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The primary identity of "brother" and its relationship to ministry an ethnographic study of Capuchin formation in Central America /Webber, Lawrence January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (D. Min.)--Catholic Theological Union at Chicago, 2003. / Vita. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 212-219).
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Die Gründung der schweizer Kapuzinerprovinz 1581-1589, ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der katholischen ReformFischer, Rainald. January 1955 (has links)
Diss.--Fribourg. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Die Kapuziner im rechtsrheinischen Gebiet des Bisthums Speyer im 17. und 18. JahrhundertManz, Georg, January 1979 (has links)
Thesis (doctoral)--Albert-Ludwigs-Universität, Freiburg i. Br., 1979. / Includes bibliographical references (p. iii-xxiv).
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Die Gründung der schweizer Kapuzinerprovinz 1581-1589, ein Beitrag zur Geschichte der katholischen ReformFischer, Rainald. January 1955 (has links)
Diss.--Fribourg. / Includes bibliographical references.
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Pietas and the Franciscan Imagination: The Call to Steadfast Holiness in the Capuchin Form of LifeTarraza, William H. January 2023 (has links)
Thesis advisor: Margaret E. Guider / Thesis advisor: Franklin T. Harkins / The call to holiness manifested in the relationship between God and humankind contemporarily expresses the virtue of pietas, often translated as piety. The spiritual depth of this virtue reflects a Franciscan approach to holiness that emphasizes relational obligations epitomized by the Trinitarian relationship. With numerous challenges and difficulties in life, I argue that the steadfast character of holiness animates recent solemnly professed Capuchin friars in their baptismal call to holiness strengthened in their consecration to God. Chapter I provides an entry point to pietas using the theology of St. Bonaventure in the Legenda Maior. I trace the develop of pietas from its ancient roots as a defining virtue for the Roman people of the Empire and its Christian appropriation by Augustine. I then discuss some key features of Bonaventure’s theology that informs his understanding of pietas as a particularly relational virtue consistent with his Franciscan identity. Chapter II begins with a survey of the Franciscan hermeneutical disputes in its history over the Rule of Saint Francis. This contextualizes the discussion of the call to holiness as an invitation for humanity to participate in the Divine nature through Baptism and the grace to share in the relationship (and thus accompanying duties) of God, the Father and the Son through the Holy Spirit. The tendency to prioritize such duties has caused hierarchical divisions that respectively seek to advance communal evangelical proclamation while upholding fidelity to the revealed Truth of God. Consecrated life deepens this responsibility, especially with the expectations set by great witnesses that invigorates others to partake in the mission. Chapter III acknowledges the difficulties of communal discernment by offering a case study of an unanticipated moment of reconciliation through pietas between two prominent 20th century friars. This sets a framework to conclude the thesis with theological reflections for recent solemnly professed Capuchin friars to practice the virtue of pietas in the modern western world. / Thesis (STL) — Boston College, 2023. / Submitted to: Boston College. School of Theology and Ministry. / Discipline: Sacred Theology.
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Libertas est bonum ordinis superioris omnium bonorum: the ideological origins of Capuchin resistance to unfreedom in the Province of VenezuelaPollock-Parker, John Reddig 24 January 2024 (has links)
In the 17th century, the Province of Venezuela was an unstable and violent corner of the Spanish world, economically fueled either by private conquest or the imposition of various forms of unfree labor. Though there were moments of resistance to slavery, the encomienda, and the reparimiento in other parts of Latin America, the Capuchin position was remarkably unified. This dissertation answers the question: what encouraged or allowed the Capuchins of Venezuela, as a corporate body, to take a posture of resistance to a program which had been legitimated by both civil and ecclesiastical authority? The answer surprisingly enough does not come from their immediate surroundings, but rather can be traced to its origins during the first hundred years after Francis of Assisi’s death. That is, resistance is not to be attributed either to modern or Iberian impulses, but to Medieval and Italian.
This dissertation argues that the abolitionist position that these men articulated was a direct product of a radical Franciscan ideology that was internalized and transmitted via the Ordo Fratrum Minorum Cappucinorum. The Capuchins of Venezuela eschewed any concern for social stability or the flourishing of empire and instead embraced a radical conception of obedientia, which enabled them to resist coercive activity in the region. The key to this resistance was a perfectionist interpretation of the Franciscan vita. In this model, complete adherence to Francis’ way of living—as expressed in his writings, especially the Rule, and to his more radical descendants, the Testamentum—was understood to be the most ideal program for Christian living outside of the Gospels, providing a moveable locus of stability. The mind of Francis thus provided a transcendent point which was divorced from time, place, and immediate social concerns.
