type of radical witness Pope Francis wants for today’s Catholics.

Francis told Argentine pilgrims during World Youth Day in July to make a “mess” in their dioceses and shake things up. He hopes the church will stop being so inward-looking, and instead go out to the peripheries to spread the faith, just like St. Francis. The pope’s first trip outside Rome was to Lampedusa, a southern Italian island closer to Africa than the Italian mainland. His eulogy for all migrants lost at sea denounced a “globalization of indifference,” a prescient message given Thursday’s shipwreck off Lampedusa that killed scores of migrants.

As black mourning ribbons hung from Assisi’s banners, Francis proclaimed Friday “a day of tears.”



A CHURCH THAT WORKS FOR PEACE AND CARES FOR THE ENVIRONMENT



Assisi is known for its message of peace, drawing people of all faiths — and no faith — for annual peace pilgrimages to the basilica dominating the hill and its magnificent frescos by Giotto and Cimabue. The town takes its cue from St. Francis, who preached a message of peace and care for nature. But Pope Francis lamented Friday that the saint’s message is often misunderstood, “sweetened” into something he didn’t represent. A Vatican spokesman put it this way: “Too often his message is lost and we reduce his role to that of a gentle, whimsical hippie who fed birds, smelled flowers and tamed wild wolves.”

Pope Francis said the saint’s message was to truly “love one another as I have loved you,” calling for an end to all the wars in the Middle East, especially Syria.


 

About the Author»


NICOLE WINFIELD THE ASSOCIATED PRESS



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Even God is getting angry....“Water is more precious than gold.”..Pope Francis

POPE FRANCIS- The pope visited Solanas and posed for a picture holding an anti-fracking T-shirt, along with one that bore the slogan, “Water is more precious than gold.”



Pope Francis speaks out against fracking and environmental devastation
Friday, November 29th, 2013 By Ilaria Bertini

http://blueandgreentomorrow.com/2013/11/29/pope-francis-speaks-out-against-fracking-and-environmental-devastation/






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AND... IN CANADA...










AND....  see... we told u gay brothers and sisters... back in the 60s and 70s..... in Canada... we would change our world..... and we have.... as long as people care about people....equally.....









LIKE POPE FRANCIS-  IT'S ABOUT ACCEPTANCE- WHO ARE WE 2 JUDGE- Am Roman Catholic... my father's family left Ireland in 1100's for France and came 2 Canada- Lawn, Placentia Bay- Newfoundland in 1632 as fishers of the sea..... not a darn thing but bare hands, raw courage, a Bible and a work ethic 2 inspire and be grateful of what we have 2da.  We hunted paedophiles back in the 80s... we also moved on knowing that our Catholic Faith is our life and EVIL was not going 2 ruin the purity that is our Christian Faith..... and have had laws in place since 1969.... Canada is about the oldest country on the planet with such cultures and embraceing 200 cultures and 2 official languages..... our military has been accepted 4 over 20 years... we walk, fight and die 4 each other on the battlefields.... r kids matter folks.... Like Sidney Crosby says.... on stepping up so honestly and honourably.... I am Canadian... it's just who we are..... as kids we grew up accepting everybody.... as ... equal.

Proud day....


Canadian bishop explains attendance at installation of new openly gay military Chaplain General


by Peter Baklinski-Thu Oct 03, 2013 19:54 EST
OTTAWA, October 2, 2013 (LifeSiteNews.com) – Canadian Bishop Donald Thériault, Bishop of the Military Ordinariate of Canada, says that, whatever his personal reservations about his openly homosexual lifestyle, Brigadier General John Fletcher, the newly installed Chaplain General of the Canadian Armed Forces, was the right man for the job.

“He was the only one with the experience at all levels, and, as they say, crossing all the T’s, as he went along. And so there’s no question about his being the one person in the Canadian Forces in the Chaplaincy who was ready for that position,” said Thériault.









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AM ROMAN CATHOLIC.... in the summers a group of us travel around 2 the different Christian churces.... and praise our Lord and Saviour-  sharing our love of Christ with all our friends, community, our Canada... and have done this since the 80s..... we love our gay brothers and sisters... and like Pope Francis says...


If u have love in your hearts 4 each other on this planet and care for our poor, homeless, aged, helpless, our children and nurture each other.... who are we 2 judge - God loves us each and all...

and that... was his response....and also 2 respect other pure religions... true religions... Peace of Christ everyone... on this beautiful day... as we pray as friends and have since 2001 4 our Nato sons and daughters... and why many of us are actually on these sites...




THIS INCREDIBLE MAN OF GOD.... DR. S.M. LOCKERIDGE.... STOLE OUR HEARTS AND REFRESHES OUR SOULS...






THAT'S MY KING-...  Catholic Christian Symbol -IRNI (LATIN: IESVS·NAZARENVS·REX·IVDAEORVM TRANSLATES-  Jesus the Nazarene, King of the Jews)


....YOU CAN'T OUTLIVE HIM.....AND YOU CAN'T LIVE WITHOUT HIM...... Oh Praise the Lord... Our Lord and Saviour...Jesus Christ




Dr. S.M. Lockeridge -That's My King: Do you know him?   -  1976 sermon in Detroit





The Purpose (Get Up Weary Soldier)











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My father's family came 2 canada via Ireland and France -  they left Ireland in 1100s and journeyed 2 France and came 2 Canada as fishers in 1632- Lawn, Placentia Bay, Newfoundland... which later- much... became part of Canada.





Roman Catholic Church

 

Roman Catholic Church, see CATHOLICISM.

TRADITIONAL LATIN MASS- FEAST OF SACRED HEART





Traditional Latin Mass filmed on the Feast of the Sacred Heart in the small chapel of the International Seminary of Saint Cure d'Ars, Flavigny, France, in 1999. The seminary is the Society of Saint Pius X's second European seminary. Typically seminarians spend their first year of spiritually there before leaving for Ecône, Switzerland, to complete their training.

The film presents the ceremonies of the Missa Solemnis or Solemn High Mass with Gregorian chant and polyphonic motets, notably Casciolini's setting of Panis Angelicus. Some local customs take place during the Mass. For example, birettas are not worn and the Domini Non Sum Dignus is recited aloud by all present. More astute listeners might also notice the French pronunciation, which is perhaps not the ideal.

This film has been available on the Internet for quite some time encoded in a very low quality format. I have encoded the video here from an original source at the highest quality possible given the size restrictions at Youtube. Unfortunately this has resulted in a slightly blurred picture and mono sound rather than stereo. Apart from the addition of captions, the film remains unchanged.

COMMENT:  The treasure of the True Roman? Catholic Church.. not the Vatican 2 sect that we see now






APOSTLE'S CREED- FOUNDED ON EVERY CHRISTIAN FAITH



The Apostles Creed
A prayer of Faith in the teaching of Jesus and His Church.



I believe in God,
the Father Almighty,
Creator of Heaven and earth.

I believe in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord,
who was conceived by the Holy Spirit,
born of the Virgin Mary,
suffered under Pontius Pilate,
was crucified, died and was buried.
He descended to the dead.
On the third day, He rose again.
He ascended to Heaven and is seated at the right hand of the Father.
He will come again to judge the living and the dead.

I believe in the Holy Spirit,
the Holy Catholic Church,
the communion of saints,
the forgiveness of sins,
the resurrection of the body,
and life everlasting. Amen.







Schubert - Ave Maria (Opera)








A brief video depicting a portion of the Tridentine Latin Mass held at Our Lady of Assumption Church in Windsor, Ontario. From YouTube.





CATHOLIC / Catholicism

The Greek word katholikos, meaning "general" or "universal," refers most commonly to the CHRISTIANITY that is in communion with the pope and the Church of Rome, that is, the beliefs and practices of a Catholic Church. The modern ecumenical movement often refers to all Christians as sharing in the church's Catholicism, which is derived from the universal headship and reign of Christ. (Many Protestant denominations include the word "Catholic" in their creeds, referring thereby to the Christian Church as a whole.)




The term is not biblical: St Ignatius of Antioch (d about 110 AD) was the first person known to have referred to the "Catholic church." St Vincent of Lerins (5th century) later defined the Catholic faith as "that which has been believed everywhere, always, and by all." In the church's belief, God is the creator and father of all, and God the son (Christ) has a universal kingdom, the church. The earliest Christian churches, established amid great linguistic, cultural and ethnic diversity, regarded themselves as constituting one holy Catholic church of Christ.








PHOTO

Roman Catholic Mass at Igloolik

The mass among the Inuit retains elements of Inuit society and tradition (Corel Professional Photos).



The Roman Catholic Sacraments
 The Roman Catholic Church recognizes 7 religious acts, or sacraments: baptism, normally of infants; confirmation; the Eucharist (communion), celebrated centrally in the mass (public worship) and offered only to the baptized; confession, which involves the petitioner's penance and absolution by a priest; ordination (admission to one of 3 clerical ranks); marriage; and unction (anointing), normally administered only if the recipient is seriously ill or death is imminent.

Government of the church is by a hierarchy of bishops, priests and deacons under the authority of the pontiff (supreme priest), or pope, who is bishop of Rome and the head of the Catholic Church. The government of the church is located in the Vatican in Rome. Cardinals are archbishops or bishops appointed by the pope, and upon the death of a pope they are responsible for electing the next pope. Each bishop is the head of a diocese and is responsible, among other things, for ordaining new priests. Priests are responsible for their individual parishes and congregations. The doctrine of apostolic succession holds that the spiritual authority vested in the apostles by Christ has descended in unbroken succession to the present pope, bishops and priests, who possess this authority in varying degrees. All clergy must be male. The church has numerous CHRISTIAN RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES of both genders; members commit themselves to chastity, as do priests and bishops of the Western rite.

Since the early centuries of Christianity, Easter, which commemorates Christ's resurrection, has been the central feast of the liturgical calendar. Easter Sunday occurs following the first full moon after the vernal equinox. The holy week begins with Palm Sunday, one week before Easter Sunday, and is the anniversary of Jesus Christ's entry into Jerusalem. On the Thursday before Easter Sunday, Catholics commemorate the Last Supper followed by Good Friday, the day of the crucifixion. Over time, other seasonal and thematic feasts have been added; in contemporary Catholicism, Christmas (feast of the birth of Jesus) and Epiphany (feast of the early manifestations of Christ's divinity) have been highlighted along with Easter as the central feasts of the year. The Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated on the first Sunday after Christmas (see RELIGIOUS FESTIVALS).

In 2001, Statistics Canada reported that 12 936 910 Canadians (46%) identified themselves as Catholic, and Roman Catholics (the Western rite) represented 12 793 125 Canadians (43.2%). This survey also reported that almost 50% of Canada's Roman Catholics lived in Québec, where they accounted for 83% of the province's population, the highest proportion in Canada. (Census data must be treated with care; identification with the church does not necessarily imply active membership.)

Immigration of ethnic groups who are Roman Catholic has substantially contributed to the population in Canada and represented 39% of immigrants who came to Canada before 1961. This proportion increased to 43% of those who arrived between 1961 and 1970, however, this proportion dropped to 23% of immigrants who came to Canada between 1991 and 2001. Despite the number of Roman Catholic immigrants, and the fact that Roman Catholics remain the largest religious group in Canada, their numbers are declining.


Early History of the Roman Catholic Church
 Roman Catholicism came to what is now Canada with the first European explorers but was slow to establish itself. Whether Jacques CARTIER really was accompanied by chaplains in 1535, Catholicism did not take hold until Samuel de CHAMPLAIN persuaded the French church to act on his pro-settlement campaign. Circumstances favoured the missionary spirit that led to a Canadian Catholic Church; these included the interest of the papacy and the religious orders in the New World; the end of the religious wars in France; the reforms following the Council of Trent, which regenerated the French church; and the enthusiasm of the devout for missions abroad. Supported by noble benefactors and the French clergy, members of the RÉCOLLET Franciscan order established themselves in Québec in 1615, followed in 1625 by the Jesuits. The missionaries went home to France during the English occupation of 1629-32, but then returned in force (although, by order of Cardinal Richelieu, only the Jesuits were permitted to resume their work).

This young Canadian church was devoted almost entirely to evangelizing native peoples. Without neglecting the increasing number of settlers in NEW FRANCE, the JESUITS (and later the SULPICIANS) concentrated on living with the natives. The accounts of their labours, published in the JESUIT RELATIONS, helped them to hold the interest of Catholics in France. Generous donations funded the Jesuit college (1635); the SILLERY reserve (1637); the URSULINE Convent school (1639) run by MARIE DE L'INCARNATION; the HÔTEL-DIEU (1639); and VILLE-MARIE (1642), where the same institutions as those in Québec were established. The church supported the colony and was dominant even in politics, with the Jesuit superior often supplanting the governor.

Everything had changed by the 1650s. In 1648-50 the IROQUOIS destroyed HURONIA, and with it the Jesuits' most promising mission, STE-MARIE AMONG THE HURONS. Thereafter the Jesuits worked in scattered missions among the native peoples, but they had to devote increasing attention to the growing French population. The church received its first prelate (senior clergyman) in 1659. Though François de LAVAL was only vicar apostolic (ie, acting bishop where no hierarchy exists), he had sufficient jurisdiction to co-ordinate the establishment of the necessary institutions, including the SÉMINAIRE DE QUÉBEC. After New France's reorganization in 1663 as a royal colony, the church had to accept state intervention in joint questions (eg, establishment of parishes) and purely religious ones (eg, regulation of religious communities); in return, it could count on state support, which included money. The first diocese was established in Québec in 1674.

Gradually a distinctive Christianity developed. It was homogeneous, because Protestants were allowed into the colony only for brief visits (see HUGUENOTS). Most members of the population practised their faith, following the severe Catholicism developed primarily by Monseigneur de SAINT-VALLIER (see JANSENISM). The parish was the backbone of religious life and was financially administered by church wardens (the only elected officials in New France), who were usually influenced by the parish priest. In 1760 Canada had about 100 parishes, most of them run by diocesan clergy (84 members), of whom four-fifths were Canadian-born. The priests were assisted by 30 Sulpicians, 25 Jesuits and 24 Récollets, and over 200 nuns belonging to 6 communities who were responsible for educational and welfare activities. These communities of men and women could offer their services free because the king had granted them lands and financial support. This equilibrium, which characterized church-state relations from 1660 to 1760, was vulnerable to the changes in the balance between the forces that composed it.


