On Epiphany morning, the Lutheran-Episcopal full communion will be rendered official and celebrated at Washington's National Cathedral. |
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The Christmas season in France comes to an end on Epiphany when we commemorate the coming of the three kings to Bethlehem. |
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The Church celebrates 6 January as Epiphany, the day on which the Christ child was shown to the three Kings. |
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The journey from Epiphany to Lent brings us from the brightness of our dawning to the bleakness of our sinfulness. |
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On January the 6th they have another special celebration called the Epiphany. |
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Tomorrow's feast of the Epiphany, or Little Christmas, is still a huge, well-celebrated event from Berlin to Barcelona. |
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Tomorrow is a Holy Day, The Feast of the Epiphany when there will be Masses at 11 am and 7.30 pm. |
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For Epiphany on January 6, a large round pastry is baked with a bean hidden in it. |
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Epiphany shows us that this event has a universal and even a cosmic dimension. |
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This week's scripture readings clearly chart the Epiphany theme, that of Jesus drawing all of humanity into a living relationship with God. |
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The Greater Blessing of Water is performed on the Feast of the Epiphany. |
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Above all, she is associated with Twelfth Night and Epiphany, 5 and 6 January. |
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Not for nothing was the Feast of Epiphany, Twelfth Night, also the Feast of the Beans, a major carnival celebration. |
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What a strange and powerful story it is we have to share in these days of Advent and Christmas and Epiphany. |
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Unlike Easter, Pentecost, Christmas or Epiphany, Trinity Sunday, has no narrative, no biblical story to ground us in space and time. |
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On the watery desert from Pentecost to Christmas, they stay on the Isle of Ailbe from Christmas through the octave of Epiphany. |
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Epiphany is a feast of revelation, the day Christ made his being known to the world. |
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The Church defines Christmas as the twelve days from Christmas Day until the eve of Epiphany. |
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The Epiphany or the day of the Three Kings is celebrated on January 6th to finish the holiday season on a bright note. |
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All over the world, the comet symbolises the feast of the Nativity and the Epiphany. |
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The pope, who personally administers each of the church's seven sacraments during the course of each year, makes a practice of consecrating bishops on Epiphany. |
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In Izalco, the period between Christmas and the Feast of the Epiphany is celebrated with nightly processions and Jeu Jeu, an Amerindian rain dance. |
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The Transfiguration, observed traditionally in this last Sunday before Lent, brings Epiphany to a close with another divine irruption into the earthly. |
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The nativity scene remains in its place until January 6, the Epiphany. |
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Six months after her wedding, Tsehay saw her husband again, at church, because it was Epiphany. |
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Thus for many years the chief celebration of Christ's coming into the world was of his baptism, marked by the feast of Epiphany. |
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Smith doubted that Perchta descended from a pagan goddess, but thought that she was the personification of Epiphany, derived through folk etymology. |
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Before 1850s, Marthoma church celebrated Christmas on 6 January, the day of Epiphany. |
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On the Feast of the Epiphany in 1501, two cardinals began to seal the holy door with two bricks, one silver and one gold. |
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On the evening of 24th December, Christmastide begins. It is a time of joy and festivity lasting until the Sunday following Epiphany, which is dedicated to commemoration of the Baptism of the Lord. |
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John Scott commemorated Pergolesi's tricentennial with a program of sacred works — two Salve Regina settings and the Stabat Mater — on Sunday evening at the Church of the Epiphany on the Upper East Side. |
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It replaced Gecko on the Epiphany browser for Gnome on Linux. |
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The Nativity celebrations end with Epiphany, twelve days after Christmas. |
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According to information that Faith of He Bei provided to Fides, numerous communities solemnly celebrated the Epiphany both on 6 January and on the following Sunday, 9 January, according to the pastoral needs of the faithful. |
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These days were later settled as Epiphany, Easter, Midsummer, and Michaelmas sessions. |
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Cardiac Science Corporation, Digisonics, Epiphany Cardiography Products LLC, FUJIFILM Holdings America Corporation, GE Healthcare Ltd. |
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It is normally concluded on Epiphany, often highlighted by the arrival of the magi on horseback. |
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Peter Mikelic pastors Epiphany Luthern church, Toronto, and writes for various church and secular publications. |
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Daniel has been credited with founding the first Moscow monasteries, dedicated to the Lord's Epiphany and to Saint Daniel. |
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In recognition of these two events, WNA commissioned Bill Powell of Epiphany Farm Daylilies to create a daylily to be named the Florence Nightingale Daylily. |
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Record of Henry's attendance in 1535 at an antipapal interlude that dramatized himself attacking the bishops might also have some relevance for the Epiphany interlude. |
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Interspersed between such piercing points of pain and disappointment are moments of epiphany. |
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This ecstatic last chapter where love and death are necessary ingredients of this epiphany, so Joycean in style, leaves the reader in abeyance. |
