The Sisters of St Thomas tell an incredible story of Divine Providence
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- Опубликовано: 25 май 2023
- Mother Mary Theresa is joined by Sister Mary Magdalen and Sister Mary Francis to tell the story of the building and recent consecration of their wonderful, gothic church in Florida. It is an uplifting and fascinating interview that will leave you feeling like you just heard a story from the 1500s.
We cannot recommend this interview enough (except I talk too much because I was nervous.....)
God bless the Sisters of St Thomas Aquinas! Please support them as much as you can at: www.sistersofaquinas.org/
AMDG - Развлечения
God bless all the traditional sisters who bring so much good to our sad times.
Thank you, Kevin, for the invite. It was a pleasure speaking to you.
Kevin should pin this!
Would love to see an interview about their school and teaching.
While I am not a sedevacantist, I love, respect and appreciate this religious community and their apostalate.
I bid you pray more and do more research about the True Catholic Faith that you may be led to the True Catholic Faith, which today is sedevacantism, nay the valid Traditional Catholism.
This is living proof that the Catholic Church is still alive, and even though it’s so small, it continues to grow and wait upon the Lord. Blessed be God+
Love seeing the nuns! I was taught for twelve years by the sisters, until I reached my senior year in high school. My brothers were taught by the Christian Brothers. It is because of them I am a practicing Catholic of the traditional Latin Rite.
I was looking for the true mass and God directed me. Praise God now and forever!
Not only I admire the devotion and fortitute to renounce to everything to follow God's will, there's simething about sisters specially; they're so carefree about financials and speak very honestly. Perhaps because they live for charity and mainly by charity. There just much good energy from this interview, thanks for sharing!
#2023 ❤🧡💛💚💙💜
Wow ..Praise be to God .....!
Best teachers ever!
Please link to the video in the description below the video.
The full video of the ceremony, you mean?
@@catholicfamilypodcast5501 👍
Yes we are all just plain Traditional Catholics. Pray for the return of the true Catholics liturgy and faith.
I am not a sedevacantist.I hope under the next Pontificate the divisions in the Church will finally end after 50+ years.
Amén, pray for the Triumph of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, the Great prelate and Great monarch.
You need become one by the grace of Our Lord Jesus Christ and the help of Our Blessed Mother.
Thank you!!🙏🏻
McCreery Architects do gothic and classical architecture. As do a few professors at Notre Dame. Conrad Schmidt does awesome traditional interiors. They exist!
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I would really like to know every detail about the altar!!! Who made it and where.
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So is this chapel near Bishop Sanborn's other chapel in Brooksville?
Their convent chapel is next door to Bishop Sanborn’s parish church. The convent chapel is the Sisters private chapel and you only get in if invited to a ceremony. There is a ceremony this Saturday for the vesting of four new nuns.
@@readerm8313 that is exciting 😀
So, are you still doing Mass at the church where the Seminary was??
Yes, that is now Queen Of All Saints Chapel masses are said there every day
@@thomas1958ful thank you
Why 9 hours ?? What did they do that it took that long to consecrate a church ?
They did the full ceremony according to the Pre-Vatican II rubrics. That is just how long it takes. Nowadays, no one does the whole thing. Usually they only do the blessing of the church and/or the dedication of the altar. SSPX uses the shortened 1960 rubrics. That’s why Kevin speculated that it may be the first time the ceremony has been done since Vatican II
We have perhaps become too accustomed to giving God the bare minimum or that God requires the bare minimum from us. Perhaps we have forgotten, as St. John Vianney once said, "It is only by sacrificing and suffering, offered as penance, that you will be able, by the grace of God, to convert sinners."
The SSPX church in St. Mary's, Kansas was recently consecrated. It was a long ceremony, but not 8 hours long. More like 4 hours, I think.
SSPX follows the shortened 1960 rubrics. It’s not the whole ceremony.
Not sure I understand how sedevacantists can be part of the Church since they don't recognize the validity of any recent pope. How does this affect the way they educate children? As a liturgist and for 22 years a seminary professor who taught liturgy and music, I need to say that "tradition" and "traditionalism" are two very different things. Tradition is alive and growing; not so for traditionalism.
I think we'd start with the question, "What is the Church?" It's a question Pope Pius XII took up in Mystici Corporis Christi ("Mystical Body of Christ"].
They look to the Archbishop of Canterbury for support.
Please let us know your own definition of "tradition" and "traditionalism" so we can understand your point better. Is your own tradition "growing" into modernism? Let us know. Beside, how can one recognize what does not exist in the first place?
Are they friends with Episcopalian nuns ?