The Church Under British Rule
 After the CONQUEST of 1759-60, the Catholic Church of Québec, already weakened by the effects of war, had also to deal with new British and Protestant masters (see PROTESTANTISM). The new authorities were expected to favour the Church of England (see ANGLICANISM) and attempt to convert their new Catholic subjects. The free exercise of the Catholic rite was guaranteed in the terms of the surrender; although the practices were only tolerated by the British, gradual freedom for Roman Catholics soon evolved. Nevertheless, the British interfered in the nomination of bishops and sometimes priests, and required the clergy to communicate certain government documents to their parishioners. The QUEBEC ACT of 1774 further guaranteed free exercise of Roman Catholicism and made it easier for Catholics to enter public office. To protect the newly won freedoms the bishops preached obedience (in varying degrees), led their people in opposition to the American invaders of 1775 and sang hymns of thanksgiving for British victories over the French in the AMERICAN REVOLUTION.

In other parts of present-day Canada, the French church had established missions in the Maritimes by the early 17th century and in Newfoundland by mid-century, but non-francophone Roman Catholics soon settled in these areas as well. Late in the 17th century IRISH Catholics began to arrive in Newfoundland, which was under Québec's jurisdiction until 1713; that year France ceded Newfoundland to Britain by the Treaty of UTRECHT, and ecclesiastical jurisdiction over the island passed to the vicar apostolic of London. In 1796 Newfoundland became a separate diocese under Bishop J.L. O'Donel.


Growth of the Church
 In the late 18th century many Scottish Roman Catholics settled on PEI and in Nova Scotia. For various personal, political and ecclesiastical reasons, however, the church there and in the other settled parts of present-day Canada, excepting Newfoundland, remained under the jurisdiction of the bishop of Québec until 1817; that year Nova Scotia was made a separate vicariate apostolic under Bishop Edmund Burke. Thereafter, new vicariates and dioceses appeared as settlement spread. The growth of the church in Anglophone Canada was spurred especially by the arrival in the 19th century of large numbers of Irish immigrants.

By the early 19th century, numerous Catholics in LOWER CANADA [Québec], especially the rising professional class, had distanced themselves from their church. Priests could not direct the populace as they had done before, and people began to neglect their religious practices. Church authorities thwarted efforts from secular denominations and won official recognition from the bishop to encourage education (including religious vocations), and revive the Catholic faith. But the 323 priests could not meet the needs of Québec's 500 000 inhabitants and could no longer count on the support of male religious communities, which (apart from the Sulpicians) had disappeared, or of female ones, which were in difficulty. The Parti PATRIOTE (founded 1826), which had mass support, proposed a liberal program that alarmed the clergy and began a Protestant-style proselytism, primarily around Montréal. The beleaguered bishop of Québec won the nomination of a Montréal auxiliary, Monseigneur Jean-Jacques LARTIGUE, who became bishop of Montréal in 1836. Lartigue condemned the REBELLIONS OF 1837 but, because of this support for the government, he temporarily alienated himself from his people.

The church was as badly shaken as the rest of society by the insurrection's aftereffects, but it was the first to recover. Under the dynamic new bishop of Montréal, Monseigneur Ignace BOURGET (installed in 1840), the clergy assumed increasing power. Bourget set out to "Christianize" and "regenerate" society, applying the ideas of his predecessor and using the populist sermons of the French Monseigneur Charles de Forbin-Janson (see EVANGELISM) to advantage. Bourget made full use of the religious press that was run by skilled laymen; he headed fund drives in the city and made begging trips to Europe. He worked for the people, allying his church with Rome on liturgy, theological studies and devotions. He supported campaigns for public morality (eg, TEMPERANCE campaigns and the fight against "evil" literature led by the Oeuvre des bons livres and the Cabinets de lecture paroissiaux), ran a social-assistance program for the poor, the sick, the orphaned and the handicapped, and preached social mutual assistance. The Montréal example was followed throughout Québec, though often to a lesser degree.

During the same period a sharp increase in religious vocations led to more and better-served parishes; the number of dioceses (10 in 1900) rose with the birthrate. The priests, now more numerous, often involved themselves in secular activities and seemed to run everything in Québec. Parishes periodically called in specialists (Jesuits, Oblates, Redemptorists, Dominicans and Franciscans) to preach at spiritual-renewal missions. The lay response seemed satisfactory: most people were now practising and an elite could even be called devoted.

Catholicism in both English and French Canada was aligned with international Catholicism, whose leadership was becoming progressively more defensive and fearful of post-revolutionary (American and French) Western society. During the early 19th century sectarian violence grew, as demonstrated by the brawling of Irish Catholics with Irish Protestants (see ORANGE ORDER) on several occasions in Upper Canada, and by the fighting involved in the so-called SHINERS' WAR of the 1840s. Catholic churchmen saw the social upheaval resulting from INDUSTRIALIZATION and URBANIZATION as the work of the devil, the French Revolution, FREEMASONRY, SOCIALISM and laissez-faire capitalism, and they urged the faithful to return to a stable Christian social order such as that prevailing in the Middle Ages.


The Catholic Church and the Schools
 One social area in which the church was always active was education. Catholic clergy throughout Canada were pioneers in early 19th- century education, establishing small local schools with teachers whose primary concern was the moral education of their charges. But toward mid-century the state began to provide schooling, thus moving into an area of social concern that had been a church responsibility for centuries. The first school Act (1841) of the PROVINCE OF CANADA was aimed at establishing a Christian but nondenominational school system. However, political realities ensured that Canada East (Québec) soon developed a dual confessional school system (Catholic and Protestant), whereas Canada West (Ontario) allowed the creation of a divided, state-supported school system, one section being nondenominational (public), the other confessional (SEPARATE SCHOOLS). The latter soon became largely Roman Catholic. In subsequent decades other provinces modelled their school systems on either the Québec or Ontario standards. As the state took over the schooling of Canadians, the confessional and Catholic schools obtained recognition in law.

During the second half of the 19th century, the Canadian Catholic hierarchy was determined to strengthen its Catholic schools, while public-school promoters argued that their "public" schools alone should enjoy the support of the state. There ensued lengthy and virulent controversies such as the NEW BRUNSWICK SCHOOL QUESTION of 1871, the MANITOBA SCHOOLS QUESTION of the 1890s and the NORTH-WEST SCHOOLS QUESTION at the turn of the century; the ONTARIO SCHOOLS QUESTION of 1912-27 was not only a fight between English Protestants and French Catholics, but also the result of a power struggle between French-Canadian and Irish-Canadian clerics within the church.

Other parts of Canada experienced similar quarrels as ethnic groups struggled for church control, but in the process some clerics learned to value diversity and to respect one another. Meanwhile, the church had founded numerous denominational institutions of higher learning. A number of Canadian UNIVERSITIES originated in this way, including theUNIVERSITY OF OTTAWA and the University of St Michael's College (Toronto). In most cases, their administration has passed gradually into secular hands.

As the church increased its influence on society, especially in French Canada, some clergy were tempted by politics. Imbued with ultramontane principles (see ULTRAMONTANISM), and fearing reforms being suggested by the Liberal Party, the Québec clergy accused that party's supporters of Catholic liberalism and denounced them at election time. In 1871 laymen supported by Bourget and Monseigneur Louis-François LAFLÈCHE published an election manifesto, the Programme catholique, which could have led to religious control of the provincial Conservative Party. The strong reaction of 3 bishops (Archbishop Elzéar-Alexandre TASCHEREAU, Monseigneur Charles LaRocque and Monseigneur Jean Langevin) and of politicians doomed the project and made public the split between moderate and intransigent ultramontanists ("Programmists").

In 1875 the groups united in a virulent denunciation of Catholic liberalism; in 1876 the election results in 2 provincial ridings were annulled because of "undue influence" by the clergy. Tension grew between church and state. Rome was consulted, and it sent an apostolic delegate, Monseigneur George Conroy, to re-establish harmony between the prelates and force them to declare that their condemnation of Catholic liberalism had not been directed against the Liberal Party. Clerical intervention in politics was thereafter more discreet.

During the latter 19th century Québec Catholicism discovered a missionary vocation that persists today. Nuns, priests and brothers first established missions in the rest of English Canada (including the present-day Prairie provinces and Northwest Territories) and the US, and then throughout the world (see also MISSIONS AND MISSIONARIES). Initially the Oblate missionaries from France, and Canadian clergy (mostly from Québec), founded, and strongly supported, missions, infirmaries and schools throughout the Prairies, BC and the North. The church was active in broader social concerns as well. Various 19th- century sociologists had recognized that new forms of society, with new needs, were being created by growing industrialization and urbanization. Protestants responded to the new "social question" with the SOCIAL GOSPEL movement.

By the 20th century, Québec Catholicism was preoccupied with social concerns. Aware of the problems created by the new technology, migration to the cities, and challenged by Pope Leo XIII's 1891 encyclical Rerum Novarum, the clergy developed a SOCIAL DOCTRINE to guide the new society. In Québec the Jesuits were particularly active through the École sociale populaire. Their Programme de restauration sociale (founded 1933) was the main inspiration for the political movements ACTION LIBÉRALE NATIONALE, BLOC POPULAIRE CANADIEN and, to a lesser degree, the UNION NATIONALE. They supported and directed Catholic trade unions formed from 1907 to 1920, credit unions, co-operatives and every kind of league, each of which had Roman Catholicism as its main characteristic.

Moreover, the church in Québec continued to control education. Secular activities left only about 45% of the clergy for parish duties. This disequilibrium posed few problems, since the province's clergy kept growing: 2091 in 1890, 3263 in 1920, 5000 in 1940 (a ratio of 567, 578 and 539 parishioners to each priest), exclusive of religious communities. The faithful were guided by their priests and in their religious practice emphasized parish missions, PILGRIMAGES and provincial, regional and local conferences. CATHOLIC ACTION helped to form "new" Catholics, whose methods disturbed traditionalists and sometimes led to conflict with clergy.

In Canadian Catholicism's commitment to sociopolitical activity, doctrine and moral teaching were stringent, and political and social involvement was uncompromising. The GREAT DEPRESSION of the 1930s again tested the readiness of Catholics to deal with major social problems. The hard times that gave birth to the CO-OPERATIVE COMMONWEALTH FEDERATION also saw the beginnings of the Catholic ANTIGONISH MOVEMENT. Many Catholic bishops condemned the CCF because of its socialist characteristics. True to its tradition the church was generally conservative, supporting the status quo and uneasy with change. WORLD WAR II brought with it an increasing awareness of the outside world among Canadian Catholics, and made the church appear to many Catholics to be too self-sufficient and complacent.

From 1850 to 1950 Catholicism became highly centralized and disciplined; while regular worship had become habitual for most Canadian Catholics, it had done so in the form of an increasing number of devotions set in a framework of intense and colourful piety. Devotion to the papacy had intensified after 1850, culminating in 1870 when the dogma of papal infallibility was defined, and successive Popes strongly encouraged special devotions, eg, to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, the Virgin Mary or Saint Joseph. The Catholic Church built upon centuries-old customs in nurturing various forms of piety, such as the Rosary, the scapular, adoration of the Blessed Sacrament, and the Forty Hours; pilgrimages became popular, both to shrines in Europe and the Holy Land and to various shrines in Canada. The crucifix adorned most Canadian Catholic homes, and wayside crosses and shrines were erected in massively Catholic areas. This intense piety would dissipate only after 1960.

Canadian Catholicism emerged from WWII as a church triumphant, as is suggested by the pageantry surrounding the 1947 Marian Congress in Ottawa and the installation ceremonies of Archbishop Paul-Émile LÉGER in Montréal in 1950. But the conservative administrations of Pope Pius XII and US President Eisenhower ended in the late 1950s, and the new liberal spirit emerging in the Western world began to affect the church in Anglophone Canada.

In Québec the changes were more extreme and jarring than they were elsewhere in Canada. WWII and the postwar period were a time of profound transformation for all Québec. Traditional values, even religious ones, were challenged by people wanting an expansion of missionary and community values, an increased lay role in the church and a warmer welcome for the positive values of the modern world. Some groups, eg, the Faculté des sciences sociales of UNIVERSITÉ LAVAL and the Commission sacerdotale d'études sociales, proposed modern solutions to social problems. They were in the forefront of opposition to the Duplessis government during the 1949 ASBESTOS STRIKE and inspired a collective pastoral letter of 1950 that expressed a new sensitivity to labour and to women.

Until 1959, however, Catholicism in Québec still wore the face of a conservative institution. Then the QUIET REVOLUTION of the 1960s forced the church to face some weaknesses. In just a few years, a wind of change produced both the declericalization of society (welfare, health and education passed from church to state control) and the secularization of institutions (eg, Catholic trade unions shed their confessionality to become the CONFEDERATION OF NATIONAL TRADE UNIONS), and associations, social clubs, universities and the state all adopted religious neutrality. At the same time, much of the population ceased attending worship services on Sunday, and there was a break with traditional morality, especially in sexual matters, a major exodus of members of the clergy and of religious orders, and a sharp drop in religious vocations. The hierarchy and the clergy as a whole seemed overwhelmed, and kept prudent silence.

The renewal of Catholicism after 1960 was also apparent in the church's new openness to other Christians and other religions. Catholics, Anglicans, LUTHERANS and other Protestants cooperated in certain missionary activities, in social justice endeavours and in local and regional pastoral initiatives.


The Church and Vatican II
 In 1959 Pope John XXIII announced the convening of an ecumenical council, and the Catholic faith throughout the world began to seek new forms of expression and witness. In Vatican Council II (1962-65) international Catholicism was caught up in a whirlwind of change and challenge that sought to revitalize all areas of Christian concern, from theology to political action, from spirituality to administration, from ecumenism to moral codes. A number of Canadians (eg, Cardinal Léger, theologian Bernard LONERGAN and humanitarian Jean VANIER) emerged as leaders of the aggiornamento (modernization movement) in various spheres of activity.

The church in Canada could no longer rely on social custom and constraint, as it had done in the past, to ensure church attendance or to influence government decision making. The effects were particularly marked in Québec, where the Quiet Revolution coincided with the church's international renewal. The loosening of these ties to society led to a decade or more of generalized confusion for many Canadian Catholics. Those who had attended mass every Sunday fearing the pain of sin learned the importance of personal responsibility in attendance at worship. Those who saw the cleric as "another Christ" discovered that he was also human. Those who were concerned over sexual sin as "the only sin" discovered the importance of loving God and one's neighbour. Churchmen learned to share some authority and Catholics were called upon to take some responsibility.

One sign of Catholic renewal was a softening of the teaching on marriage. Before 1960 a Roman Catholic needed special permission to marry a non-Catholic, and the non-Catholic partner was required to agree, in writing, that the couple's children would be educated in the Catholic faith. After Vatican II the church discovered the primacy of conscience and the real Christian faith of many non-Catholic Christians. This led to less stringent disciplinary dictums, many Catholic pastors now acknowledging that the children born of a mixed marriage are best raised in the church of the more committed Christian partner. The ecumenical campaign was strengthened in the process.

