2. Newman was born on 21 February 1801 in the City of London,
the eldest of a family of three sons and three daughters.
3. His father, John Newman, was a banker with
Ramsbottom, Newman and Company in Lombard Street.
4. His mother, Jemima (née Fourdrinier), was descended from
a notable family of Huguenot refugees in England, founded
by the engraver, printer and stationer Paul Fourdrinier.
5. Francis William Newman was a younger brother.
His younger sister, Harriet Elizabeth, married
Thomas Mozley, also prominent in the Oxford
Movement. The family lived in Southampton St.
(Southampton Place) in Bloomsbury and
bought a country retreat in Ham,
near Richmond, in the early 1800s
Francis W. Newman
6. At the age of seven Newman was sent to Great Ealing
School conducted by George Nicholas. There George Huxley,
father of Thomas Henry Huxley, taught mathematics,
and the classics teacher was Walter Mayers.
Thomas H Huxley
7. Newman took no part in the
casual school games. He was a
great reader of the novels of
Walter Scott, then in course of
publication, and of Robert
Southey. Aged 14, he read
sceptical works by Thomas Paine,
David Hume and perhaps Voltaire SCOTT SOUTHEY
PAINE VOLTAIRE
8. At the age of 15, during his last year at school,
Newman converted to Evangelical Christianity
9. In March 1816
- the bank
Ramsbottom,
Newman and Co.
Bank crashed,
though it paid its
creditors and
Newman’s
father left to
manage a
brewery.
11. Yet later he came to see Evangelicalism, with its emphasis on religious feeling and
on the Reformation doctrine of justification by faith alone, as a Trojan horse for an
undogmatic religious individualism that ignored the Church's role in the transmission
of revealed truth, and that must lead inexorably to subjectivism and skepticism.
12. Newman's name
was entered at
Lincoln's Inn.
He was, however,
sent shortly to
Trinity College,
Oxford, where he
studied widely.
13. His anxiety to do
well in the final
schools produced
the opposite result;
he broke down in
the examination,
under Thomas
Vowler Short, and
so graduated as a
BA "under the line"
14. Newman then took private pupils and read for a fellowship
at Oriel College, then "the acknowledged centre of Oxford
intellectualism". He was elected a fellow at Oriel on 12 April 1822
15. ANGLICAN MINISTRY
On 13 June 1824, Newman was made an Anglican
deacon at Christ Church Cathedral, Oxford.
16. Ten days later he preached his first sermon at Holy Trinity Church in Over
Worton (near Banbury, Oxfordshire) while on a visit to his former teacher
the Reverend Walter Mayers, who had been curate there since 1823.
17. On Trinity Sunday, 29 May 1825, he was ordained a priest at
Christ Church Cathedral by the Bishop of Oxford, Edward Legge.
18. He became curate of St Clement's Church, Oxford. Here,
for two years, he was engaged in parochial work and
wrote articles on "Apollonius of Tyana", "Cicero" and
"Miracles" for the Encyclopædia Metropolitana
20. In 1826 Newman
returned as a tutor
to Oriel, along with
Richard Hurrell
Froude, the two
formed a high ideal of
the tutorial office as
clerical and pastoral
rather than secular,
which led to tensions
in the college.
21. Newman assisted Whately in his popular
work Elements of Logic (1826, initially for the
Encyclopædia Metropolitana), and from him gained
a definite idea of the Christian Church as institution:
"a Divine appointment, and as a substantive body,
independent of the State, and endowed with rights,
prerogatives and powers of its own"
25. While local secretary of the Church Missionary Society, Newman circulated
an anonymous letter suggesting a method by which Anglican clergy might
practically oust Nonconformists from all control of the society.
26. this resulted in his being dismissed from the post on 8 March
1830; and three months later Newman withdrew from the Bible
Society, completing his move away from the low church group.
27. In 1831–1832, Newman became the "Select Preacher"
before the university.
In 1832 his difference with Hawkins as to the
"substantially religious nature" of a college tutorship
became acute and prompted his resignation.
28. MEDITERANEAN TRAVELS - In December 1832, Newman accompanied
Archdeacon Robert Froude and his son Hurrell on a tour in southern
Europe on account of the latter's health.