Through analysis, literary and contextual, of Rule commentaries, personal correspondences, and polemical writings, three things become clear. The first is that there was a strain of Franciscan theology and praxis that rejected authority not directly derived from the life and methods of Francis of Assisi. Second, the Capuchins from their earliest moments adopted and espoused these positions as the official platform of the Reform. Finally, both of these elements primed the friars to resist the coercive colonial program in Venezuela. In undertaking this argument, this dissertation does not advance any claims of Franciscan exceptionalism, or imply that resistance to coercion was an integral part of the Capuchin colonial experience writ large. Instead, I attempt to illustrate that when the Capuchins chose to elevate their own consciences’ above contemporary social norms, they did so by utilizing methods which were deeply ingrained in the Capuchin Reform. / 2026-01-24T00:00:00Z
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Le rôle et l'action des capucins de la province de Paris dans la France religieuse du XVIIème siècleMauzaize, Jean. January 1978 (has links)
Thesis--Paris IV, 1977. / Includes index. "Sources et ouvrages utilisés": p. xii-clxv.
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Le rôle et l'action des capucins de la province de Paris dans la France religieuse du XVIIème siècleMauzaize, Jean. January 1978 (has links)
Thesis--Paris IV, 1977. / Includes index. "Sources et ouvrages utilisés": p. xii-clxv.
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The Capuchins in French Louisiana (1722-1766)Vogel, Claude L. January 1928 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Catholic University of America, 1928. / Vita. Bibliography: p. xiii-xxiv.
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"Práticas e prédicas em nome de Cristo...": capuchinhos na "cruzada civilizatória" em Sergipe (1874-1901)Cunha, Tatiane Oliveira da January 2011 (has links)
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Previous issue date: 2011 / CNPq / O Brasil da segunda metade do século XIX enfrentava a questão da substituição da mão-de-obra escrava pela livre ao mesmo tempo em que almejava transformar-se numa Nação “civilizada” aos moldes europeus. É nessa tessitura que esta pesquisa objetiva compreender a contribuição das missões itinerantes capuchinhas na “cruzada civilizatória” no Sergipe de 1874 a 1901. Para tanto, usamos como fio condutor a atuação do missionário frei João Evangelista Giuliani de Monte Marciano, a partir do seu caderno de memórias. Verificamos que essas missões deixaram diversas contribuições. Ajudaram na concretização dos planos das autoridades e dos proprietários de terras à medida que convocavam a população ao trabalho. O ideal de trabalho como instrumento de salvação não ficava apenas no discurso. Os missionários levavam a população sergipana a construir importantes obras comunitárias, ajudando a suprir uma deficiência do Estado, a exemplo de estradas, pontes, tanques, cemitérios e hospitais. Transmitiam as práticas do catolicismo a uma população carente de párocos. A missão também era uma festa para a população, que além da prática sacramental aproveitava o evento religioso para encontrar parentes e amigos e formar também novas redes de sociabilidades, importantes para o comércio. No entanto, compreendemos que a apropriação da mensagem pela população não se deu exatamente da forma como queriam as autoridades civis e eclesiásticas, pois era influenciada pela sua visão do mundo. Nesta pesquisa usamos além das fontes oficiais da Ordem Capuchinha, os Relatórios dos Presidentes da Província e os relatos de memorialistas.
In the second half of the 19th century Brazil faced the substitution of the slave manual job for the free one and at the some time it aimed be transformed into a civilized nation into the European standard. It is in this aspect that this research ains to get to understand the contribution of the itinerant missions of the capuchins in the cruzade for civilization in Sergipe state between 1874-1901. For that to happen, we used as a leading wire the performace of the missionary friar João Evangelista Giuliani de Monte Marciano from his memories notebook. We realized these missions let several contributions. They helped to make the authorities plans as well as the landlords real as they convoke the population to labour. The ideal of work as a salvation instrument did not get only in the sermon. The missionaries led Sergipe people to build important comunitary buildings helping the state to supply the lack of roads, bridges, reservoirs, graveyards and hospitals. They transmited the habits of the Catholicism to a shy population of parish priests the mission was also a celebration to the people that besides the sacrament practice enjoyed the religious event to neet relatives and friends and also to get new social nets which were very useful to business. However we noticed that the appropriation of the mensage by the population wasn‟t exactly the way the civilian and religious authorities wished but they were influenced by their own view of the world. In this research it was used beyond the standard sources of the capuchins order the reports by the Presidents of the Provinces and the descriptions of the memoirists. / Salvador
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