Indeed, Vatican II and the papal documents that followed in its wake constitute a milestone in the history of the Roman Catholic Church. New bridgeheads were established on the shores of a postmodern world whose links with the Christian church had been deteriorating since the 17th century. The fear of the world that characterized so much of previous spirituality became an open-hearted movement towards contemporary humanity. There was greater emphasis on the church as a people of God, and less on the dominant hierarchy; the laity made some advances (although in the early 1980s Canadian women were lobbying for access to the hierarchy through women's ordination); Protestants were promoted in the eyes of the Roman Catholic Church from the rank of heretics to that of "separated brethren"; the developing nations were given their due as an area of major concern to the church; the scarecrow of socialism became acceptable ideology under certain circumstances; and the treatment reserved for linguistic, cultural and political minorities was recognized as a valid test of the quality of governments.

Forms of worship changed as well after Vatican II, and many of the changes centered on the renewed emphasis on the people as the principal constituent of the church. Although communion remains the focal point of the mass, it is not linked as closely to individual confession as it formerly was. Priests now conduct mass facing the people, and the Latin of the Tridentine rite (the Latin Mass used until the introduction of the current Mass by Vatican Council II) has given way to vernacular languages. The practice of preaching and interpretation of scripture has been revived, and lay members of the congregation participate more fully in the various aspects of the worship service. There is also a resurgence of congregational singing and popular hymnology. At the same time, certain features of popular piety (eg, benedictions, stations of the cross) have virtually disappeared (see also CHARISMATIC RENEWAL).

In the wake of Vatican II the Canadian Catholic Church reassessed its attitude toward "other" linguistic and cultural groups. For instance, in early Ontario and English Canada the leadership of various Catholic churches had been largely French or French Canadian (there was no francophone bishop in the Maritimes before 1912). As an English-speaking (largely Irish) hierarchy came to the fore in these areas, ethnolinguistic polarization developed simultaneously in the ranks of the hierarchy and in Canada generally. The result was a Canadian Catholic Church that pretended to be united, but was in fact separated on English-French lines. While Rome preached bilingualism for the Canadian church, Canada's bishops indulged in their own brand of ethnocultural warfare.

The new spirit that prevailed after 1960 led Canada's Catholics to reassess their attitudes. At the centennial of CONFEDERATION (1967) as well as on several other occasions ranging from the adoption of Québec's charter of the French language (1977) to Canada's constitutional debate (to 1982), the bishops of Canada, Québec and Ontario issued a series of statements on the question of minority language rights and the status of French and English in Canada. For the first time in a century, the leaders of Canada's Catholic church were constructively coming to grips with an issue that had long divided them. The Canadian Catholic Church had practised bilingualism before Confederation, a policy that had served it well in evangelizing much of Canada, and it returned to this policy. Given the church's numbers and geographic distribution, the language policy contributed immensely to French-English understanding in Canada. Today Canada has 34 dioceses in the French sector, and 37 dioceses belonging to the English sector.

The turbulence of the 1960s and 1970s dramatically affected ecclesiastical institution: the network of parishioners and parishes remained virtually intact; the organization of religious communities of men and women rethought their objectives; confessional schools and some private colleges expanded; a new plan for parish action and greater lay participation in religious activities thrived. The episcopacy more frequently joined in ECUMENICAL SOCIAL ACTION, and took positions on such topics as BIRTH CONTROL and ABORTION (1977, 1981) and the economic crisis (1982). But it is perhaps at the level of popular religion that the continuity and the hopes are most visible, given (among other things) a new interest in scripture, the continued popularity of pilgrimage and the growth of charismatic religion, the multiplication of small groups interested in spirituality, and the emergence of Catholic interests. For more than 100 years Protestants had outnumbered Catholics in Canada; however, by 1971, for the first time since Confederation, Catholics outnumbered Protestants.

The rapidly changing Canadian church experienced a climactic event in September 1984 when Pope John Paul II visited Canada. This pontiff, who was seen by more people than all other popes combined, was the first reigning pope to set foot in Canada. He visited many regions, preaching a gospel of peace, reconciliation and disciplined belief. To fulfill a promise made to the residents of Fort Simpson, NWT, where he was unable to land because of fog, he returned in September 1987.

During the 1990s, the rejuvenated pride of Canada's aboriginal people led them to seek SELF-GOVERNMENT, better living conditions and more equitable treatment from the government of Canada, as well as public apologies and financial compensation from the institutions that had abused them in the past. A primary target of their grievances is RESIDENTIAL SCHOOLS, institutions that had been funded by the government of Canada and directed by Canada's leading Christian churches. An estimated one-third of Canada's aboriginal children spent some time in a residential school from the 1880s to the 1960s, a time when these schools were practically the only avenue available to aboriginal children seeking an education. Two-thirds of the residential schools were administered by the Catholic Church and entrusted to the Oblate Fathers. The latter have had to deal with allegations of physical, emotional or sexual abuse of resident children by some of the staff of the schools. Several cases are before the courts. Canada's bishops and the Oblate religious order, not to mention other churches, have responded by publicly expressing their regret for any wrongdoing and harm they may have caused the aboriginal people, and offering to participate personally and financially in the healing process of the victims. Yet compensation remains a thorny issue, given that the allegations pertain to events that would have occurred more than a half-century ago.

In the 1990s, a renewed Canadian Catholic Church faced more daunting challenges. The drop in church attendance, the widespread questioning of Catholic moral teachings, the dearth of new vocations to the priesthood and the religious life, and the waning of church influence in public life have caused many faithful to give serious thought to their faith. The simultaneous chaotic growth of NEW RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS, new age thinking, secular values and new fundamentalisms, movements that frequently challenge or deny the ordered world of traditional Catholicism, contribute to changes in attitudes. Yet some remember that the triumphant Catholic religious world that they grew up in was a temporary phase in Christian history. (See EVANGELICAL AND FUNDAMENTALIST MOVEMENTS.)

In 2004, the Catholic Conference of Bishops reported 80 active and 59 retired cardinals, archbishops and bishops in 5 681 parishes and missions in Canada. Nearly 6 000 diocesan priests, more than 3 500 religious order priests and approximately 2 300 religious brothers and sisters serve Catholics in Canada.

NIVE VOISINE and ROBERT CHOQUETTE


Eastern Rite Catholic Churches
 A small but important segment of Canada's Christian population belongs to the Eastern Catholic or Eastern Rite churches, which trace their theological, canonical and spiritual traditions to the early Christian culture of the Eastern Mediterranean world. As distinctive ecclesial entities, the Eastern Catholic churches emerged only after Christian unity had succumbed to a centuries-long process of estrangement, culminating in the defeat of the Greek city, Constantinople, by Western crusaders in 1204 and the establishment of a Latin patriarchate, with the tacit support of Pope Innocent III. With the exception of the Maronite Catholic Church and the Italo-Albanian Catholic Church, which claim always to have been in communion with the bishop of Rome, all Eastern Catholic churches originated from Western missionary efforts to return Eastern Christians to the immediate jurisdiction of the papacy, or, in the case of the Bulgarian Byzantine Catholic Church, from a spontaneous desire for union with Rome.

Throughout their history, Eastern Catholics have struggled to maintain their own traditions against the Latinization or absorption into the Latin (ie, Western or Roman) Church and have sometimes experienced hostility from their parent Eastern ORTHODOX Church and the Oriental Orthodox churches. The negative effects of Latinization are most evident in the collapse of traditional Eastern forms of monastic life, which have been supplanted by Western-style religious orders, and in the liturgy. For Eastern Christians in Canada (and the US), the prohibition of married parish clergy, dating from the 19th century, is perhaps the most painful reminder of Latinization.

Although in union with Rome, each Eastern Catholic church remains distinct, particularly in liturgical practices and devotional life. Eastern Catholics celebrate their faith in one of 5 different rites: the Alexandrian, Antiochene, Chaldean, Armenian and Byzantine rites. Historical circumstances, especially the persecution and suppression of Eastern Christians in the Ottoman and Russian empires and in the former Soviet Union, forged an unbreakable bond between religion and ethnicity that helped Eastern Christians to survive but now hinders future growth outside their traditional homelands. In keeping with the theological understanding of the church current at the time of their establishment, Eastern Catholic churches frequently were reduced to the status of a mere rite in the larger Roman Catholic Church. The Second Vatican Council and subsequent papal pronouncements have corrected this, so that today Eastern Catholic churches are treated as sister churches of the Roman Catholic Church.

In 1990 the Code of Canons of the Eastern churches was promulgated by Pope John Paul II. According to this document, Eastern Catholic churches may be grouped into 4 types:

1. patriarchal;

2. major archiepiscopal;

3. metropolitan; and

4. other churches.

A patriarch is elected during the periodic meetings of the synod of bishops of a particular church. After his election and enthronement, he requests communion from the Pope. A major archbishop is elected in the same manner as a patriarch, but before he is enthroned, his election must be confirmed by the Pope. The Pope names metropolitans (a bishop with authority over other bishops) after consulting a list of candidates presented by the bishops of a particular church.

The Maronite Catholic Church traces its origins to disciples of the fourth-century monk Saint Maron in Lebanon. By the eighth century this largely monastic-centered community elected a bishop as their head. During the twelfth century the Maronites came in contact with Latin Christianity thanks to the Crusaders, and in 1182 they formally confirmed their relations with Rome. Lebanon remains the home for most Maronite Catholics. In Canada, the bishop of the Eparchy of Saint-Maron de Montréal leads some 80 000 adherents in 14 parishes. The Italo-Albanian Catholic Church, dating from the 15th century, comprises 2 dioceses in southern Italy and the monastery of Santa Maria di Grottaferrata south of Rome.

In the wake of the Council of Florence in 1439, groups of Armenian, Coptic and Syrian Christians entered into short-lived unions with the Roman Catholic Church. These churches were revived in the 18th century: the Armenian Catholic Church in 1742, the Coptic Catholic Church in 1741, and the Syrian Catholic Church in 1782. A small apostolic exarchate of Armenian Catholics exists in Canada, and there are 8 Coptic Catholic parishes throughout the country. Syrian Catholics, centered in Lebanon, Syria and Iraq, currently have no official presence in Canada. Other Eastern Catholic churches include the Chaldeans (1553), the Syro-Malabars (1599), the Ethiopians (1626), the Melkites (1744), the Ukrainians (1595-1596), the Ruthenians or Rusyns (1646), the Romanians (1700), Byzantine Catholics of Krizevci in the former Yugoslavia (1777), the Bulgarians (1861), the Syro-Malankarans (1930), the Hungarians (1912), the Greeks (1911) and the Slovaks (1968).

Members of Christian Orthodox groups represented 1.6% of Canada's population in 2001; Statistics Canada reported that this was a 24% increase over 1991. Numerically significant in Canada are the Melkite, Slovak and Ukrainian Catholic churches.

The Greek-Melkite Catholic Christians are organized under the bishop of the Eparchy of Saint-Sauveur de Montréal (created in 1984) and number approximately 43 000 adherents across Canada. Slovak Catholics received their own diocese in 1980, when Pope John Paul II created the Eparchy of Saints Cyril and Methodius of Toronto, originally under the care of Bishop Michael Rusnak. There are 7 parishes for approximately 10 000 members in Canada.

The Ukrainian Catholic Church is the largest Eastern Rite Catholic church in Canada with roughly 150 200 faithful in more than 350 parishes. Brought by Ukrainian immigrants at the end of the 19th century, the church received its first bishop in 1912 when Pope Pius X appointed Nicetas Budka to the episcopate. The head of the Synod of Ukrainian Catholic Bishops is located in Winnipeg and he oversees the Canadian metropolitan province, consisting of 5 dioceses (eparchies): the metropolitan see of Winnipeg, and the eparchies of Edmonton, Toronto, Saskatoon and New Westminster. Religious orders contribute significantly to the spiritual life of Ukrainian Catholics, and include the Order of Saint Basil the Great or Basilian Fathers, Redemptorist Fathers, Studites, Basilian Sisters, Missionary Sisters of Christian Charity, Sisters Servants of Mary Immaculate, and Sisters of St Joseph.

Theological education of clergy and laity is assured by the church's own Holy Spirit Seminary in Ottawa. The Metropolitan Andrey Sheptyts-ky Institute of Eastern Christian Studies was established in 1992 as part of the Faculty of Theology of Saint Paul University in Ottawa and offers specialized studies in Eastern church history and theology. A scholarly journal, Logos, gives Ukrainian and other Eastern Catholics a strong voice in the academic world.

T. ALLAN SMITH

Authors contributing to this article:

Author T. ALLAN SMITH, NIVE VOISINE AND ROBERT CHOQUETTE


Suggested Reading
 Robert Choquette, "The Oblate Assault on Canada's Northwest" (1995); Charles H. Lippy et al, "Christianity Comes to the Americas, 1492-1776" (1992); Terrence Murphy et al, eds, "Creed and Culture: The Place of English-Speaking Catholics in Canadian Society, 1750-1930" (1993); R.G.Roberson, The Eastern Christian Churches: A Brief Survey (1993, 1999); L. Cross, Eastern Christianity: The Byzantine Tradition (1988).


Links to Other Sites
The Holy See
 The official website of the Holy See.

Seasons of New France
 A superbly illustrated site that explores the role of the Catholic church in the development of the religious, social, and economic institutions of New France. From the Musée de la civilisation and the Virtual Museum of Canada.

Musée Marguerite-Bourgeoys & Chapelle Notre-Dame-du-Bon Secours
 The website for the historical Notre-Dame-de-Bon-Secours Chapel and the Marguerite Bourgeoys Museum in Montreal. Crowning an ancient promontory above the Saint Lawrence River, once a favoured Amerindian campsite, a 300-year-old chapel, a museum of history and an archaeological site invite you to hear what they have to say about the people who founded Montreal.

Lac Ste Anne Pilgrimage
 The website for the annual Lac Ste Anne Pilgrimage, the largest annual Catholic gathering in western Canada. Located on the shores of Lac Ste Anne, the pilgrimage grounds has been declared a national historic site.

Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops
 The website for the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, the national assembly of the Bishops of Canada.

Church Affairs During the French Settlement at Placentia (1662 - 1714)
 An essay about early attempts to establish religous institutions under French colonial rule in the Placentia region. From the website "Roman Catholicism in Newfoundland and Labrador."

Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion
 A virtual community for the academic study of religion in Canada, with current news, job listings, feature articles, and information about scholarly publications in the field.

Quebec monk declared saint for his 'boundless charity'
 A 2010 CTV News story about the newly canonized St. André Bessette.

Tridentine Latin Mass
 A brief video depicting a portion of the Tridentine Latin Mass held at Our Lady of Assumption Church in Windsor, Ontario. From YouTube.

George Ryerson
 A biography of George Ryerson, militia officer, teacher, Methodist preacher, and Catholic Apostolic minister. From the Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online.