29. On board the mail steamship Hermes they visited Gibraltar, Malta,
the Ionian Islands and, subsequently, Sicily, Naples and Rome,
where Newman made the acquaintance of Nicholas Wiseman.
30. Newman started
the Tracts for
the Times,
from which
the Oxford
movement was
subsequently
named
"Tractarian”.
31. He also gave courses of lectures in a side
chapel of St Mary's in defence of the via media
("middle way") of Anglicanism between Roman
Catholicism and popular Protestantism.
32. One plan that surfaced
was to set up a religious
community in Littlemore,
outside the city of Oxford.
Since accepting his post at
St Mary's, Newman had a
chapel (dedicated to Sts
Nicholas and Mary) and
school built in the parish's
neglected area. -
Newman's mother had laid
the foundation stone in
1835, based on a half-acre
plot and £100 given
by Oriel College.
33. Newman continued as a High
Anglican controversialist until
1841, when he published
Tract 90, which proved
the last of the series.
34. in 1842 Newman withdrew to Littlemore
with a small band of followers, and lived in
semi-monastic conditions. These included…
John Dobree Dalgairns.
William Lockhart
Henry Manning,
Ambrose St John in 1843,
Frederick Oakeley
Albany James Christie in 1845
Saint
35. Newman was received
into the Catholic Church
on 9 October 1845 by
Dominic Barberi, an
Italian Passionist, at the
college in Littlemore.
As a consequence
he suffered broken
relationships with
family and friends, and
attitudes to him within
his Oxford circle
becoming polarised.
36. ORATORIAN - In February 1846, Newman left
Oxford for St. Mary's College, Oscott, where
Nicholas Wiseman, then vicar-apostolic
of the Midland district, resided;
37. in October he went to Rome, where
he was ordained priest by Cardinal
Giacomo Filippo Fransoni and
awarded the degree of Doctor
of Divinity by Pope Pius IX.
38. At the close of 1847, Newman returned to England as an Oratorian and
resided first at Maryvale (near Old Oscott, now the site of Maryvale
Institute, a college of Theology, Philosophy and Religious Education);
39. then at St Wilfrid's
College, Cheadle;
and later at St Anne's,
Alcester Street,
Birmingham.
St. Wilfred
St. Anne
40. he settled at Edgbaston, where spacious
premises were built for the community, and
where (except for four years in Ireland) he lived
a secluded life for nearly forty years
41. Before the house at Edgbaston was
occupied, Newman established the
London Oratory, with Father Frederick
William Faber as its superior.
42. Lectures on the Present Position of Catholics in England
Anti-Catholicism had been central to British culture since the 16th-century English
Reformation. With the papal bull Universalis Ecclesiae Pope Pius IX re-established the Catholic
diocesan hierarchy in England on 29 September 1850. New episcopal sees were created and
Cardinal Nicholas Wiseman was to be the first catholic Archbishop of Westminster.
43. Led by The Times and Punch, the British press saw this as being an attempt
by the papacy to reclaim jurisdiction over England. This was dubbed the
"Papal Aggression". The prime minister, John Russell, wrote a public letter to
the Bishop of Durham and denounced this "attempt to impose a foreign yoke
upon our minds and consciences". Russell's stirring up of anti-Catholicism led
to a national outcry. This "No Popery" uproar led to violence with Catholic
priests being pelted in the streets and Catholic churches being attacked
44. Newman was keen for lay people to be at the forefront of any
public apologetics, writing that Catholics should "make the
excuse of this persecution for getting up a great organization,
going round the towns giving lectures, or making speeches".
45. In total there were nine lectures:
Protestant view of the Catholic Church
Tradition the sustaining power of the
Protestant view
Fable the basis of the Protestant view
True testimony insufficient for the
Protestant view
Logical inconsistency of the Protestant view
Prejudice the life of the Protestant view
Assumed principles of the intellectual
ground of the Protestant view
Ignorance concerning Catholics the
protection of the Protestant view
Duties of Catholics towards the Protestant
view
which form the nine chapters of the
published book
They constituted "an analysis of this [anti-
Catholic] ideology, satirising it,
demonstrating the false traditions on which
it was based and advising Catholics how
they should respond to it. They were the
first of their kind in English literature.
