Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

CATHOLIC INTELLIGENCE.

divinity of Je,u 9 Christ, the divinity of Aohuwki nd of J£ TLjfc of g C W T« ° Ut ma^? g Curi3t «nity itself depend upon th?S of men. The recognition and acceptance of these laws would eo^ fimnSff A T ncan <c .atholic Review' represents that the mission founded for the conversion of the Southern negroes to CathdS £ m a growing and healthy condition. "At present there are « £ W? SififS'i? th ° Colle g eof St. Joseph, at Mill HaTEaES" Eng and, making the preparatory studies for this mission htSSTSL Englishmen sit Irishmen, three German,, two Hollanders and alt Belgian. L.ka all other priests, these young men biad t&sekes to chas rty and obedience to their ecclesiasLal superiors f bu Xy add another obligation, which binds them for lid "to the negro 22? where they will be • the fathers and the servanta of the tSi^ ' A great Catholic Cathedral U now beln ? erected in Cincinnati under the supervision of Mr P. Keeley, *ho ha! contracts on hand foJ 31 churches which he has planned and will supervise this year Rev John Hughes, pastor of St. JerWa Church, Mott Haven New York, a few weeks since, received into the Church 51 Protestant?' converts to ihc Catholic Church. roiestants, ri. The , Ge m "an Catholics of America nre much ahead of their En<r S?tlT, b f ren in th 6 number Of "^papers «ioy support' While the latter have not yet succeeded in ertabluhiiig a daily EL even m New York, the former have prosperous dailies printed hi t£ German language in Buffalo, Philadelphia, fl «d St. Louis. They bi« aUo .successful weeklies ; one in Baltimore circulatin? 25 000 in i incunati 16,000, Lone Island 14,00 J, and tffot ffo j D Batfilo be«M many others. vc »iaea Detroit, Mich., "The City of the Straits," has a Catholic hiitorr dating back to the days of the early French Missioned, who •„" ?,'{ religious pioneers of that region when the Indian savages wer7it 3 u» disputed masters. The fi»t Catholic church erected was the old «?T Anns, whose massive walls are still standing, though ita oaKn flte ,i' have been worn down by the feet of successive generations P The 'Catholic Telegraph,' of Cincinnati, says the Catholics of Ameuca are ahead of all others in attending their religious XX, lot even excepting Ireland. It says that durin| the past year there Jt 43,000 communions at the Cathedral of CiufinnatftheCieh con Sa ing only 11 000 souls. The « San Franeiioo Guardian " «^ •» A single churcluu this city-where there are eleven regular churchef besides the various chapels connected with echools, etc, where com munion is gjven-ha, given, during the year 1872, near?v eiSTv thousand communions; An average of over fifteen hundred a week » This is religious rivalry truly. - WBBt The Feast of St. Gregory VII., aud the eight hundredth anniversary of Ins ascending the Papal throne, occurring on the 25th of May was to be worthily celebrated in Bologne, Turin, and other ifi cities. His Pontificate, like the present, was troubled by a QwrnS

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18730920.2.19

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Tablet, Volume I, Issue 21, 20 September 1873, Page 12

Word Count
508

CATHOLIC INTELLIGENCE. New Zealand Tablet, Volume I, Issue 21, 20 September 1873, Page 12

CATHOLIC INTELLIGENCE. New Zealand Tablet, Volume I, Issue 21, 20 September 1873, Page 12

Log in or create a Papers Past website account

Use your Papers Past website account to correct newspaper text.

By creating and using this account you agree to our terms of use.

Log in with RealMe®

If you’ve used a RealMe login somewhere else, you can use it here too. If you don’t already have a username and password, just click Log in and you can choose to create one.


Log in again to continue your work

Your session has expired.

Log in again with RealMe®


Alert