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LATIN PRAYERS



THE PRAYERS OF THE ROSARY
Sign of the Cross:

In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti. Amen

Apostles' Creed:

Credo in Deum Patrem omnipotentem, Creatorem caeli et terrae. Et in Iesum Christum, Filium eius unicum, Dominum nostrum, qui conceptus est de Spiritu Sancto, natus ex Maria Virgine, passus sub Pontio Pilato, crucifixus, mortuus, et sepultus, descendit ad infernos, tertia die resurrexit a mortuis, ascendit ad caelos, sedet ad dexteram Dei Patris omnipotentis, inde venturus est iudicare vivos et mortuos. Credo in Spiritum Sanctum, sanctam Ecclesiam catholicam, sanctorum communionem, remissionem peccatorum, carnis resurrectionem, vitam aeternam. Amen.

The Lord's Prayer:

PATER NOSTER, qui es in caelis, sanctificetur nomen tuum. Adveniat regnum tuum. Fiat voluntas tua, sicut in caelo et in terra. Panem nostrum quotidianum da nobis hodie, et dimitte nobis debita nostra sicut et nos dimittimus debitoribus nostris. Et ne nos inducas in tentationem, sed libera nos a malo. Amen.

The Hail Mary:

AVE MARIA, gratia plena, Dominus tecum. Benedicta tu in mulieribus, et benedictus fructus ventris tui, Iesus. Sancta Maria, Mater Dei, ora pro nobis peccatoribus, nunc, et in hora mortis nostrae. Amen.

Glory Be:

GLORIA PATRI, et Filio, et Spiritui Sancto. Sicut erat in principio, et nunc, et semper, et in saecula saeculorum. Amen.

Oratio Fatimae (The Fatima Prayer)

Domine Iesu, dimitte nobis debita nostra, salva nos ab igne inferiori, perduc in caelum omnes animas, praesertim eas, quae misericordiae tuae maxime indigent.

Hail, Holy Queen:

SALVE REGINA, Mater misericordiae. Vita, dulcedo, et spes nostra, salve. Ad te clamamus exsules filii Hevae. Ad te Suspiramus, gementes et flentes in hac lacrimarum valle. Eia ergo, Advocata nostra, illos tuos misericordes oculos ad nos converte. Et Iesum, benedictum fructum ventris tui, nobis post hoc exsilium ostende. O clemens, o pia, o dulcis Virgo Maria.

V. Ora pro nobis, Sancta Dei Genitrix.
R. Ut digni efficiamur promissionibus Christi.

ANGELUS (Latin)

V. Angelus Domini nuntiavit Mariae.
R. Et concepit de Spiritu Sancto.

Ave Maria, gratia plena; Dominus tecum: benedicta tu in mulieribus, et benedictus fructus ventris tui Iesus. * Sancta Maria, Mater Dei ora pro nobis peccatoribus, nunc et in hora mortis nostrae. Amen.

V. Ecce ancilla Domini,
R. Fiat mihi secundum verbum tuum.

Ave Maria, gratia plena; Dominus tecum: benedicta tu in mulieribus, et benedictus fructus ventris tui Iesus. * Sancta Maria, Mater Dei ora pro nobis peccatoribus, nunc et in hora mortis nostrae. Amen.

V. Et Verbum caro factum est,
R. Et habitavit in nobis.

Ave Maria, gratia plena; Dominus tecum: benedicta tu in mulieribus, et benedictus fructus ventris tui Iesus.* Sancta Maria, Mater Dei ora pro nobis peccatoribus, nunc et in hora mortis nostrae. Amen.

V. Ora pro nobis, sancta Dei Genetrix,
R. Ut digni efficiamur promissionibus Christi.

Oremus. Gratiam tuam, quaesumus, Domine, mentibus nostris infunde; ut qui, Angelo nuntiante, Christi Filii tui incarnationem cognovimus, per passionem eius et crucem ad resurrectionis gloriam perducamur. Per eumdem Christum Dominum nostrum. R. Amen.

ANGELUS (English)

V. The angel of the Lord declared unto Mary.
R. And she conceived of the Holy Spirit.

Hail Mary, full of grace; the Lord is with Thee: blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.* Holy Mary, Mother of God, prayer for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death.

V. Behold the handmaid of the Lord,
R. Be it done to me according to Thy word.

Hail Mary, full of grace; the Lord is with Thee: blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.* Holy Mary, Mother of God, prayer for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death.

V. And the Word was made flesh,
R. And dwelt among us.

Hail Mary, full of grace; the Lord is with Thee: blessed art thou among women, and blessed is the fruit of thy womb, Jesus.* Holy Mary, Mother of God, prayer for us sinners, now and at the hour of our death.

V. Pray for us, O holy Mother of God,
R. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.

Let us pray.
Pour forth, we beseech Thee, Lord, Thy grace into our hearts; that, as we have known the Incarnation of Christ, Thy Son, by the message of an angel, so by His Passion and Cross we may be brought to the glory of the Resurrection. Through the same Christ our Lord.
R. Amen.

PSALMUS 129: DE PROFUNDIS (Latin) —
to be said while processing to the refectory

De profundis clamavi ad te, Domine:
Domine, exaudi vocem meam:
Fiant aures tuae intendentes,
in vocem deprecationis meae.
Si iniquitates observaveris, Domine:
Domine, quis sustinebit?
Quia apud te propitiatio est:
et propter legem tuam sustinui te, Domine.
Sustinuit anima mea in verbo eius:
speravit anima mea in Domino.
A custodia matutina usque ad noctem:
speret Israel in Domino.
Quia apud Dominum misericordia:
et copiosa apud eum redemptio.
Et ipse redimet Israel,
ex omnibus iniquitatibus eius.
Gloria Patri, et Filio,
et Spiritui Sancto.
Sicut erat in principio, et nunc, et semper,
et in saecula saeculorum. Amen.

PSALM 129: DE PROFUNDIS (English) —
to be said while processing to the refectory

Out of the depths I have cried to Thee, O Lord: * Lord, hear my voice.
Let Thy ears be attentive * to the voice of my supplication.
If Thou, O Lord, wilt mark iniquities: * Lord, who shall stand it?
For with Thee there is merciful forgiveness: * and by reason of thy law, I have waited for Thee, O Lord.
My soul hath relied on His word, * my soul hath hoped in the Lord.
From the morning watch even until night, * let Israel hope in the Lord.
Because with the Lord there is mercy: and with him plentiful redemption.
And he shall redeem Israel * from all his iniquities.
Glory be to the Father and to the Son, * and to the Holy Spirit.
As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, * world without end. Amen.

here is the site 4 u





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Roman Catholic Church History

A Brief History of the Roman Catholic Denomination

By Mary Fairchild, About.com Guide




As the apostles of Jesus Christ spread the gospel, they provided the beginning structure for the early Christian Church. It is impossible to separate the initial stages of the Roman Catholic church from that of the early Christian church.

After Jesus died, Simon Peter, one of Jesus' disciples, became a strong leader in the Jewish Christian movement. Later James, most likely Jesus' brother, took over leadership. These followers of Christ viewed themselves as a reform movement within Judaism yet they continued to follow many of the Jewish laws.

At this time Saul, originally one of the strongest persecutors of the early Jewish Christians, had a blinding vision of Jesus Christ on the road to Damascus, and became a Christian. Adopting the name Paul, he became the greatest evangelist of the early Christian church. Paul's ministry, also called Pauline Christianity, was directed mainly to Gentiles rather than Jews. In subtle ways, the early church was already becoming divided.

Another belief system at this time was Gnostic Christianity, which taught that Jesus was a spirit being, sent by God to impart knowledge to humans so that they could escape the miseries of life on earth.

In addition to Gnostic, Jewish, and Pauline Christianity, there were already many other versions of Christianity being taught. After the fall of Jerusalem in 70 AD, the Jewish Christian movement was scattered. Pauline and Gnostic Christianity were left as the dominant groups.

The Roman Empire legally recognized Pauline Christianity as a valid religion in 313 AD. Later in that century, in 380 AD, Roman Catholicism became the official religion of the Roman Empire. During the following 1000 years, Catholics were the only people recognized as Christians.

In 1054 AD, a formal split occurred between the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. This division remains in effect today.

The next major division occurred in the 16th century with the Protestant Reformation.

Those who remained faithful to Roman Catholicism believed that the central regulation of doctrine by church leaders was necessary to prevent confusion and division within the church and corruption of its beliefs.

• Learn more about the History of the Catholic Church.

(Sources: ReligiousTolerance.org, ReligionFacts.com, AllRefer.com, and the Religious Movements Web site of the University of Virginia.)

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4 CATHOLIC KIDS- PRAY THE HOLY ROSARY







The Rosary is not only a mental prayer, but also a vocal prayer in which we meditate on the virtues of the Life, Death, Passion and Glory of Jesus Christ and His Blessed Mother, the Virgin Mary.

The rosary owes its origin to St. Dominic.

It is a humble prayer that many sinners owe their conversion to.

1. Hold the cross of the Rosary in your right hand and bless yourself with the Cross, saying, "In the Name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen."

2. Still holding the Cross, say, The "Apostles' Creed."

3. On the first large bead after the Cross, say the Our Father;
On the next three small beads, say the Hail Mary, for the virtues of Faith, Hope and Charity; after the third Hail Mary, say "Glory be to the Father, and to the Son and to the Holy Ghost. As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen."

4. Then announce the first mysteries.
Recite the "Our Father" on the large bead, followed by 10 "Hail Mary's" on the smaller beads, then say, the "Glory Be" for each decade of the Rosary. There are five decades for each Mystery.

After each Mystery, recite the "Fatima Ejaculation"
" O my Jesus, forgive us our sins, save us from the fires of Hell; lead all souls to Heaven especially those who are most in need of Thy Mercy."


Click here for a picture version of the Mysteries of the Rosary

The Joyful Mysteries:
(Said on Mondays and Saturdays, the Sundays of Advent,
and Sundays from Epiphany until Lent)

1. The Annunciation (Humility)
2. The Visitation (Fraternal Charity)
3. The Nativity (Love of God)
4. The Presentation (Spirit of sacrifice)
5. Finding in the Temple (Zeal)

The Luminous Mysteries (Mysteries of Light):
(Said on Thursdays)

1. The Baptism of the Lord (Sacrament of Baptism)
2. The Wedding of Cana (Fidelity)
3. The Proclamation of the Kingdom (Desire for Holiness)
4. The Transfiguration (Spiritual Courage)
5. The Institution of the Eucharist (Love of Our Eucharistic Lord)

The Sorrowful Mysteries:
(Said on Tuesdays, Fridays throughout the year;
and daily from Ash Wednesday until Easter Sunday)

1. Agony in the Garden (True Repentance)
2. Scourging at the Pillar (Mortification)
3. Crowning with Thorns (Moral Courage)
4. Carrying the Cross (Patience)
5. The Crucifixion (Final Perseverance)

The Glorious Mysteries:
(Said on Wednesdays and the Sundays from Easter until Advent)

1. The Resurrection (Faith)
2. The Ascension (Hope)
3. The Descent of the Holy Spirit (Zeal)
4. The Assumption (Happy Death)
5. The Coronation of B.V.M. (Love for Mary)


The Hail Holy Queen (said after the completion of the five mysteries)

Hail! Holy Queen, Mother of Mercy, our life, our sweetness and our Hope. To thee do we cry, poor banished children of Eve. To thee do we send up our sighs, mourning and weeping in this valley of tears. Turn then, O most gracious advocate, thine eyes of mercy toward us; and after this our exile, show unto us the blessed fruit of thy womb, Jesus. O clement! O loving! O sweet Virgin Mary!

Pray for us, O Holy Mother of God. That we may be made worthy of the promises of Christ.

Let Us Pray

O God, whose only begotten Son,
By His life, death and resurrection has purchased for us
The rewards of eternal life, grant, we beseech Thee, that
Meditating upon these mysteries in the most Holy Rosary of
The Blessed Virgin Mary, we may imitate what they contain and
Obtain what they promise: through the same Christ, our Lord.
Amen.

For the intentions of the Holy Father, recite one "Our Father," one "Hail Mary," and a "Glory Be."

In the name of The Father, and of The Son and of The Holy Ghost. Amen.





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CANADA TRANSLATION OF BIBLE- FIRST PEOPLES- 10,000 YEARS- ONE OF THEIR LANGUAGES


Bible translations into Inupiat


The complete Bible has been translated into three of the dialects of Inupiat language (Greenland, Labrador and Inuktitut (East Arctic)), the New Testament in two more and portions in another.

The Ethnologue lists five major Inuit dialects: Eastern Canadian, Western Canadian, North Alaskan, Northwest Alaskan and Greenlandic. Each of these dialects have at least a New Testament translated. Even though Inuit language is very spread out it is rather arbitrary to decide where to draw the lines of dialects. Labrador and East Arctic/Baffin Inuit are both the same dialect according to Ethnologue, but both have their own translation of the Bible in their own orthographies.




Labrador/Eastern Canadian (ike)[edit]

Benjamin Kohlmeister's harmony of the gospels was published in 1810 in London by W. McDowall. Kohlmeister also translated the entire gospel of John (mostly extracted from the harmony) and this was published later in 1810, also by W. McDowall, at the expense of the British and Foreign Bible Society. 1000 copies were published. This was very well received and Kohlmeister's translation of the other three gospels was published in 1813. C.F. Burghardt may have been involved in the 1813 publication.

A version of the Acts and Epistles prepared by the labour of the Moravian missionaries was published by the Society in 1819 and in 1826 a complete edition of the New Testament left the Society's press in London. In 1839 a revised edition of the Acts Epistles and book of Revelation was completed.

Psalms was published in 1826 and again in 1830, and Genesis in 1834. The complete New Testament was published again in 1840, followed by the Pentateuch which was published in London in 1847, Proverbs and the prophetical books were published in 1849.[1] The whole Old Testament was published before 1867.

A version of the gospels and Acts was printed in Stolpen by Gustav Winterib for the British and Foreign Bible Society in 1876.

Even though the whole Bible had been translated by 1867, it had never been published as a whole book. The Moravian Church in Newfoundland & Labrador and the Canadian Bible Society partnered together to revise the whole Bible in the Labrador dialect, and to publish it as one volume.[2] It was officially launched on January 20, 2009.


----------------



Christianity in Canada


 

Christianity, a major world religion, and the religion of some 80% of Canadians. Believers hold that the life, death and resurrection of Jesus in the first century AD, as presented in the Bible and in the Christian tradition, are central to their understanding of who they are and how they should live. As the Messiah, or the Christ (Gk christos, "the anointed one," or "the one chosen by God"), Jesus was to restore God's creation to the condition intended by its creator, and especially to restore order among God's chosen Jewish people, saving them from the deadly disorder into which sinful behaviour had brought them.
Jesus' first followers included some fishermen, a rich woman, a tax collector and a rabbinical student - a diverse group of enthusiasts who scandalized their fellow Jews and puzzled their Greek neighbours. They claimed that Jesus had accomplished his redemptive mission by submitting himself to execution as a state criminal and later rising from the dead. They argued that he was thus revealed to be both human and divine, and they invited all, not just Jews, to join them in living as members of the Church (Gk kuriakon, "that which belongs to the Lord").