46. John Gillow, president of Ushaw College, perceived Newman's language as ascribing
too much to the role of the laity. Gillow accused Newman of giving the impression
that the church's infallibility resides in a partnership between the hierarchy and
the faithful, rather than falling exclusively in the teaching office of the church, a
concept described by Pope Pius IX as the "ordinary magisterium" of the church.
47. ACHILLI TRIAL –
Giacinto Achilli (1803–
1860), an ex-Dominican
friar, in 1833 Achilli,
wrote “Dealings with
the inquisition: or, Papal
Rome, her priests, and
her Jesuits” ... (1851), he
had been made Master
of Sacred Theology at
the College of St.
Thomas, the future
Pontifical University of
Saint Thomas Aquinas,
Angelicum. - Newman
denounced this ex priest
recounting his scandals,
but was taken to trial
for libel, and lost the
case, and was not
permitted a re-trial.
48. EDUCATOR - In 1854, at the request of the Irish Catholic bishops,
Newman went to Dublin as rector of the newly established
Catholic University of Ireland, now University College Dublin.
49. - It was during this time that he founded
the Literary and Historical Society.
- After four years, he retired. He published a volume
of lectures entitled The Idea of a University, which
explained his philosophy of education
50. Newman believed in
a middle way between
free thinking and moral
authority—one that would
respect the rights of
knowledge as well as
the rights of revelation.
His purpose was to build a
Catholic university, in a world
where the major Catholic
universities on the European
continent had recently been
secularised, and most
universities in the English-
speaking world were
Protestant.
51. For a university to claim legitimacy in the larger world, it would have
to support research and publication free from church censorship;
52. however, for a university to be a safe place for the education of
Catholic youth, it would have to be a place in which the teachings
of the Catholic church were respected and promoted
53. a Catholic club was formed in 1888,
it was renamed the Oxford
University Newman Society
The Oxford Oratory was eventually
founded over 100 years later in 1993.
In 1859, Newman established,
in connection with the Birmingham
Oratory, a school for the education
of the sons of gentlemen.
54. Newman published
several books with the
Burns and Oates
company, effectively
saving it from bankrupcy.
There is even a story
that Newman's novel
Loss and Gain was
written specifically to
assist Burns who had
converted to catholicism.
55. Newman's
personal coat
of arms upon
his elevation
to the
cardinalate.
The Latin
motto, Cor ad
cor loquitur,
translates as
'heart speaks
unto heart'.
56. Charles Kingsley, wrongly asserted that "Father
Newman informs us that truth for its own sake
need not be, and on the whole ought not to be,
a virtue of the Roman clergy."
-In answer to Kingsley, Newman published
-in bi-monthly parts his Apologia Pro Vita Sua,
a religious autobiography.
57. In 1870, Newman
published his
Grammar of
Assent, a closely
reasoned work
in which the case
for religious belief
is maintained
58. The issue of infallibility promulgated by Vatican I - in a letter
Newman affirmed that he had always believed in the doctrine,
and had only feared the deterrent effect of its definition on
conversions on account of acknowledged historical difficulties.
59. Newman was elevated to the rank of cardinal in the consistory of 12 May 1879
by Pope Leo XIII, who assigned him the Deaconry of San Giorgio al Velabro.
-While in Rome, Newman insisted on the lifelong consistency of his opposition
to "liberalism in religion"; he argued it would lead to complete relativism
60. After an illness, Newman returned to England
and lived at the Birmingham Oratory until his death.
61. From the latter half
of 1886, Newman's
health began to fail.
He celebrated Mass
for the last time on
Christmas Day in
1889. - On 11 August
1890 he died of
pneumonia at the
Birmingham
Oratory.
- Eight days later his
body was buried
alongside Ambrose
St. John in the
cemetery at Rednal
Hill, Birmingham, at
the country house
of the oratory.
62. The pall over the coffin
bore the motto that
Newman adopted for use
as a cardinal, Cor ad cor
loquitur ("Heart speaks to
heart"), which William
Barry, writing in the
Catholic Encyclopedia
(1913), traces to Francis de
Sales and sees as revealing
the secret of Newman's
"eloquence, unaffected,
graceful, tender, and
penetrating“.
