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Faith and the Fear of Death
by
Jong, Jonathan
in
Candidates
/ Clergy
/ Death & dying
/ God
/ Graves
/ Middle Ages
/ Ordination
/ Religious beliefs
/ Sanctuaries
/ Soup kitchens
/ Stories of Faith & Science I
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
Faith and the Fear of Death
by
Jong, Jonathan
in
Candidates
/ Clergy
/ Death & dying
/ God
/ Graves
/ Middle Ages
/ Ordination
/ Religious beliefs
/ Sanctuaries
/ Soup kitchens
/ Stories of Faith & Science I
2018
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Journal Article
Faith and the Fear of Death
2018
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Overview
The making of a priest takes many years. A calling must be discerned, not only by the individual but by the Church also, who will test him repeatedly by observation and interview. The candidate must be trained and formed in sanctuaries and seminaries and soup kitchens. He must be examined and found — in the words of the ordinal — “to be of godly life and sound learning.” Some of us wonder how we got through; many of us wonder how other people did too. At the end of this process, the act of ordination itself takes no time at all. In the parish church of a medieval Oxford village one mild English summer’s afternoon a few months before my thirtieth birthday, the bishop, his hands like a veil upon my head, his voice grave and tender in equal measure, invokes the Holy Spirit to come down upon this servant of God for the office and work of a priest in the Church. Done. Priest made.
Publisher
Center for the Study of Technology and Society in Washington, D.C,Ethics And Public Policy Center
Subject
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