(courtesy Maclean's) 



Influence in Secular and Spiritual Worlds
 Christianity gradually became interwoven with the histories of numerous nations, especially in Europe, and developed its own history, gaining and losing influence in both secular and spiritual worlds and surviving serious schisms within. Today the major divisions of Christianity, all well represented in Canada, are Roman CATHOLICISM (12.3 million adherents, 1991c), the Eastern ORTHODOX tradition (387 000 adherents) and Protestantism (9.8 million adherents). They have similar calendars of the church year, and all celebrate Christmas and Easter as the major feasts.

Sacraments (religious acts regarded as outward signs of spiritual grace) are practised by most groups, although most Protestants view only baptism and communion (Eucharist) as sacramental, whereas the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches include as sacraments baptism, confirmation (chrismation), Eucharist, penance, extreme unction, holy orders (ordination) and matrimony.

RELIGION is a response to ultimate questions, and it makes ultimate demands. What Christian in Canada can be said to be truly religious? Many Canadians are serious Christians, but although there is certainly a plurality of religious standpoints in modern Canada, there is no general acceptance of pluralism, even within the Christian community itself.

All Christians look to the Bible, but Christians live different lives in the light of the Gospel, and Canadian Christians are far from a consensus that all ways are legitimate and worthy. Nor do all Canadian Christians commit themselves to the same degree.

Until the mid-20th century, public rhetoric and fundamental laws took it for granted that Canada was a Christian country, but since the 1950s there has been a significant shift away from Christian language in public life to more general affirmations that Canada is a country that recognizes "the supremacy of God," as the Constitution Act 1982 puts it. Buddhists and other nontheists chafe at even this mild declaration. But such vague public theism may wither away by the end of the 20th century.


History in Canada
 Ville-Marie [Montréal], named in honour of Mary, the mother of Jesus, was founded in 1642 as a mission station by Roman Catholics caught up in the great 17th-century religious revival in France. The island on which the mission stood had been named Montréal for the Italian home of a cardinal who helped sponsor Cartier's explorations of 1535. (The origin of the name was later ascribed to "Mont Réal" - mountain of the king - in honour of the king of France.)

Although one should not romanticize such beginnings, it is true that many early settlers of NEW FRANCE were motivated in part by religious concerns. MARIE DE L'INCARNATION, the URSULINE nun who was a source of civil and spiritual strength to Québec 1639-72, understood herself as a founder of a "New Church" rather than of a "New France." Later in the 17th century the colony passed effectively into the hands of the king, officially "His Most Christian Majesty." In practice, royal direction proved less Christian than secular.


18th Century
 During the 18th century, both French and British governments took for granted the European tradition that political stability depends in part on the people's allegiance to one church, carefully established as an arm of the royal government. European kings were known as "vicars of Christ" long before the pope assumed that title, and many colonial administrators saw their own role in a religious light. But the notion of an "established church" was difficult to realize in Canada.

In the first place, the established churches themselves, Roman Catholic and then Church of England (see ANGLICANISM), lacked the financial and human resources to bind together a scattered pioneer society. Secondly, Catholic and Anglican bishops often had agendas differing from those of the politicians. Thirdly, people often turned for inspiration to religious leaders such as the mystical revivalist Henry ALLINE, who shunned political involvement. Fourthly, from the common people's personal experience came religious responses and convictions only incidentally related to the rubrics laid down by church leaders; eg, the Acadians' "white mass" (mass without a priest), the curiously pagan healing practices of Scottish Highland settlers, and the home devotions and supernatural tales of French Canadian peasants.

Finally, the consolidation of Canada under the British Crown, effected by the Treaty of Paris in 1763, created a political entity comprising a highly diverse collection of Christians. To the existing Catholic population of Lower Canada [Québec] were added English-speaking immigrants of all kinds: sundry Protestant dissenters from England, northern Europe and the US; Catholics and Protestants from Ireland; Catholics and PRESBYTERIANS from Scotland. Clergy trained in the home country often accompanied the immigrants and, like the priests of LC, fought to hang on to their flocks and their distinctive traditions.


Early 19th Century
 During the early 19th century, independent religious revivals in LC, the Maritimes and Upper Canada [Ontario] greatly strengthened the hands of those churches that were opposing the feeble efforts of the Anglican establishment to reproduce in Canada the hegemony it had enjoyed in Britain.


Mid-19th Century
 "By the middle of the 19th century, public Christianity" was taking shape. Universities, founded by particular churches in order to train indigenous clergy, received public support and began to admit students from all religious backgrounds, even while retaining their peculiar denominational leanings. There developed public school systems officially committed to producing "Christian citizens"; outside Québec they were Protestant for all practical purposes, and English-speaking Catholics struggled to support private schools with little help from government (see SEPARATE SCHOOLS).

There arose a public rhetoric that was often biblical (eg, Canada was called a "Dominion" because the term is found in Psalm 72:8) and laws pertaining to personal morality reflected popular Christian standards. The public calendar was marked by Christian holidays, particularly Christmas and Easter, and Sunday was traditionally a day of rest.

Within Québec the Catholic majority and Protestant minority came gradually to a workable living arrangement, perhaps because Catholic numbers were balanced by Protestant economic power. Elsewhere, mainstream Protestants such as Anglicans, METHODISTS, Presbyterians, BAPTISTS and CONGREGATIONALISTS came to an accommodation but frequently had acrimonious disputes with the Catholic minority.

George-Étienne CARTIER'S dream of a Canada stretching from sea to sea with provinces evenly balanced between Protestant and Catholic, as Upper and Lower Canada had been, foundered in the wave of westward migration from Protestant Ontario and the sad results of the RIEL rebellions. French Canadian society adopted a defensively nationalist outlook (see FRENCH CANADIAN NATIONALISM), turning inward to consolidate a Catholic homeland while leaving the rest of Canada to more Protestant imaginings.

By mid-19th century both Protestant and Catholic leaders began to realize that they faced a common adversary: cities were beginning to attract more and more Canadians. Small-town parish and congregational organization failed to sink roots in the modern city with its cosmopolitan morality, its anonymity, separation of home and workplace, specialization of tasks and complex economy.

In response all the churches began to stress the importance of a well-trained, professional clergy and to develop special programs for children - in Québec the clergy gradually replaced lay people teaching in the schools, and elsewhere the SUNDAY SCHOOL movement took hold. The local congregation or parish remained the fundamental unit of organization, but church newspapers and lay organizations based on particular occupational groups or age ranges went beyond the parish.

The YMCA, for example, transcended traditional Protestant church boundaries, and the ST-JEAN-BAPTISTE SOCIETY transcended traditional Catholic diocesan boundaries. Church buildings became imposing, permanent and expensive structures, funded largely by prosperous church members (see RELIGIOUS BUILDING). Working-class Canadians then came to be seen as the object of missionary activity, which was sometimes directed through downtown missions.


Urban Threat to Traditional Christian Ways
 The urban threat to traditional Christian ways brought Protestant and Catholic leaders together in support of the Lord's Day Act of 1906 (proclaimed 1907; see LORD'S DAY ALLIANCE OF CANADA). Respect for Sunday, the "Lord's Day," was hallowed by custom in rural society, but in urban society it could only be maintained by law.

Many of the furthest-reaching modifications to the Act, permitting more amusement and labour on Sunday, occurred during the 2 world wars. The changes were justified as necessary to the success of war efforts "to defend Christian civilization." Some responses to urbanization were even more defensive.

For example, the Catholic Church encouraged its people to shun the "Protestant" cities and Protestant New England in order to transform the wilderness of northern Québec into a Catholic, rural civilization. This "colonization movement" was more successful in novels such as Jean Rivard and Maria Chapdelaine than it was in practice.

But there were often positive and unexpected results from such defensive responses - eg, the efforts of many Christian temperance organizations, Protestant and Catholic, which culminated in Canada-wide PROHIBITION during WWI. After the war the legislation withered away, but meanwhile the Protestants of the WOMAN'S CHRISTIAN TEMPERANCE UNION formed the core of a movement that finally won the vote for women in 1918 (see WOMEN'S SUFFRAGE).

Protestants often began in the TEMPERANCE MOVEMENT, then moved on to broader concerns, ultimately forming part of the SOCIAL GOSPEL movement which spawned Protestant social activists ranging from those who stayed firmly within church structures - eg, Nellie MCCLUNG and novelist C.W. GORDON - to others - J.S. WOODSWORTH and T.C. DOUGLAS - who found the left-wing CO-OPERATIVE COMMONWEALTH FEDERATION less inhibiting.

Catholic social activists were more likely than their Protestant counterparts to stay within church-affiliated groups, such as the various CATHOLIC ACTION organizations and the ANTIGONISH MOVEMENT.


Mid-20th Century
 By mid-20th century Québec was so highly clericalized that nearly half its Catholic priests were engaged in full-time work outside the traditional parish: teaching, guiding Catholic labour unions (see CONFEDERATION OF NATIONAL TRADE UNIONS) and administering social services, etc. Catholic lay people had a great respect for the clergy but they were not puppets of the priesthood, as many Protestants thought.

The vitality of anticlerical jokes and songs, and the largely spontaneous generation of popular devotions such as a PILGRIMAGE to Brother André's shrine, demonstrated considerable independence from the hierarchy. The lay elites that formed in the worlds of politics and journalism included Henri BOURASSA, Maurice DUPLESSIS and André LAURENDEAU - Catholics who could scarcely be described as "priest-ridden."

The Christian communities of the early 20th century suffered many tensions. Among English-speaking Protestants, the disputes that arose over the value of the Bible as history and over church involvement in social action sometimes created new institutional divisions (eg, the Baptist schisms of the 1920s and the student divisions of the 1930s leading to the Student Christian Movement and Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship) and sometimes encouraged solutions that buried the disputes, unresolved, in silence. The Catholic consensus was rarely disturbed, but when it was, the results were briefly spectacular (eg, in the ostracism of Jean-Charles HARVEY).

Most Protestant tensions were obscured by a series of movements toward union, starting in the mid-19th century and climaxing in the 1925 foundation of the UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA. Jesus' call to unity (eg, in John 17:21), together with the practical advantages gained by pooling scarce resources in a vast land and together with the Canadian tradition that the churches have a public role, have made this trend toward unity a characteristic of Canadian church history.

It is remarkable that, although Canada's population is based on immigration from many different lands and cultures, almost two-thirds of its citizens claim to belong to 3 churches: Roman Catholic, United and Anglican. Nevertheless, diversity has thrived, largely as a result of the influx of numerous cultural groups and of ideas from outside Canada. Ukrainians, Romanians and others have brought various Orthodox Church traditions with them. MENNONITES and others with ANABAPTIST roots immigrated, as did LUTHERANS, chiefly from Europe; MORMONS came from the US.

JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES and SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTISTS are well established, and HOLINESS CHURCHES, such as the SALVATION ARMY, have a long history in this country. Transdenominational movements are active as well: in the early 20th century, PENTECOSTAL MOVEMENTS crossed Protestant denominational boundaries, and more recently CHARISMATIC RENEWAL has attracted both Protestants and Catholics. The CHRISTIAN CHURCH (DISCIPLES OF CHRIST), though considered a denomination, is committed to the ultimate unity of all Christians across denominational lines.


Post-WWII
 In the wake of WWII, church leaders were confident in the strength of the churches: attendance at weekly services was high, and the resources that once went into war could now be devoted to building the peace. But in the 1960s, church attendance and vocations to the ordained ministry fell off sharply, most dramatically in Québec, but elsewhere as well.


The 1970s
 In the 1970s it became apparent that conservative EVANGELICAL AND FUNDAMENTALIST CHURCHES, whose membership made up only a tiny slice of the population as a whole, were attracting as many Sunday worshippers as all the mainstream Protestant giants combined. The reason may lie in the nature of modern society in which, generally speaking, public life is secularized and religious life has become private.


Secularization
 To secularize is to treat something as belonging to the world, rather than to God, and to judge the worth of things according to their usefulness in human activity. For example, the Lord's Day Act is regarded as valuable because it gives workers a weekly rest and therefore increases productivity, not because it honours God; religious education is good because it produces well-behaved citizens, not because it cultivates a person's love of God.

Christians have frequently adopted purely secular values in the course of defending public Christianity. Virtually every contemporary Canadian author who writes about the awe and wonder experienced in human life has only scorn for modern churches - an indication, perhaps, that few Canadians expect to find that which is "holy" in the churches.

People have come to think of themselves as "real" or "themselves" only in private. Elsewhere they take on roles dictated by the institution that sustains them: eg, the same person will behave in markedly different ways in school, at work, at a political rally or in a sports arena. Only in the privacy of the home does the individual think that the real self emerges. Within this private segment of modern life religion has become lodged.

The movement of religion into the individual's private life helps to explain why religion in Canadian public life has gradually become secular or has simply eroded, why church attendance is seen to be less and less important, and why private religious practices (eg, watching evangelical TV programs, reading religious paperbacks or magazines) are more widespread than ever in Canadian life.

The few public issues seen to be clearly religious are closely tied to this private world of home and family: ABORTION, the use of alcoholic beverages, OBSCENITY, MARRIAGE AND DIVORCE, sex education, etc. People who tell the census taker that they are "Christian" generally want to be married and buried in a church setting, but they often feel no urgent need to take a larger part in the life of the institution with its tradition of public responsibility.


Changing Contours
 Nevertheless, Christianity remains, its contours constantly changing. The Bible is still the basic reference point for all Christians, though they often differ widely as to how it is to be understood. International Christianity continues to influence what happens in Canada: leaders of the World Council of Churches and the pope have visited Canada, and Canadians follow their doings through the secular media; most religious broadcasting in Canada originates in the US; candidates for the ministry often journey abroad for their theological education.

At the same time, Canadian scholars such as Northrop FRYE, Bernard LONERGAN and Wilfred Cantwell Smith are familiar in Christian circles around the world.

The local parish or congregation continues as the basic unit of Christian organization in modern Canada, but the variety of views within congregations is often as significant as the divisions between the denominations to which the congregations belong.

The more liberal Christians often find support in the activities of their denominational leaders, particularly those working in central offices, and tend to view the conservatives as too private; the more conservative Christians tend to view the liberals as too secular. Between these groups lies the broad "middle" of church membership, perhaps less intensely involved in the churches' institutional life, but providing stability at the centre.

