odor of sanctity การใช้
- Many NGOs that operate in an odor of sanctity routinely supply active combatants.
- Peter Semenenko, CR died on November 18, 1886 in Paris, France in the odor of sanctity.
- She died in the odor of sanctity at the monastery of the Visitation of Holy Mary in Troyes on 7 October 1875.
- He smelled the other-worldly perfume _ the so-called odor of sanctity _ that seemed to emanate from Pio during public receptions.
- He advanced to the priesthood in 1602, but died on June 2, 1603, probably of tuberculosis, in the odor of sanctity.
- Irmengard of Nassau died at Liebenau in January 1371, in the " odor of sanctity " as the Historical Society for Hesse puts it.
- The living bodies and corpses of saints were said to exude a floral " odor of sanctity " as one of the most notable signs of their holiness.
- After having ruled his see for seven or, according to another account, for twenty years, he made Alexander his successor and retired to the desert, whence Cyril had summoned him and there died in the odor of sanctity.
- Two saintly figures lived and were buried in Loboc church : Fr Alonso Humanes SJ whose grave became the object of pilgrimages after his death in 1633, and the native boy, Miguel Ayatumo, a student of the Seminario Colegio, who died in the odor of sanctity at the age of sixteen in 1609 . Contemporary Jesuit records speak glowingly of this " Aloysius Gonzaga " of Bohol.
- Their influence brought about attempts at reform even among the Conventuals, including the quasi-Observantist brothers living under the rule of the Conventual ministers ( Martinianists or " Observantes sub ministris " ), such as the male Colletans, later led by Boniface de Ceva in his reform attempts principally in France and Germany; the reformed congregation founded in 1426 by the Spaniard Philip de Berbegal and distinguished by the special importance they attached to the little hood ( " cappuciola " ); the Neutri, a group of reformers originating about 1463 in Italy, who tried to take a middle ground between the Conventuals and Observantists, but refused to obey the heads of either, until they were compelled by the pope to affiliate with the regular Observantists, or with those of the Common Life; the Caperolani, a congregation founded about 1470 in North Italy by Peter Caperolo, but dissolved again on the death of its founder in 1481; the Amadeists, founded by the noble Portuguese Amadeo, who entered the Franciscan order at Assisi in 1452, gathered around him a number of adherents to his fairly strict principles ( numbering finally twenty-six houses ) and, died in the odor of sanctity in 1482.