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By that time, new plans are expected to be in place for the next chapter of Clairvaux’s remarkable history. Saint Bernard of Clairvaux founded the abbey in 1115 as the locus of his reform of the ...
In 1148, he set out on a second journey to Rome and only made it as far as the monastery of Clairvaux. There the saint died in the arms of his friend St. Bernard ... usual run of miracles ...
In 1148, he set out on a second journey to Rome and only made it as far as the monastery of Clairvaux. There the saint died in the arms of his friend St. Bernard of Calirvaux ... Malachy include the ...
Others question why St Malachy’s biographer Bernard of Clairvaux — who knew him — does not mention the visions. Pope John Paul II was born during a solar eclipse which may have been ...
He was a monk at the monastery of Cluny. His work when he taught at the University of Paris was called into question by St. Bernard of Clairvaux. In 1926, the future Queen Elizabeth II was born in ...
The study homed in on a set of Romanesque volumes in the Clairvaux Abbey in France ... including a historical account of St. Bernard.
Arrangements provided by Mihovk-Rosenacker Funeral Home (Cheviot Rd.). Services on Feb 27, 10:00am at St. Bernard of Clairvaux Church (Taylor's Creek). Arlington Memorial Gardens (Mt. Healthy).
hosted breakfast for many children and their families Saturday at St. Bernard of Clairvaux. Following breakfast, the children dressed up and acted in the Nativity pageant. Father Donald Conroy ...
In the Twelfth Century, St. Bernard of Clairvaux identified twelve steps up the mountain of pride, and another twelve steps down. These are detailed in his work entitled Steps of Humility and Pride.
With an Aug. 17 Mass celebrated by Washington Cardinal Wilton Gregory and a festival featuring traditional Latin American and African food and music, parishioners of St. Bernard of Clairvaux Parish in ...
Every year on Aug. 20, the Catholic Church honors St. Bernard of Clairvaux, the 12th-century monk who helped to build up the Cistercian order — some of whom are known today as the Trappists.