On the first anniversary of Pope Francis' election, James Martin, S.J., looks at how the pope's ministry has been shaped by his Jesuit identity.
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@tolethom10 жыл бұрын
moreover, he does not fight modernity but tries to understand it and accompany people in their complex situations.
@anneroat676610 жыл бұрын
Outstanding analysis of Pope Francis and his Jesuit spirituality. I will show it to my students!
@Davanillaguerrilla6 жыл бұрын
The richest people on earth praying for the poor. That's called a cult.
@paulmasgalajian356710 жыл бұрын
Thank you, Father, for your enlightening video about our new Pope Francis. I now understand his "style" of public behavior. However, to be honest I'm one Catholic who has always had an appreciation for the symbolic outward forms of the Catholic/Orthodox Apostolical Tradition. For this reason my favorite Pontiff is still Pope Pius XII !
@sanctus46397 жыл бұрын
Thank God for Pope Francis! May his papacy last for years to come!
@TeodoroStaAna10 жыл бұрын
Wonderful.
@alicktemanifriday58456 жыл бұрын
Thank God for pope francis
@ihateslideshows10 жыл бұрын
baptisms origins come from a single oral story passed down from generations to generations, through thousands of years, translated threw texts and manuscripts from the first time, the time of the gods, moses name originally meant saved from water, since his mother who was a pharaoh saved him from the nile, another god who's been saved from water is a god from south america called quetzalcoatl, he was said to of been shredded to pieces or something and his wife made a boat made of a certain type of material, and the egyptian god osiris has a very similar story as quetzalcoatl, which i believe is evidence of a lost highly advanced civilization that got wiped out by the flood of the last ice age, a global highly advanced technologically sophisticated civilizations that survived, and spread their story from generation to generation through oral tradition, and now appear in the form of religious practices such as baptism.