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The only real epiphany in the movie is the realization that we know right from wrong, and choose to do wrong anyway. |
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This mirrors my own epiphany when I was first exposed to feminist liberation theology at Harvard Divinity School in the eighties. |
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After this epiphany, she and Furii work to dismantle the fantasies of Deborah's make-believe world. |
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Their Bildungsromane do not conclude with a state of epiphany, but, like their lives, are choppy, episodic, and nightmarish. |
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The resultant unconsciousness from a severe hit to the back of the head from a coffee table led to an epiphany which has changed his life. |
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After Weise went unpicked for a second straight time in the NHL Entry Draft, the 6-foot-2, 206-pound forward had an epiphany. |
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The final chuckle of the week was a sort of a personal epiphany that came to me in the small hours of Tuesday morning. |
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An epiphany strikes me with the magnificent glory of a holy intervention and instantly brings my seizure to a halt. |
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I was too pleased with my own hard-won epiphany that the film's title is a palindrome to even notice that the credits had started rolling. |
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It was in a spot like this that Illyn experienced the epiphany that led him to become God's padre of wild places. |
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Getting students to experience this same epiphany is a perennial challenge for the teachers of every subject. |
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I keep hoping they'll have an epiphany, but what I see instead is their irresistible urge to double down on the derp. |
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In a sudden epiphany, he had remembered that he still had Krillir's guns, silver weapons with eagles engraved on the handles. |
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I had a sudden epiphany, and slipped my hands nonchalantly into my pockets. |
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Then Walker stopped for a second, and in that instant, it was as if he experienced a moment of epiphany. |
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Almost everyone in recovery has an story of an epiphany, the moment they knew they needed to stop using. |
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And then you experience some form of traumatic epiphany, and change all those opinions. |
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Then, as if we all have an epiphany at the same moment, we simultaneously yell out. |
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Then one day I had an epiphany and realized that you can go around in a bad mood all of the time, but it won't do any good. |
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Richard Kurin was a 19-year-old anthropology student in India when he experienced his material culture epiphany. |
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I told him the abbreviation and he typed it into the computer, his face lighting up with epiphany before sending me on my way. |
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This was an epiphany, this was imprinted on you, you could do anything now. |
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Zaks experienced an epiphany of sorts a couple years ago, when he was looking through a book of Tony Walton illustrations. |
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East's epiphany took the form of a satirical column comparing the progress of his native state to that of a crawfish. |
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While watching The Ten commandments on TV with their children for the umpteenth time, Burnett and Downey had an epiphany. |
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He speaks with the zeal of someone who has undergone a political epiphany. |
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There is a crisis and a tragedy, enlightenment and epiphany. |
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A little epiphany happened to me while riding home in the rain tonight. |
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The account of the magi is celebrated as an epiphany of our Lord. |
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The sudden shift at the end from the present tense to the conditional and qualified suggests that the epiphany that the poem seems to promise is a transient thing. |
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Growing up on a farm, Greco never saw live dance until he was in his teens, although he recalls a moment of epiphany at the age of six when he knew he wanted to dance. |
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He acknowledges his political mutation but says there was no epiphany. |
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It was a moment of epiphany in the magic midsummer twilight. |
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They were not designed via the epiphany of an unlettered Russian sergeant at a workbench, as fables would have it. |
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That was the epiphany I had Sunday night during a 10-hour stay at a roadside hotel. |
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For them, the publication of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species was the epiphany of everything they had begun to suspect. |
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Somebody up there finally had an epiphany and hockey might now come out of the choke hold it has been suffering and breathe again. |
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As he strived to demystify the mutual fund business for masses of individual investors, for example, Schwab had an epiphany. |
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Sparling had his nature lover's epiphany right there in his kayak amid all the black water and cypress knees. |
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Whitley had an epiphany and decided to name his new town Hollywood. |
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Creating the perfect mixture of sand and water for our man-made Cinderellaesque castle, I looked up at the expanse of water before me and had one of those epiphany moments. |
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Perrot's study is also at times Proustian in its perception of totality through detail and its sense of progression through instantaneous epiphany. |
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Interestingly, what seems to bring him the most pleasure is not this contemplative moment's conduciveness to self-discovery, but its potential to defer epiphany. |
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