64. James Joyce had a
lifelong admiration
for Newman's
writing style and in
a letter to his
patron Harriet Shaw
Weaver remarked
about Newman that
"nobody has ever
written English
prose that can be
compared with
that of a tiresome
footling little
Anglican parson
who afterwards
became a prince
of the only
true church".
65. Newman lived in the world of his time,
travelling by train as soon as engines were built
and rail lines laid, and writing amusing letters
about his adventures on railways and ships,
and during his travels in Scotland and Ireland.
He was an indefatigable walker, and as a
young don at Oriel he often went out riding
with Hurrell Froude and other friends
66. James A. Froude
described Newman thus
-there was an original
force of character which
refused to be moulded by
circumstances, which was
to make its own way,
and become a power
in the world;
-a clearness of
intellectual perception,
-a disdain for
conventionalities,
a temper imperious and
wilful, but along with it
-a most attaching
gentleness, sweetness,
singleness of heart
and purpose
67. For Newman, friendship is an intimation of a greater love,
a foretaste of heaven. In friendship, two intimate friends
gain a glimpse of the life that awaits them in God
68. On Catholics, his influence was mainly in the direction of a
broader spirit and of a recognition of the part played by
development, in doctrine and in church government
69. colleges have been named
for him in Birmingham, UK;
Melbourne, Australia;
Edmonton, Canada;
Thodupuzha, India,
and Wichita, USA
70. The cause of beatification - In 2001, Jack Sullivan, an American
deacon from Marshfield in Massachusetts, attributed his recovery
from a spinal cord disorder to the intercession of Newman.
The miracle was accepted by the Holy See for Newman's
beatification, which Pope Benedict XVI announced
on 19 September 2010 during a visit to Britain
71. Newman was canonised on 13 October
2019, by Pope Francis, in St. Peter's Square.
The ceremony was attended by Charles III,
then-Prince of Wales, representing the UK
72. The Congregation of
the Oratory and the
Catholic Bishops'
Conference of
England and Wales
opted to place
Newman's optional
memorial on 9
October, the date of
his conversion to
Catholicism.
- The reason that 9
October was chosen
is because "it falls at
the beginning of the
University year; an
area in which
Newman had a
particular interest.
73. John Henry Newman is remembered in the Church of England with a commemoration
on 11 August. He is remembered in the Episcopal Church on 21 February
74. Works
Anglican period
The Arians of the Fourth Century (1833)
Tracts for the Times (1833–1841)
British Critic (1836–1842)
Lyra Apostolica (poems mostly by
Newman and Keble, collected 1836)
On the Prophetical Office of the Church ç
(1837)
Lectures on Justification (1838)
Parochial and Plain Sermons (1834–1843)
Select Treatises of St. Athanasius
(1842, 1844)
Lives of the English Saints (1843–44)
Essays on Miracles (1826, 1843)
Oxford University Sermons (1843)
Sermons on Subjects of the Day (1843)
75. Catholic period
Essay on the Development of Christian Doctrine
(1845)
Retractation of Anti-Catholic Statements (1845)
Loss and Gain (novel – 1848)
Faith and Prejudice and Other Unpublished Sermons
(1848–1873; collected 1956)
Discourses to Mixed Congregations (1849)
Difficulties of Anglicans (1850)
The Present Position of Catholics in England (1851)
The Idea of a University (1852 and 1858)
Cathedra Sempiterna (1852)
Callista (novel – 1855)
On Consulting the Faithful in Matters of Christian
Doctrine (1859)
The Rambler (editor) (1859–1860)
Apologia Pro Vita Sua (religious autobiography –
1864; revised edition, 1865)
Letter to Dr. Pusey (1865)
The Dream of Gerontius (1865)
An Essay in Aid of a Grammar of Assent (1870)
Sermons Preached on Various Occasions
(various/1874)
Letter to the Duke of Norfolk (1875)
Five Letters (1875)
Sermon Notes (1849–1878)
Select Treatises of St. Athanasius (1881)
On the Inspiration of Scripture (1884)
Development of Religious Error (1885)
Other miscellaneous works
Historical Tracts of St. Athanasius (1843)
Essays Critical and Historical (various/1871)
Tracts Theological and Ecclesiastical (various/1871)
Discussions and Arguments (various/1872)
Historical Sketches (various/1872)
Addresses to Cardinal Newman and His Replies,
with Biglietto Speech (1879)
Selections
Realizations: Newman's Own Selection of His
Sermons (edited by Vincent Ferrer Blehl, S.J., 1964).