Co-operation among the churches is channelled through several Canada-wide coalitions devoted to ECUMENICAL SOCIAL ACTION, but members of local congregations often feel alienated from these coalitions with their relatively progressive stances. In addition, public prayer meetings frequently bring Christians together during urban crusades led by travelling EVANGELISTS, or on special occasions such as Good Friday and Remembrance Day when ceremonies are held with local clerical leadership.

The Eucharist (Communion or Lord's Supper, the ritual sharing of bread and wine that commemorates Jesus' crucifixion) is seldom celebrated at such interdenominational gatherings, since the particular ways of celebrating that central and nearly universal rite remain closely linked with denominational identity. But modern Christians in Canada are much more likely than their ancestors were to take part in another denomination's Eucharist, drawn by friendship or marriage to members of that congregation, and there are few clergy who would deny them access.

Furthermore, these Christians are now much more likely to be favourably aware of the doctrines and practices of JUDAISM, ISLAM, HINDUISM, BUDDHISM, SIKHISM or the BAHA'I FAITH, and possibly even of NEW RELIGIOUS MOVEMENTS, as practised by other Canadians.


Private Nature of Religious Life
 To the extent that Canadian Christians have accepted the secularization of public life and the increasingly private nature of religious life, they have made a working accommodation to the peculiar nature of modern society. But the accommodation is inconsistent with a tradition whose favourite prayer says, "Thy kingdom come," and takes for granted that a kingdom is no merely private matter. It is also inconsistent with the fundamental nature of religion itself, which aspires to knit everything together into one ultimately meaningful pattern, and which demands that things be holy as well as useful.

Therefore it seems likely that Christianity will persist as a useful thing proper to the private lives of many Canadians, but challenged from time to time to be open to that which is holy and to be active in that which is public.

See also BIBLE SCHOOLS; CANADIAN COUNCIL OF CHURCHES EVANGELICAL FELLOWSHIP OF CANADA; CHRISTIAN RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES; CANADIAN BIBLE SOCIETY; CALVINISM; MILLENARIANISM; PACIFISM.

Author TOM FAULKNER


Suggested Reading
 Terrence Murphy, ed. A Concise History of Christianity in Canada (1996); J.W. Grant, The Church in the Canadian Era (1972); R.T. Handy, A History of the Churches in the United States and Canada (1977); J. Moir, The Church in the British Era (1972); Nive Voisine et al, Histoire de l'Église catholique au Québec (1608-1970) (1971); H. H. Walsh, The Church in the French Era (1966).


Links to Other Sites
Canadian Council of Churches
 The Canadian Council of Churches is the largest ecumenical body in Canada, representing churches of Anglican, Eastern and Oriental Orthodox, Protestant, and Roman Catholic traditions.

Lutheran Church Canada
 The official website of the Lutheran Church in Canada.

United Church of Canada
 The official web site of the United Church of Canada, the largest Protestant denomination in Canada.

 Anno Domini : Jesus Through the Centuries
 This beautifully illustrated Virtual Museum website focuses on the life and teachings of Jesus and his impact on Western culture.

The Bishop Who Ate His Boots
 This site profiles the exploits of Bishop Isaac O. Stringer and other missionaries who journeyed to the harsh regions of Canada’s Far North. From the Virtual Museum of Canada.

The Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada
 The website for the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada. Offers an overview of church doctrine and a selection of online documents about various religious issues.

Anglican Church of Canada
 The official website of the Anglican Church of Canada. Offers an overview of the General Synod of the Anglican Church of Canada, current news about church programs and more. Also provides access to full text articles from the “Anglican Journal.”

The History of King's County
 An online digitized copy of "The History of King's County." From the "Our Roots" website.

Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion
 A virtual community for the academic study of religion in Canada, with current news, job listings, feature articles, and information about scholarly publications in the field.

Christian pilgrims flock to Holy City for Good Friday
 Watch a video clip depicting throngs of Christian pilgrims walking the route tradition holds Jesus took to his crucifixion in Jerusalem's Old City on Good Friday. From YouTube.

Christian pilgrims flock to Holy City for Good Friday
 A brief video clip showing pilgrims taking the traditional Good Friday walk along the Via Dolorosa, or Way of Suffering, the route taken by Jesus as he carried the cross on which he was to be crucified by the Romans. From YouTube.

How the Easter Date is Determined
 A summary of various systems used to calculate the date for Easter and related annual Christian observances. From timeanddate.com.

The Significance Of Easter Lilies And Other Blooms
 See brief descriptions of the symbolic attributes of the Easter Lily and other popular flowering plants. From the Canada Floral Delivery website.

Season of Easter
 This article covers some of the key elements of the Season of Easter. From the website for St. Andrew's United Church in Toronto.

Easter
 A brief history of the Christian celebration of Easter from the Grace United Church, in Barrie, Ontario.

Edmonton Interfaith Centre for Education and Action
 The website for an Edmonton organization that works towards building bridges of understanding and respect between our diverse faith communities.



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THE OLD LATIN VERSION- THE BIBLE

The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia (1915)


1. The Motive of Translation
2. Multiplicity of Latin Translations in the 4th Century
3. The Latin Bible before Jerome
4. First Used in North Africa
5. Cyprian's Bible
6. Tertullian's Bible
7. Possible Eastern Origin of Old Latin
8. Classification of Old Latin Manuscripts
9. Individual Characteristics
10. Value of Old Latin for Textual Criticism 




1. The Motive of Translation

The claim of Christianity to be the one true religion has carried with it from the beginning the obligation to make its Holy Scriptures, containing the Divine message of salvation and life eternal, known to all mankind. Accordingly, wherever the first Christian evangelists carried the gospel beyond the limits of the Greek-speaking world, one of the first requirements of their work was to give the newly evangelized peoples the record of God's revelation of Himself in their mother tongue. It was through the Septuagint translation of the Old Testament that the great truths of revelation first became known to the Greek and Roman world. It is generally agreed that, as Christianity spread, the Syriac and the Latin versions were the first to be produced; and translations of the Gospels, and of other books of the Old and New Testament in Greek, were in all probability to be found in these languages before the close of the 2nd century.

2. Multiplicity of Latin Translations in the 4th Century

Of the earliest translators of the Bible into Latin no record has survived. Notwithstanding the careful investigations of scholars in recent years, there are still many questions relating to the origin of the Latin Bible to which only tentative and provisional answers can be given. It is therefore more convenient to begin a study of its history with Jerome toward the close of the 4th century and the commission entrusted to him by Pope Damasus to produce a standard Latin version, the execution of which gave to Christendom the Vulgate. The need for such a version was clamant. There existed by this time a multiplicity of translations differing from one another, and there was none possessed of commanding authority to which appeal might be made in case of necessity. It was the consideration of the chaotic condition of the existing translations, with their divergences and variations, which moved Damasus to commission Jerome to his task and Jerome to undertake it. We learn particulars from the letter of Jerome in 383 transmitting to his patron the first installment of his revision, the Gospels. "Thou compellest me," he writes, "to make a new work out of an old so that after so many copies of the Scriptures have been dispersed throughout the whole world I am as it were to occupy the post of arbiter, and seeing they differ from one another am to determine which of them are in agreement with the original Greek." Anticipating attacks from critics, he says, further: "If they maintain that confidence is to be reposed in the Latin exemplars, let them answer which, for there are almost as many copies of translations as manuscripts. But if the truth is to be sought from the majority, why not rather go back to the Greek original, and correct the blunders which have been made by incompetent translators, made worse rather than better by the presumption of unskillful correctors, and added to or altered by careless scribes?" Accordingly, he hands to the Pontiff the four Gospels to begin with after a careful comparison of old Greek manuscripts.

From Jerome's contemporary, Augustine, we obtain a similar picture. "Translators from Hebrew into Greek," he says (De Doctrina Christiana, ii.11), "can be numbered, but Latin translators by no means. For whenever, in the first ages of the faith, a Greek manuscript came into the hands of anyone who had also a little skill in both languages, he made bold to translate it forthwith." In the same context he mentions "an innumerable variety of Latin translators," "a crowd of translators." His advice to readers is to give a preference to the Itala, "which is more faithful in its renderings and more intelligible in its sense." What the Itala is, has been greatly discussed. Formerly it was taken to be a summary designation of all the versions before Jerome's time. But Professor Burkitt (Texts and Studies, IV) strongly urges the view that by this term Augustine designates Jerome's Vulgate, which he might quite well have known and preferred to any of the earlier translations. However this may be, whereas before Jerome there were those numerous translations, of which he and Augustine complain, after Jerome there is the one preeminent and commanding work, produced by him, which in course of time drove all others out of the field, the great Vulgate edition, as it came to be called, of the complete Latin Bible.


LITERATURE

Wordsworth and White, Old Latin Biblical Texts, 4 volumes; F.C. Burkitt, "The Old Latin and the Itala," Texts and Studies, IV; "Old Latin VSS" by H.A.A. Kennedy in Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible (five volumes); "Bibelübersetzungen, Lateinische" by Fritzsche-Nestle in PRE3; Introductions to Textual Criticism of the New Testament by Scrivener, Gregory, Nestle, and Lake.

Thomas Nicol









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JUDAISM  - CANADA

Judaism is the religion of the JEWS. Its origins were in ancient Israel, where the sacred text of the Hebrew Bible was understood to be God's revelation. The Bible's core is the Torah-the 5 books delivered by God to the Jewish people at Mount Sinai through their liberator, teacher and prophet Moses. The other sections of the Bible- the books of the prophets, histories and ethical works-are based on the centrality of the Torah.




View a brief video of the traditional shofar sounds and their names. From YouTube.


Video not working? Report a broken link.

 In the centuries following the destruction of the Temple in Jerusalem in 70 AD during the unsuccessful struggle for independence from the Roman Empire, the rabbis, the religious teachers of the Jews, compiled additional sacred texts-the Mishnah, and the Palestinian and Babylonian Talmuds. Later rabbis added more commentaries and legal codes. The rabbis taught that Mishnah and Talmud were "oral Torah"-given to Moses at Sinai, but only written down when their oral transmission was jeopardized by the destruction of the Temple.
The original "written Torah," the later texts of the "oral Torah," and other sacred writings served as "a portable homeland," a comprehensive text-based holy way of life which would preserve the Jewish people and their faith in their period of exile. The rabbi's role in this way of life was to be a legal scholar, whose knowledge of the law would guide daily life. Judaism was understood to be about much more than prayer, synagogue, fasts and festivals. The Judaism based on the written and oral Torah also concerned itself with family, business, civil and criminal law; the court system by which these were legislated and enforced; and the philosophies and world-views which gave meaning to the presence of the Jews in history. Thus Judaism developed as a framework for religion, society and culture.

Biblical Judaism developed as a challenge to traditional pagan beliefs and practices. Christianity and Islam self-consciously developed as successor religions to Judaism. While revering Judaism as the original revelation, they have also portrayed Judaism as the religion rejected by their later revelations. Bizarre, hostile portraits of Judaism have been accompanied by humiliation, expulsion and violence. The vilification of Judaism has been present in Canadian society, but has diminished as a broad consensus on religious tolerance and pluralism has become part of Canadian culture. The National Council of Christians and Jews provides a framework for promoting religious tolerance and Jewish-Christian dialogue. There are tentative movements towards a Jewish-Moslem dialogue. (See also ANTI-SEMITISM; PREJUDICE AND DISCRIMINATION.)

While the United States maintained the separation of church and state since its founding, Canada's founding arrangements recognized Catholic and Protestant group rights. Members of minority religions, however, could become full citizens. With the exception of the important area of education, where some provinces give full public support to confessionally based Christian schools systems while equivalent support is not available to non-Christian schools, religious minorities in Canada now enjoy the rights and privileges of all Canadians. This degree of equal status under the law is far beyond the experience of Jews before the 19th century.

The opportunity to participate as equals in an open society has been a challenge to Jews and Judaism. An open, competitive economy gave immigrants a chance to work their way out of poverty. It also encouraged deviation from ritual prohibitions which limit economic opportunity, such as the prohibition against working on Saturday and other Jewish holy days. Mandatory education placed Jewish children in public schools which intentionally aimed to transform them into good Canadians, where children of immigrants studied science, history and literature unknown to previous generations of Jews. Most who went on to higher education were impressed by the cosmopolitan culture of western intellectuals. As participants in a developing consumer society, Canadian Jews were encouraged to devote their leisure hours to shopping and entertainment rather than the pious communal activities mandated by their tradition. In response to these challenges, a few Jews took the route of an abrupt break with Judaism. The more common response was to combine some degree of fidelity to Judaism, the comfort of traditionally based family and communal ties, and the drive for acceptance and integration into Canadian society.


Demography
 Jews are mainly urban, concentrated in the 3 large metropolitan centres. The largest number are in Ontario, especially Toronto. Montréal, where the first Canadian SYNAGOGUE was established and which was for many years the largest Canadian Jewish community, remains a centre of Jewish life. Vancouver's Jewish population has been growing. In religious affiliation and practice, the Jewish community of Montréal is the most traditional, while that of Vancouver is the least.

The Canadian census counts Jews as both an "ethnic group" and a "religion." In the 1991 census, approximately 318 000 Canadians reported their religion as Jewish. Jewish organizations estimate a total Jewish population of about 356 000, including those who reported themselves on the 1996 census as Jews by ethnic group but with "no religion." Most of the minority who report themselves as belonging to the Jewish "ethnic group" but having "no religion" are not completely separated from religious knowledge and observance. Because of the close relationship between religion and other aspects of Jewish identity, they usually have some religious education, participate in events which blend religious observance with extended family ties, and observe, in their own ways, Jewish life-cycle events.


Branches of Judaism
 The branches of Judaism that have developed as a response to the new place of Jews in modern society are all represented in Canada. Orthodox Judaism, which maintains the divinely revealed character of both written and oral Torah, requires adherence to a highly distinctive way of life. Conservative Judaism, which developed in the United States at the Jewish Theological Seminary, interprets Torah in a more flexible way, allowing its adherents to share in Canadian social, cultural and educational institutions while professing complete continuity with an ever-evolving tradition. Reform Judaism, while respecting traditional sources of wisdom and inspiration, explicitly rejects the divine revelation of the oral law. Reform Jews observe practices such as the dietary laws or Sabbath restrictions only on an optional basis.

Early Jewish immigrants to Canada came mostly from places where only Orthodox Judaism was practised. Almost all Canadian synagogues whose origins go back to the turn of the century were founded as Orthodox. Holocaust survivors who immigrated to Canada included Hasidim, Orthodox Jews whose study of mystical texts is combined with a high degree of separation from outside cultural influence, who successfully established communities in Montréal and Toronto. North African Jews who immigrated in the 1950s established Orthodox synagogues, mainly in Montréal, with a few in Toronto. At present, Orthodox congregations remain numerous. The orientation of Canadian synagogues towards Conservative Judaism was gradual, often taking place in the second or third generation after immigration. Canadian Jews are now most likely to be affiliated with Conservative synagogues. The Reform movement was limited until the early 1950s to 3 congregations in Canada, but has also grown considerably and is well established as a major branch of Canadian Judaism. A few synagogues belonging to the smaller Reconstructionist movement, which is based on the concept of a Jewish religious civilization, are also found in Canada.


