We are evaluating old indulgences that have been approve on todays date of:
January 11
List of Traditional materials we will be looking at today, and the current/withstanding grants that they satisfy (directly or indirectly).
443. Invocation - Saint Michael, first champion
partial indulgence… General Grant 1
573. An Invocation - Saint Joan of Arc
partial indulgence… General Grant 1
NOTE:
Every invocation may be eligible for a partial indulgence, if applied correctly, under ‘General Grant ’ 1
Some spelling errors may be present.
Abbreviations that are found at the end of an indulgence prayer/practice (like S. P. Ap., and S. C. Ind.,) are, in essence, a specific ecclesiastical approval for a particular indulgence.
Traditional indulgences are ordered by their last date of approval.
The full written outline of the requirements for a partial or plenary indulgence, found at the end of an indulgence prayer/practice, may be omitted if not all of the information is unique or notable. (You will see three dots when there is a break in text …)
CHAPTER VI. “THE HOLY ANGELS” – Art. II. “SAINT MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL” – I. Invocations
443. Saint Michael, first champion of the Kingship of Christ, pray for us. An indulgence of 300 days (Apostolic Brief, Jan. 11, 1927).
Every invocation may be eligible for a partial indulgence, if applied correctly, under ‘General Grant’ 1. The specific reference in the 'Manuel of Indulgences' is as follows: A partial indulgence is granted to the Christian faithful who, while carrying out their duties and enduring the hardships of life, raise their minds in humble trust to God and make, at least mentally, some pious invocation.
CHAPTER VII. - “THE SAINTS” – Art. IV “IN HONOR OF OTHER SAINTS” – LVI. Saint Joan of Arc, Virgin
573. An Invocation - Saint Joan of Arc, Apostle of the kingship of Christ, pray for us. An indulgence of 300 days (Apostolic Brief, Jan. 11, 1927).
Every invocation may be eligible for a partial indulgence, if applied correctly, under ‘General Grant’ 1. The specific reference in the 'Manuel of Indulgences' is as follows: A partial indulgence is granted to the Christian faithful who, while carrying out their duties and enduring the hardships of life, raise their minds in humble trust to God and make, at least mentally, some pious invocation.
This concluded the Traditional Indulgences
Every prayer/practice that we evaluated today is taken from the last approved publication of the Raccolta. The Raccolta was once the official book/document/list of approved Indulgences. In its last publication there were 780+ individualized prayers/practices that were approved for gaining indulgences.
In 1967 indulgence practices were revised so that indulgences are now, today, granted more in the style of “category” of prayers/practices rather than individually. This leaves me with the question: how do the indulgenced prayers/practices from the Raccolta (traditional indulgence) line up with the indulgences of today? That question is what this “study” seeks to answer.
Comments