Liturgical Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-8146-3290-1
Mary the Second Eve (compiled by Sister Eileen
Breen, F.M.A., 1969). TAN Books, 2009. ISBN 978-0-
89555-181-8
Newman, John Henry (2006). Earnest, James
David; Tracey, Gerard (eds.). Fifteen Sermons
Preached Before the University of Oxford. Oxford
University Press.
76. Biography of Cardinal John Henry Newman,
The Anglican period (1801-1845)
Youth (1801-1825)
The family and Walter Mayers (1801-1817)
The arrival in Oxford and the meeting with the noetics (1817-1825)
The abandonment of the noetics and the approach to the High Church (1825-1832)
Froude and the advance of liberalism
The journey to the Mediterranean and contact with the Catholic Church (1832-1833)
The Oxford Movement (1833-1841)
Keble and the Sermon of the Assizes (1833)
Newman and the Movement: Antiquity and the Via Media (1833-1839)
From the summer of 1839 to Tract 90: the collapse of the via media
The retreat to Littlemore and conversion to Catholicism (1841-1845)
The question of the Bishopric of Jerusalem (1841)
Littlemore and the Essay on the development of Christian Doctrine (1842-1845)
Conversion
Catholic period (1845-1890)
The reaction of the Anglicans.
The arrival in Oscott and the period of studies in Rome (1845-1847)
The return to England and the spread of the Oratorians (1847-1850)
The first frictions with Catholics and Anglicans
The old Catholics
Catholics
The Anglicans and the Achilli case (1850-53)
The Idea of University: the Irish university experience (1851-1858)
Newman's redemption: his Apologia Pro Vita (1864)
The changing of the guard: from Wiseman to Manning
The First Vatican Council and the letter to the Duke of Norfolk (1870-1875)
The cardinalate (1879)
The last years and public recognitions (1879-1890)
Death and funeral
Thought
General framework
Modernity and faith
The writings
Topics
The criticism of liberalism
ii) The primacy of conscience and the search for truth
iii) The relationship between faith and reason: The Grammar of Assent
iv) Ecumenism and dialogue: Newman's humanity
Fortune and fame
Newman and the contemporary world
The «absent Father» of Vatican II
The esteem of the pontiffs
Process of beatification and canonization
Newman's patronage
Newman in mass culture
Filmography - On the occasion of the beatification, the director Liana Marabini directed a film
on the life and spirituality of Newman, entitled The Unseen World and released in cinemas in