Institutions
 In their personal lives, Canadian Jews are less involved with the theological differences between the branches of Judaism than with the synagogues and schools which are the foundations on which the branches of Judaism rest. Synagogues are the property of the congregation. Congregations choose the branch of Judaism with which to affiliate and normally choose a rabbi from the rabbinical seminary of that branch. Affiliation fluctuates with the life cycle; it is most common when children are in primary school. In larger cities, congregations compete for members. The rabbi's role has become less legal and more pastoral, shaped by a population used to "shopping around," who are sometimes seeking spiritual bearings in a dangerous and complex world and sometimes seeking only a pleasant setting for life-cycle rituals and socially required infrequent appearances.




De Sola, Abraham
De Sola, Abraham
Abraham de Sola was an influential rabbi in Montréal in the 19th century (courtesy McGill University Archives). 
 Jewish schools rival synagogues as centres of religious activity. Almost all Jewish schools are under religious sponsorship; the large majority of Jewish children will receive at least a few years of Jewish education. Jewish schools are of 2 types-schools which meet for several hours a week outside of public school hours and schools which students attend in place of public schools. The schools which complement public school are almost always sponsored by congregations. In the past generation, private Jewish alternatives to public school, called "day schools," have grown considerably. Day schools follow a double curriculum, typically with half the day spent on the provincially mandated curriculum and half the day spent on Judaica. Judaica includes text study-Bible, and in some places Talmud-Hebrew language, Jewish history and religious practices. Orthodox Zionist, Orthodox non-Zionist, Conservative and Sephardic (teaching the religious and cultural traditions of the Jews from North Africa) day schools are found in both Montréal and Toronto; in Toronto, Reform and Labour Zionist day schools are also available; Montréal maintains a day school founded as a Yiddishist school, which teaches French, English, Hebrew and Yiddish. In smaller communities, such a broad choice is not available.
The Orthodox are represented in Jewish education in numbers far beyond their proportion in the community because Orthodox Jews require a detailed knowledge of ritual, place a stronger value on the study of Jewish texts, are more willing to sustain many years of private school tuition, and have less difficulty with separation from Canadian culture. On the other hand, Judaism is taught in the secular Zionist and Yiddishist schools. Students educated in these schools will be in settings where Judaism is practised, and Judaism, as a historic framework of Jewish life, is part of their cultural background.

After high school, there is considerable opportunity for part-time religious study; some continue full-time study of Talmud and other texts in Orthodox yeshivot. Jewish Studies has entered the university curriculum at McGill University, Concordia University, York University, the University of Toronto and the University of British Columbia.


Ritual Practices
 The branches of Judaism differ in their standards for distinctive ritual practices. Most Jews are selective in their practices, not strictly adhering to the standards of the branch with which they identify. Common practices are family seders on the first 2 nights of Passover, which commemorates the liberation from slavery in Egypt; synagogue attendance on the New Year (Rosh Hashanah) and Day of Atonement (Yom Kippur), along with fasting on the latter; lighting candles on Friday night before a family meal; and candle lighting on Hanukkah, which commemorates the successful Jewish revolt against the Seleucid Empire in the 2nd century BC.

Commonly observed life-cycle practices are ritual circumcision at 8 days, marking the entry into the covenant between Jews and God; celebration of a child's 13th birthday with a synagogue bar mitzvah for boys and bat mitzvah for girls; weddings with a rabbi officiating; and religious funerals followed by internment in a Jewish cemetery.

Even though traditional practices which impinge upon participation in Canadian life have been abandoned by most, Canada's Jews wish to invest their identity with transcendent meaning. Most contemporary Jewish practice stresses the importance of family and people. With an increasing number of Jews marrying spouses born outside the faith, study of Judaism for the purpose of conversion has become much more common; conversion involves joining family, community and people as well as the religion. A significant minority of Canadian Jews retain high levels of ritual practice out of choice, indicating the power of Judaism to answer questions of meaning and morality and to meet the needs for a supportive community and transcendent experiences.


Judaism and Peoplehood
 Attachment to the Jewish people has a religious dimension. In Judaism the people, as a group, carry the sacred message. The Holocaust and the establishment of the state of Israel are powerful symbols to Canadian Jews. A mythic Israel (not entirely identified with the political state) appears as a phoenix rising out of the ashes of Auschwitz, the symbol of ultimate evil. These events function as sacred stories, endowing Jewish peoplehood with transcendent meaning.


Judaism and Community
 Members of synagogues are almost always members of other Jewish organizations, some religious, some not. The Talmud says, "All Jews are responsible for each other." Even among Jews who are unaffiliated or who consider themselves secular, responsibility to the Jewish people is felt as a moral obligation.

The specifically religious institutions of Canadian Jews are integrated into the broader community. Congregations are members of the Canadian Jewish Congress and of the Jewish federations found in local communities across Canada. Jewish federations raise funds on behalf of homes for the aged, social work agencies and other Jewish social welfare services. These agencies work co-operatively with the religious institutions of Canadian Jews. Federations also raise funds for Jewish education, sometimes devoting a large part of the local budget to this responsibility.


Judaism and Zionism
 Just as peoplehood and religious commitment are intertwined, the Zionist movement has a religious dimension. Zionism had strongly secular beginnings, rejecting the teaching that only prayer and moral purification would lead to the end of Jewish exile. The movement, however, was supported by a great many Jews who followed traditional Jewish rituals and were members of synagogues. Zionism's pragmatic call for a place of refuge for persecuted Jews and the promise in the Torah that the Jews would be a free people in the land of Israel were powerful incentives. The Zionist movement had a strong popular following among Canadian Jews from the time of its organization in the late 19th century.

Currently, each branch of Judaism sponsors its own Zionist organization, which promotes ties to Israel within the branch and the interests of the branch within the Zionist movement. The Conservative and Reform Zionist organizations support the development of their movements in Israel by encouraging philanthropy, travel, study and aliyah (moving to Israel) within their own frameworks. Canadian Conservative and Reform Zionist organizations also join in the lobby to modify the imposition of Orthodox standards on the Israeli public and the considerable state support in Israel which is available only to Orthodox institutions. Orthodox Zionism has been particularly effective at creating links between Canadian Jews and Orthodox institutions in Israel. Orthodox Jews are more likely than other Canadian Jews to travel to Israel, send their children to study and to make aliyah themselves. A minority within Orthodox Judaism object to the national obligations which accompany Zionism; they work co-operatively with their counterparts-the non-Zionist Orthodox Jews who live in Israel.


Judaism and Social Movements
 Canadian Jews, like American Jews, have been well represented in social movements to ameliorate the suffering of the poor and oppressed. This activity can be seen as growing out of the Jewish religious heritage, with its prophetic vision of justice and universal peace.

In sum, the dynamics of Canadian Judaism lie in the tension between the commitment to participation in Canadian life and the commitment to retention of Jewish identity. The strategies used to balance these two commitments vary, leading to a community which is ideologically pluralistic but socially integrated. Canadian Jews interpret the heritage of Judaism in different ways, yet they share a common life and expect to share a common future.

See also JEWISH WRITING.

Author STUART SCHOENFELD


Suggested Reading
 Irving M. Abella, A Coat of Many Colours: Two Centuries of Jewish Life in Canada (1990); Jack Lightstone and Frederick B. Bird, Ritual and Ethnic Identity: a Comparative Study of the Social Meaning of Liturgy and Ritual in Synagogues (1995).


Links to Other Sites
Passover: A Montreal Haggadah Supplement
 A contemporary supplement to the age-old Haggadah, which recounts the story of the Exodus that is read during the Seder, the festive meal at the heart of the celebration of Passover. Explains the symbolism of the rituals and traditional foods consumed during the holiday. From the Canadian Jewish Federation.

Open Hearts - Closed Doors: The War Orphans Project
 This multimedia Virtual Museum website recounts the poignant stories of orphaned Jewish children from Europe who were admitted to Canada after surviving the Holocaust.

Toronto's First Synagogues
 A brief illustrated history of Toronto's first synagogues and leaders of the local Jewish community. From the Ontario Jewish Archives.

Too Close to Home
 An online learning guide that examines the history of anti-semitism and fascism in Canada during the 1930s and 1940s. Scroll down to the "Table of Contents" for key topics. From the Vancouver Holocaust Centre.

Jewish Holidays
 An illustrated guide to Jewish Holidays from the Chabad-Lubavitch Media Cente.

Temple and rare cache of sacred vessels from Biblical times discovered at Tel Motza
 An article about the discovery in Israel of rare evidence of the religious practices and rituals in the early days of the Kingdom of Judah. From the Israel Antiquities Authority.

Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion
 A virtual community for the academic study of religion in Canada, with current news, job listings, feature articles, and information about scholarly publications in the field.

Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre
 The Vancouver Holocaust Education Centre is a teaching museum and a leader in Holocaust education in British Columbia. See the menu on the left for information about current events, learning resources, and links to their outstanding virtual exhibits.

Canadian Centre for Diversity
 This site offers educational resources that focus on celebrating diversity and inclusion in Canadian society.

The Four Traditional Shofar Blasts
 View a brief video of the traditional shofar sounds and their names. From YouTube.

Passover: A time of learning through food
 An article about the eight-day celebration of Passover, which commemorates the time that Moses led the ancient Jews out of enslavement in Egypt. From The Calgary Journal.

Introduction to the Seder Plate
 An illustrated guide to preparing the items for the Seder plate, the centrepiece of the Passover table. From chabad.org.












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Leonard Cohen - Hallelujah



"Hallelujah"


I've heard there was a secret chord
 That David played, and it pleased the Lord
 But you don't really care for music, do you?
 It goes like this
 The fourth, the fifth
 The minor fall, the major lift
 The baffled king composing Hallelujah

 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah

 Your faith was strong but you needed proof
 You saw her bathing on the roof
 Her beauty in the moonlight overthrew you
 She tied you to a kitchen chair
 She broke your throne, and she cut your hair
 And from your lips she drew the Hallelujah

 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah

 Baby I have been here before
 I know this room, I've walked this floor
 I used to live alone before I knew you.
 I've seen your flag on the marble arch
 Love is not a victory march
 It's a cold and it's a broken Hallelujah

 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah

 There was a time when you let me know
 What's really going on below
 But now you never show it to me, do you?
 And remember when I moved in you
 The holy dove was moving too
 And every breath we drew was Hallelujah

 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah

 Maybe there’s a God above
 But all I’ve ever learned from love
 Was how to shoot at someone who outdrew you
 It’s not a cry you can hear at night
 It’s not somebody who has seen the light
 It’s a cold and it’s a broken Hallelujah

 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah

 You say I took the name in vain
 I don't even know the name
 But if I did, well, really, what's it to you?
 There's a blaze of light in every word
 It doesn't matter which you heard
 The holy or the broken Hallelujah

 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah

 I did my best, it wasn't much
 I couldn't feel, so I tried to touch
 I've told the truth, I didn't come to fool you
 And even though it all went wrong
 I'll stand before the Lord of Song
 With nothing on my tongue but Hallelujah

 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah, Hallelujah
 Hallelujah 









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Islam- CANADIAN ENCYCLOPEDIA

 

Islam is one of the major religions of the world and is estimated to be the fastest-growing religion in Canada and worldwide. Its 1.6 billion adherents are scattered throughout the globe, though concentrated most densely in South and Central Asia, the Middle East, and North and East Africa. The word "Islam" is derived from the Arabic root s-l-m, which carries a range of meanings including submission, obedience, surrender and peace. Followers of Islam, called Muslims (Moslems), believe that Islam is the religion of God (Allah), and was revealed to a succession of prophets including Abraham, Moses, Jesus and Muhammad for the guidance and benefit of humanity. Followers of earlier prophets are, therefore, considered to be believers in the same divine message as Muslims.


 View a television news story about the observance of Ramadan in Canada. From YouTube.


Video not working? Report a broken link.

 In ideal terms, to accept Islam is to choose to live life according to the revealed will of God, to surrender oneself to His mercy and judgement, and to strive to maintain righteousness in the world. Individual and communal obedience to the tenets of the faith, coupled with Islam's message of equality among people, is thought to facilitate the elimination of social discord. The teachings of Islam are grounded in the Book of Allah, the Qur'an (Koran), the scripture Muslims believe to have been revealed by God through the angel Gabriel, in Arabic, to the Prophet Muhammad between 610 (when he was 40 years old) and 632 AD (the year of his death). These teachings guide Muslims in their practices and beliefs of Islam.
Muslims are expected to live up to the demands of Shari'a, which refers to the rights and responsibilities expressed by an intricate legal-ethical system constructed and refined over the centuries. The Shari'a is derived primarily from the Qur'an and the example of the prophet Muhammad (known as the Sunna), and defines what is halal (permissible), and haram (prohibited). Although Islam has no clergy and no sacraments, it does require certain ritual practices in obedience to God's commandments. Often referred to as the "Pillars of Islam," there are 5 acts of worship incumbent on all believers: a testimony of faith, regular prayer, an annual charitable donation, fasting during the holy month of Ramadan, and a pilgrimage to the holy sites in Mecca (city in Saudi Arabia) once during a Muslim's lifetime. To avoid a spiritually empty formalism, and to facilitate the adherent's personal development, each act is to be approached with a conscious purification of intent meant to remind the worshipper of his or her relationship to God.


Acts of Worship
 The shahadah (affirmation of faith) is a succinct and comprehensive testimony of faith; it is to be affirmed by all Muslims and recited often, and its implications to be acted upon. The Arabic formula translates to "I bear witness that there is no god but God and that Muhammad is the messenger of God." It attests commitment to a strict monotheism, and specifies that the revelation to Muhammad is the final truth. It is whispered in the ear of the newborn to remind the child of a primordial covenant made by each individual with God, and in the ear of the deceased in preparation for the questioning of the grave.

Salat (ritual prayer) is prescribed for all believers 5 times a day (at dawn, at midday, in the afternoon, at dusk and in the evening). The prayers are performed while facing toward Mecca, and stamp daily life with a steadfast devotion to God. The prayers are to be preceded by a purity of heart, mind and body, and therefore ritual ablutions are required. The prayer involves liturgical recitations while standing, bowing and kneeling.

Zakat (alms-giving) is perceived as an act of purification. Repeated passages in the Qur'an indicate that prayer and almsgiving are irrevocably bound together as central acts of worship. One's commitment to God is incomplete without this fulfillment of responsibility toward the community. The annual payment or charity required by Shari'a (Islamic law) is assessed at 2.5% of one's total assets, and is to be given to the poor, orphans and widows, or charitable causes.

