12,588 research outputs found

    Know About Patrick Henry College

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    Patrick Henry College believes that God is the source of all truth, be it spiritual, moral, philosophical, or scientific. For this reason, we seek to educate students in God's truth throughout the entire curriculum. Christian faith and genuine learning cannot be separated; neither is our Christian faith a mere addendum to the liberal learning process. Instead, our Christian faith precedes and informs all that we at Patrick Henry College study, teach, and learn.</p

    Brian Friel : Faith-Healer

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    Rafroidi Patrick. Brian Friel : Faith-Healer. In: Études irlandaises, n°6, 1981. pp. 260-261

    Brian Friel : Faith-Healer

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    Rafroidi Patrick. Brian Friel : Faith-Healer. In: Études irlandaises, n°6, 1981. pp. 260-261

    Leadership development in a faith-based non-profit organisation using a relational leadership model: A case study

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    This paper describes a case study of a Leadership Development Program (LDP) which has been developed and conducted at a large faith-based non-profit organization providing aged and community care in Australia. Walter Wright's Relational Leadership model which used insights from Jude, Philemon and Colossians was adopted by the organization. Started as a pilot in 2003 the LDP was implemented in 2007 and has been run regularly since then. The LDP was systematically evaluated by an independent researcher recently. The evaluation concluded that the program has been effective and recommended that it continue with some minor modifications. The organization in which this program was developed is a partner in an Australian Research Council (ARC) linkage grant started in 2010 between three universities and two faith-based non-profit organizations providing aged care and community care. This paper has been written by four researchers involved in the linkage grant. Four interviews on participants in the LDP were conducted by the authors to evaluate the effectiveness of the leadership program in order to prepare this paper. The study was carried out to clarify the research aim for the principal author (who is a PhD student in the ARC grant) by trying to understand what the LDP program was aiming to achieve and to be presented at the Spirituality at Work conference at the University of Arkansas

    Letter from Bishop Patrick Finegan to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop Patrick Finegan of Kilmore, Bishop's House, Culliss, Cavan, to Hagan; the briefs arrived. Asking for receipt for his contribution to the Propagation of the Faith

    Letter from Bishop Patrick Finegan to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop Patrick Finegan of Kilmore, Bishop's House, Culliss, Cavan, to Hagan. Enclosing cheque for Peter's Pence and for the Propagation of the Faith. Asking for information on current pensions at the College, and the value of their burse. Stating his wish that Fr. Willan takes out the doctorate in canon law

    Letter from Bischop Patrick McKenna to Hagan

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    Holograph letter from Bishop Patrick McKenna, Bishop's House, Monaghan, to Hagan, enquiring about his application for 'sanatio in radice' and giving particulars. The parties are named as Miss Katie Davies and Victor [Hampstead], neither suspects that their Protestant marriage may be invalid, and both undergo instruction for the Catholic faith

    Faith Reyher Jackson papers

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    Author, educator, dancer/choreographer and master gardener Faith Reyher Jackson was born in New York City in 1919 to author Ferdinand Reyher (1890-1967) and author and women's rights activist Rebecca Hourwich Reyher (1898-1985). Jackson attended Bennington College in Bennington, Vermont, where she studied under Martha Hill and Martha Graham, graduating with a degree in dance and the arts in 1939. Jackson pioneered a program in dance education at the Academy of the Washington Ballet, where she served as the headmistress from 1964 until her retirement in 1978. Upon her retirement, Jackson devoted considerable time to her gardening efforts, earning her the title of master gardener. Jackson's journalistic career includes positions as the beauty editor of the New York Post from 1945 to 1946 and book editor of the Miami Herald from 1948 to 1950, and she has written for a number of publications, including Dance Magazine, Home & Garden, Mid-Atlantic Country, and American Horticulturist. Her major publications include both fiction and nonfiction, beginning with a scholarly biography of landscape architect William Lyman Phillips, Pioneer of Tropical Landscape Architecture: William Lyman Phillips in Florida, published in 1997 by the University Press of Florida. Jackson's fiction includes Meadow fugue and Descant (2002), for which she was awarded the Washington Writers Award, and her most recent publication, Stone's Throw (2009). Faith Jackson died on November 12, 2012. The collection documents Jackson's literary and journalistic activities, as well as major gardening projects. Material includes correspondence, manuscripts, architectural drawings, photographs, publications, and clippings

    Two Letters from Bishop Patrick Finegan to Hagan

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    Two holograph letters from Bishop Patrick Finegan, Culiss, Cavan, to Hagan. Enclosing cheques; sums are for Peter's Pence and for the Propaganda. Asking advice on the collection for the Propagation of the Faith; some bishops do not contribute. The committee sending lottery tickets for charity have been a little aggressive in their means to extract their price- enclosing the tickets (not extant). Adding lotteries are not permitted by the laws of the Free State. – Separately petitioning for honours for deserving Kilmore priests; recommending Fr. Patrick Goden as protonotary apostolic, and Fr. Hugh Brady as domestic prelate. They would be the first of the diocese to receive papal honours

    The theme of faith in the Hezekiah narratives

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    This study examines the Hezekiah narratives as found in 2 Kgs 18-20 and Isa. 36-39, with special reference to the theme of faith, using narrative criticism as its methodology. Attention is paid especially to setting, plot, point of view and characterization within the narratives. The Kings version is taken as the main text for exegesis purposes, but relevant differences in the Isaiah text are noted. Articles and books on "faith" in the Old Testament rarely mention Hezekiah as an example of faith. Until recently, studies that have treated the theme of faith in the book of Isaiah have tended to neglect this section because of their historical-critical stance. Again, there are many studies of the Hezekiah narratives, but few focus on literary methods and/or the theme of faith. The major part of the study involves an exegesis of the text. How the narratives function within the context of the book of Kings is also considered. Furthermore, faith as a theme in the book of Isaiah is examined, and comparison is made especially between Isa. 36 and Isa. 7. The plot of the longest narrative (2 Kgs 18:13-19:37/Isa. 36-37) proves to be very instructive in the way that the verb nn (to trust) is used. Isaiah, YHWH, Sennacherib and Hezekiah emerge as main characters within the narratives. Different points of view and the use of temporal and geographical setting also reinforce the characterization. In particular, a largely positive portrait of Hezekiah as an example of faith emerges
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