2010. The role of Newman is played by the actor F. Murray Abraham [172].
77. LIST OF PRESENTATIONS IN ENGLISH - Revised 26-8-2023
CHRIST
Resurrection – according to the gospels
Christ the King
Christ lives
Body of Christ - Corpus Christi 1,2,3,4
Christ and his Kingdom
Sacred Heart 1 + 2 – bible and doctrine –
Haurietis aquas – the cult of the Sacred Heart
Vocation to beatitude
Vocation to evangelize with Christ
CHURCH
Divine Revelation
Priestly Ministry
Human Community
Church, Mother and Teacher
Signs of hope
youth synod
CULTURE and HISTORY
Columbus and the discovery of America
Confraternities and processions– Hispanic
Diwali – Festival of lights – Hindi feast
Football in Spain
President Trump
Russian Revolution and Communism 1, 2, 3
Sevilla's fair
Virgen del Pilar and Hispanicity
FAMILY, CHILDREN
Grandparents
Love and Marriage 1,2,3 – 4,5,6 – 7,8,9
Dignity of women – John Paul II
God of Love (sex)
World Meeting of Families Rome 2022 – festival of families
Familiaris Consortium 1,2,3,4
GOD
Angels
Come Holy Spirit
God is Love 1,2– Benedict XVI
Man, image of God
Trinity
LITURGICAL YEAR
Advent and Christmas, 1 + 2
All departed souls
All Saints – Halloween for Christians
Carnival and Lent
Christmas – the birth of our Lord
Holy Week for adults
Holy Week for children 8+ years
Holy Week - drawings for children
Holy Week – Views of the last hours of JC – the passion
Sunday – Lord's Day – JP2
Thanksgiving
MARIA
Fatima – History of the Apparitions of the Virgin
Mary and the Bible
Mary Doctrine and Dogmas
Medjugore pilgrimage
Virgin of Guadalupe, Mexico – apparitions
Virgen de Pilar – Hispanic festival
Our Lady of Sheshan, China
SCIENCE
Mars Rover Perseverence – Spanish
Juno explores Jupiter
Parker Solar Test
MORAL AND ETHICAL
Christian holidays - JP2
Conscience, human community, human freedom and salvation
justification and grace, Life in Christ, merit and holiness
moral law, Morality of human acts, Passions, Sin, Sincerity
social justice, Social Life – participation, Virtue
Vocation – www.vocation.org
Vocation to evangelize
Vocation to beatitude
Pope John XXIII – Peace on Earth
Pope Paul VI
Pope Juan Pablo II –
Redeemer of man,
Karol Wojtyla + Pontificado 1+2
Pope Benedict XVII - in Germany WYD 2005
POPE FRANCIS – DOCUMENTS
love and marriage - Amoris Laetitia – 1.2 – 3.4 – 5.6
Christ lives - 1,2,3 – 4,5,6 – 7,8,9
Evangelii Gaudium 1,2,3,4,5
Gaudete et Exultate 1,2,3,4,5
FRATELLI TUTTI - 1,2 – 3,4,5 – 6,7,8
LAUDATE Sii
1 – care of the common home
2 – gospel of creation
3 – The root of the ecological crisis
4 – integral ecology
5 – lines of action
6 – Ecological Education and Spirituality
LUMEN FIDEI – chapter 1,2, - 3,4
Misericordiae Vultus in Spanish – Face of Mercy
Dear Amazonia 1,2,3,4
POPE FRANCIS – TRAVEL
Pope Francis in Africa
Pope Francis in America
Pope Francis in Bahrain 1+ 2
Pope Francis in Brazil WYD 2013
Pope Francis in Bulgaria and Macedonia
Pope Francis in Canada 1,2,3
Pope Francis in Central African Republic
Pope Francis in Chile 1 + 2
Pope Francis in Cyprus
Pope Francis in Colombia 1 + 2
Pope Francis in Congo 1+ 2
Pope Francis in Cuba 2015
Pope Francis in Egype
Pope Francis in Slovakia 1 + 2
Pope Francis in Europe – parliament
Pope Francis in Fatima
Pope Francis in Greece
Pope Francis in Holy Land, Israel, Palestine Jordan
Pope Francis in Hungary 2021 + 2023
Pope Francis in Iraq 1,2,3
Pope Francis in Ireland – world meeting of families
Pope Francis in Kenya
Pope Francis in Japan