During sawm (fasting during the lunar month of Ramadan, 29-30 days) believers have a small meal before sunrise, then refrain from food, drink and sex from dawn to dusk. The month of Ramadan is the ninth month of the Islamic calendar. The celebration of the feast known as Eid-al-Fitr marks the end of Ramadan, and the first day of Shawwal, the tenth month of the Islamic calendar. (See RELIGIOUS FESTIVALS.) Fasting is a time of repentance and discipline; it binds the community together in a shared experience of deprivation as well as gratitude and celebration at the end of the day.

Hajj (the pilgrimage to Mecca), for believers who can afford it, is incumbent on believers at least once during their lifetime. It commemorates the memory of Abraham's unwavering obedience to God as demonstrated by his willingness, upon God's command, to sacrifice his son - widely considered by Muslim tradition to have been Ishmael, and not Isaac. The ceremony begins with the pilgrim's repentance to God, and seeking forgiveness from family and friends before the journey. The male pilgrim then dons two pieces of white cloth symbolizing the universal brotherhood (umma) of which he is a part, as well as the spiritual renewal to which he aspires. A female believer's pilgrimage is no different in terms of motives, intentions and significance, but the particular dress code is set aside in view of Islamic requirements of hijab (headscarf). The pilgrimage tracks and re-enacts prominent moments believed to have occurred in the life of Abraham and his family. In addition to abstention from worldly pleasures, the pilgrim participates in a meditation at Mount Arafat, a ritual pelting of the devil (symbolized by a post at the spot in which Satan is believed to have appeared to Abraham to dissuade him from carrying out his duty), the sacrificial offering of an animal (in commemoration of the Abrahamic sacrifice), the trimming or shaving of the hair on his or her head (again, in a spirit of sacrifice), walking between the mountains of Safa and Marwa (reflecting Hagar's desperate journey in the desert in search of water for Ishmael before a well sprung open for her), and circumambulation of the Kaaba, the central building built by Abraham and Ishmael in devotion to their Lord, which now forms the centrepiece of the Grand Mosque in Mecca.

The Islamic house of worship, the mosque, is often characterized by a large, open interior and a dome-shaped roof with a minaret or tower from which the muezzin (Muslim official or crier) calls the faithful to worship. Mosques are nondenominational; all Muslims are welcome. Prayer services are conducted daily from the mihrab, a semicircular niche in the wall facing Mecca, but on Fridays, preceding the midday prayers, the Imam or Khateeb delivers a sermon from a pulpit known as a minbar as the congregation sits on carpets in the centre of the building, facing him. The first Canadian mosque was the Al Rashid Mosque, built in Edmonton in 1938, now relocated to the historic Fort Edmonton Park. Other mosques and centres were not organized in major urban areas until the 1950s and 1970s. Mosques are generally managed by the congregation. (See RELIGIOUS BUILDING.)


The Creed of Islam
 The essential credal statement of Islam as it appears in the Qur'an specifies belief in God, his messengers, his books, the angels and the Last Day. God represents the Lord of the world and is revealed through nature and history. Humanity was provided guidance through prophets and messengers beginning with Adam and ending with Muhammad. Certain messengers were entrusted with a scripture (eg, Moses with the Torah, Jesus with the Gospel). To prevent changes to the scripture, Muslims believe the Qur'an, God's revelation to Muhammad, must be affirmed and preserved - not only recorded on paper, but also memorized in its entirety by believers. The Qur'an teaches that God created the angels out of light, and that some have specific tasks. For example, the archangel Gabriel brings revelation, while Izrail is the "angel of death," and Israfil sounds the horn announcing the Last Day and the Resurrection. Muslims believe that on the Day of Judgment all humans will give account for every intent, thought and act. The righteous will be rewarded in Paradise (or, the Garden) while the sinful will be consigned to the Fire.


Islam in Canada
 The Islamic mosaic within Canada is the consequence of a variety of factors including changes in Canadian IMMIGRATION policies, as well as economic and political upheavals affecting Muslims in other countries. The 1871 census recorded only 13 Muslims in Canada. Their number increased to 645 by 1931, mostly due to immigrants from Lebanon, Albania, Syria, Yugoslavia and Turkey. The influx of immigrants after the Second World War raised the number to 33 370 by 1971. The majority of this wave comprised highly educated, westernized professionals who came to settle in Canada to share in its economic prosperity. They were mostly from Lebanon, Syria, Indonesia, Morocco, Palestine, Egypt, Iraq and the Indian-Pakistani-Bangladeshi subcontinent. From 1966 to 1970, thousands of unskilled labourers of Indo-Pakistani background immigrated to escape discrimination in East Africa and Britain. More recently, Muslim immigrants have included unskilled workers from southern Lebanon, Somalia and the Balkans fleeing their war-torn countries, as well as political REFUGEES from Iran and Afghanistan.

Early Muslim settlements were concentrated in Ontario and Alberta, with a shift into Québec in the 1930s. Most Muslims arriving in Canada since the 1960s settled in urban areas, with more than 70% now concentrated in the Toronto, Montréal, and Vancouver metropolitan areas; the number approaches 80% if Edmonton and Calgary are included. The national 2001 census identified Muslims as the fastest growing religious group in Canada with 579 640 Muslims throughout the country - approximately 2% of the total population - belonging to a wide range of ethnic cultures and speaking a variety of languages. In 2001, approximately half of all Canadian Muslims had immigrated in the preceding decade, while a comparable number were either Canadian-born, or had immigrated previously. The 2006 census did not tabulate figures based on religious denomination, but it is believed that these trends have continued.


Islamic Denominations
 A large majority of Muslims, both in Canada and globally, adhere to Sunni Islam, while the remainder follow Shi'i Islam. The differences between these two denominations reflect early religious-political divisions in Islamic history. While both are guided by the Qur'an and the teachings of Muhammad, Shi'i Muslims believe that Ali, the Prophet's cousin and son-in-law, was designated as his immediate political and spiritual successor, and that this authoritative leadership (known as the Imamate) was restricted thereafter to the lineage of Ali. Both groups affirm that the revelation through prophets has ceased; however Shi'is accept Imams as divinely ordained leaders capable of providing a continuing source of Muslim doctrine since the death of the Prophet.

There are other divisions within these denominations. Twelver Shi'is, commonly referred to as "Twelvers," believe that the Imamate culminated in the twelfth Imam, who disappeared in 874 AD, while Isma'ilis believe in a succession of Imams continuing through his lineage to the present day under the leadership of the Aga Khan. Other important Islamic groups in Canada include Sufis (followers of the mystic traditions of both Sunnism and Shi'ism), as well as sects that are deemed non-Islamic by the majority, such as the Druze, the Alawis and the Qadyanis.

For Sunni Muslims, Canada offered a special challenge since this group lacked structured leadership. Efforts to organize have historically occurred primarily at the local level; however, there have been important efforts at the national and continental levels. The Federation of Islamic Associations in the US and Canada was formed in the 1950s by second-generation Muslims of ARAB background. In 1962, the Muslim Student Association (MSA) was formed to instil Islamic consciousness in Muslim students in North America. Some MSA alumni in Canada formed the independent Council of Muslim Communities of Canada (CMCC) in 1972; however, the council disbanded within a decade. The council attempted to integrate Muslims of other ethnic and linguistic groups. Its objectives evolved, and the council formed links between Canadian Muslims and other national and international groups to organize youth camps, provide scholarships for Muslims, and publish textbooks and books on Islam. Today, a comparable role is occupied by the Islamic Society of North America (ISNA). As the Muslim community has diversified, so have the functions and types of organizations representing it. In Canada, political advocacy groups have grown and developed within the Muslim community to support its members and to safeguard the rights of Muslim citizens. Among such groups are the Canadian Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-CAN), the Canadian Islamic Congress (CIC), the Canadian Council of Muslim Women (CCMW) and the philanthropic Olive Tree Foundation. The Muslim Canadian Congress (MCC) focuses on advancing discussions and interpretations of Islam that differ from mainstream Muslim religious beliefs.


Challenges
 Immigrants have often found it difficult to incorporate Islamic practices into their lives because of the pressures of an environment that is traditionally Christian and at variance with familiar customs. There are, for example, no public reminders for the daily prayers, and special arrangements often have to be negotiated with employers or schools to accommodate prayer times and religious holidays. Some modern Muslims question the need to pay the zakat since the Canadian government cares for the disadvantaged, and the Islamic prohibition of usury raises concerns regarding transactions involving interest payments, which are a routine component of Canadian economic life. Islamic dietary restrictions concerning the way meat is slaughtered and against pork and alcohol are often seen as impediments to social integration.

A strain between Muslim communities and the larger Canadian society regarding male-female relationships has sometimes been evident since traditional Muslim cultures often expect particular gender roles that are not found in modern Western societies. Religious groups including Muslims argued that the secular legal system did not adequately include the laws and traditions of their faith. In 2003 and 2005, public debates were held in Ontario regarding a proposal from a Muslim organization to facilitate Muslim access to private arbitration based on Shari'a beliefs. Women's groups, legal organizations and the Muslim Canada Congress were alarmed at the implications this could carry for vulnerable members of the community. Ontario's Arbitration Act allowed "faith-based arbitration" when it was agreed to by all parties involved in the arbitration, which allowed people to choose to settle civil disputes such as divorce, custody, and inheritance outside the formal court system.

Concerns were raised that faith-based arbitration would not adequately or fairly support women, may not fully comply with international human rights standards, and did not include different interpretations of religious law, and it was questioned whether the rulings could be applied under Canadian law. The controversy motivated Premier Dalton McGuinty to appoint Marion Boyd (former Attorney-General and former Minister Responsible for Women's Issues) to study the risks and suggest recommendations. Boyd recommended that private arbitration under religious law be continued, however she also recommended safeguards to protect vulnerable parties. A public backlash against the recommendations prompted the premier to ban all religious arbitration.

In Québec in 2007, debates over accommodating immigrants and what constituted "reasonable accommodation" were sparked when the small town of Hérouxville passed a code of conduct for immigrants or "new arrivals" that included a rule that prohibited stoning women. The town's exaggerated code of conduct for immigrants and the description of "dominant norms" for people living in the rural community were revised after Muslim women from the Canadian Islamic Congress met with representatives from the town council. Conflicts between religious requirements and Québec's secular society prompted Premier Jean Charest to appoint prominent academics Gérard Bouchard and Charles Taylor to study the concept and limits of "reasonable accommodation" in Canadian society. Bouchard and Taylor focused on religion and the role of interculturalism in Québec (as opposed to the multiculturalism identified within English Canada), and the increasingly diverse identity of Québec society.


Islam in Canada Today
 Debate about Islam, Canadian multiculturalism (or interculturalism), and diversity have been complicated by global politics and events, in particular the attacks on the United States on 11 Sept 2001, and the subsequent wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. The global situation has fomented distrust between Muslim communities and government agencies. Related to this climate, Statistics Canada reported that in 2006, among the 220 hate crimes motivated by religion, 21% of offences were against Muslims (Islam).

Islamic community organizations have made efforts to reach out to other religious and community groups. During the 1980s, Islam West Associates promoted mutual understanding between Muslims in Canada and all other Canadians. More recently, efforts have been made to acquaint Canadian society with the Islamic contribution to culture, science and art through exhibits at some of the nation's largest museums. A permanent collection of art and artifacts from the Muslim world will be housed at The Aga Khan Museum, slated to open in 2013 in Toronto. In 2007, the CBC premiered Little Mosque on the Prairie, a sitcom depicting the travails of a small Muslim community in rural Saskatchewan. An earlier documentary (Me and the Mosque) directed by Little Mosque creator Zarqa Nawaz illustrated the role of women in Canadian mosques, and described the emerging awareness among second-generation Muslim Canadians of the need to blend their religious heritage and Canadian sensibilities.

Author YVONNE Y. HADDAD Revised: JUNAID QUADRI


Suggested Reading
 Michael A. Koszegi and J. Gordon Melton, eds, Islam in North America (1992); S.A. Nigosian, Modes of Worship (1981); E.H. Waugh, B. Abu-Laban and R.B. Qureshi, eds, The Muslim Community in North America (1983); Y.Y. Haddad and J.I. Smith, eds, Muslim Communities in North America (1994); B. Abu Laban, "The Muslim Community of Canada," in Muslim Minorities in the West, ed. S.Z. Abedin and Z. Sardar (1995); E.H. Waugh, et al, ed, Muslim Families in North America (1991); A.F. Yousif, Muslims in Canada: A Question of Identity (2008); Natasha Bakht, ed, Belonging and Banishment: Being Muslim in Canada (2008); R.B. McGown, Muslims in the Diaspora (1999); S.H. Razack, Casting Out: The Eviction of Muslims from Western Law and Politics (2008); J. Zine, Canadian Islamic Schools (2008).


Links to Other Sites
INDEPTH: ISLAM
 This CBC feature report provides an introduction to Islamic religion, Ramadan, Shariah law in Canada, the Shia and Sunni believer groups, and much more.

The Islamic World to 1600 Tutorial
 The Islamic World to 1600 Tutorial is a multimedia introduction to the first millennium of Islamic history. Focuses on Muslim beliefs and practices, the history of the Islamic world from the 7th to the 17th centuries, and more. From the Applied History Research Group at the University of Calgary.

Muslims
 A profile of the Muslim community in Canada. Part of the "Diversity Watch" website from Ryerson University.

Canadian Corporation for Studies in Religion
 A virtual community for the academic study of religion in Canada, with current news, job listings, feature articles, and information about scholarly publications in the field.

Canadian Centre for Diversity
 This site offers educational resources that focus on celebrating diversity and inclusion in Canadian society.

The West Asian Community in Canada
 A profile of Canadians of West Asian origin from Statistics Canada.

Ramadan Celebration in Canada
 View a television news story about the observance of Ramadan in Canada. From YouTube.

The Islamic Society of British Columbia and Masjid Al-Hidayah & Islamic Cultural Centre
 The website for the Islamic Society of British Columbia and Masjid Al-Hidayah & Islamic Cultural Centre.

 An Intellectual History of Islam in India
 Read the full text of Aziz Ahmad's scholarly work "An Intellectual History of Islam in India." From the questia.com website.



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THANKS RUSSIA 4 THE SHARE.... and respecting our troops like we respect yours :-)

????????? ?????? ? ??????????? Canadian troops in Afghanistan  (Russian and Canadian translat.)
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WOUNDED WARRIORS- THE SOUTH POLE CHALLENGE- 2013



WWTW South Pole Allied Challenge Launch 2013



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WOUNDED WARRIORS- THE SOUTH POLE CHALLENGE- 2013



WWTW South Pole Allied Challenge Launch 2013

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