Pope Francis in Kazakhstan 1+ 2
Pope Francis in Malta
Pope Francis in Mexico
Pope Francis in Mexico 2016
Pope Francis in Mongolia
Pope Francis in Morocco
Pope Francis in Panama – WYD 2019
Pope Francis in Peru
Pope Francis in Poland - Auschwitz
Pope Francis in Poland WYD 2016
Pope Francis in Portugal 2021 + WYD 2023
Pope Francis in Romania
Pope Francis in Sudan
Pope francis in Sweden
Pope Francis in Thailand
Pope Francis in Uganda
Pope Francis in United Arab Emirates
SAINTS and MARTYRS
Martyrs of Korea
Martyrs of Japan
Martyrs of Uganda
Martyrs of Vietnam
Martires North American
Saint Albert the Great
Saint Alphonsus Maria Liguori
Saint Ambrose of Milan
Saint Andrew, Apostle
Saint Anthony of Padua
Saint Anthony of the desert (Egypt)
Saint Bruno, founder of the Carthusians
Saint Charles Borromeo
Saint Ciyil y Methodius
Saint Columbanus 1,2
Saint Daniel Comboni
Saint Dominic de Guzman, Dominican founder
Saint Dominic Savio
Saint Stephen, proto-martyr
Saint Philip Neri
Saint Francis of Assisi 1,2,3,4
Saint Francis de Sales
Saint Francis Xavier
Saint Ignatius of Loyola
Saint Joaquin and Saint Ana
Saint Joseph, worker, husband, father
Saint John Bosco, founder of the Salesians
Saint John Chrysostom
Saint John of the Cross
Saint John Ma Vianney, Curé de'Ars
Saint John Henry Newman, Cardinal
Saint John N. Neumann, Bishop of Philadelphia
Saint John Paul II, Karol Wojtyla
Saint John, Apostle and Evangelist
Saint Leo the Great
Saint Luke the Evangelist
Saint Mark the Evangelist
Saint Martin de Porres
Saint Martin of Tours
Saint Matthew, Apostle and Evangelist
Saint Maximilian Kolbe
Saint Nazarius and Celsus
Saint Nicholas (Santa Claus)
Saint Paul, 1 + 2
Saint Padre Pio of Pietralcina
Saint Patrick and Ireland
Saint Peter Claver
Saint Robert Bellarmine
Saint James the Apostle
Saint Simon and Judah Thaddeus, apostles
Saint Zacharias and Elizabeth, parents of John the Baptist
Saint Thomas Becket
Saint Thomas Aquinas
Saint Valentine
Saint Vincent of Paul
Saint Zacharias and Saint Elizabeth
Saint Agatha, virgin and martyr
Saint Agnes of Rome, virgin and martyr
Saint Bernadette of Lourdes
Saint Brigid of Ireland
Saint Catherine of Alexandria, virgin and martyr
Saint Catherine of Siena
Saint Cecilia
Saint Faustina and divine mercy
Saint Elizabeth of Hungary
Saint Lucia, virgin and martyr
Saint Margaret of Scotland
Saint Maria Goretti
Saint Mary Magdalene
Saint Martha, Mary and Lazarus
Saint Monica, mother of Saint Augustine
Saint Rita of Cascia
Saint Teresa of Avila
Saint Teresa of Calcutta
Saint Therese of Lisieux 1 + 2
Saints Martha, Mary, and Lazarus
For comments – email – mflynn@lcegionaries.org
fb – Martin M Flynn
78. LISTA de PRESENTACIONES en ESPAÑOL- Revisado 26-8-2023
CRISTO
Resurrección – según los evangelios
Cristo Rey
Cristo vive
Cuerpo de Crito - Corpus Christi 1,2,3,4
Cristo y su Reino
Sagrado Corazón 1 + 2 – biblia y doctrina–
Haurietis aquas – el culto del Sagrado Corazón
Vocación a la bienaventuranza
Vocación a evangelizar con Cristo
IGLESIA
Revelacíon Divina
Ministerio sacerdotal
Comunidad humana
Iglesia, madre y maestra
Signos de esperanza
Sinodo jovenes
CULTURA Y HISTORIA
Colón y el descubriento de America
Confraternitdades y processiones– Hispanic
Diwali – Festival de luz – Fiesta Hindi
Futbol en España
Presidente Trump
Revolución y el Comunismo 1, 2, 3
Feria de Sevilla
Virgen del Pilar y Hispanicidad
FAMILIA, HIJOS, NIÑOS
Abuelos
Amor y Matrimonio 1,2,3 – 4,5,6 – 7,8,9
Dignidad de la mujer – John Paul II
Dios de Amor (sexo)
Encuentro Mundial de Familias - Roma 2022 – festival de ls familias
Familiaris Consortium 1,2,3,4
DIOS
Angeles
Ven Espiritu Santo
Dios es Amor 1,2– Benedicto XVI
El hombre, imagen de Dios
Trinidad
AÑO LITURGICO
Adviento y Navidad 1 + 2
Todos las Almas
Todos los Santos– Halloween para Cristianos
Carnival y Cuaresma
Navidad– el nacimiento del Señor
Semana Santa para adullos
Semana Santa para niños 8+ años
Semana Santa – dibujos para niños
Semana Santa– Vistas de las ultimas oras de JC – La Pasión
Domingo– Dia del Señor – JP2
Accion de Gracias - Thanksgiving
MARIA
Fátima – Historia de las Aparitciones de la Virgen
Maria y la Biblia
Maria Doctrina y Dogmas
Medjugore peregrinación
Virgen de Guadalupe, Mexico – aparitciónes
Virgen del Pilar –festival hispanica
Nuestra Señora de Sheshan, China
SCIENCE
Mars Rover Perseverence – Spanish
Juno explora Jupiter
Parker Sonda Solar
MORAL Y ETICA
Vacaciones Cristianos - JP2
Conciencia, Comunidad Humana, Libertad Humana y Salvacion
Justificación y gracia, Vida en Cristo, Merito y Santidad, Ley moral
Moraliidad de actos humanos, Pasiones, Pecado , Sinceridad
Justicia social ,Vida Social– participacion,Virtud
Vocación– www.vocation.org
Vocación a evangelizar
Vocación a la bienaventuranza
Papa John XXIII – Paz en la tTerra
Papa Paul VI
Papa Juan Pablo II –
Redentor del hombre,
Karol Wojtyla + Pontificado 1+2
Papa Benedicto XVII – en Alemania JMJ 2005
PAPA FRANCISCO – DOCUMENTOS
Amor y matrimonio- Amoris Laetitia – 1.2 – 3.4 – 5.6
Cristo vive - 1,2,3 – 4,5,6 – 7,8,9
Evangelii Gaudium 1,2,3,4,5
Gaudete et Exultate 1,2,3,4,5
FRATELLI TUTTI - 1,2 – 3,4,5 – 6,7,8 (somos todos hermanos)
LAUDATE Sii
1 – cuidado de la casa común
2 – evangelio de la creación
3 – la raiz de la crisis ecologica
4 – ecologia integral
5 – lineas de acción
6 –Educación y Espiritualidad Ecological
LUMEN FIDEI – capitulo 1,2, - 3,4
Misericordiae Vultus in Spanish – Rostro del Perdón
Querida Amazonia 1,2,3,4
PAPA FRANCISCO – VIAJES
Papa Francisco en Africa
Papa Francisco en America
Papa Francisco en Bahrain 1+ 2
Papa Francisco en Brazil WYD 2013
Papa Francisco en Bulgaria and Macedonia
Papa Francisco en Canada 1,2,3
Papa Francisco en Central African Republic
Papa Francisco en Chile 1 + 2
Papa Francisco en Chipre
Papa Francisco en Colombia 1 + 2
Papa Francisco en Congo 1+ 2
Papa Francisco en Cuba 2015
Papa Francisco en Egypto
Papa Francisco en Eslovaqiia 1 + 2
Papa Francisco en Europa – parliamento
Papa Francisco en Fatima, Portugal
Papa Francisco en Grecia
Papa Francisco en Tierra Santa, Israel, Palestine Jordan
Papa Francisco en Hungria 2021 + 2023
Papa Francisco en Iraq 1,2,3
Papa Francisco en Ireanda – encuentro mundial de familias
Papa Francisco en Kenia
Papa Francisco en Japón
Papa Francisco en Kazaquistan 1+ 2
Papa Francisco en Malta
Papa Francisco en Marruecos
Papa Francisco en México
Papa Francisco en México 2016
Papa Francisco en Mongolia
Papa Francisco en Panama – JMJ 2019
Papa Francisco en Peru
Papa Francisco en Polonia- Auschwitz
Papa Francisco en Polonia – JMU - 2016
Papa Francisco en Portugal 2021 + JMJ 2023
Papa Francisco en Romania
Papa Francisco en Sudan
Papa Francisco en Suecia
Pope Francis en Tailandiia
Papa Francisco en Uganda
Papa Francisco en United Arab Emirates
SANTOS Y MÁRTIRES
Mártires de Corea
Mártires de Japón
Mártires de Uganda
Mártires de Vietnam
Mártires de Nortd America
San Alberto Magno
San Alfonso Maria Liguori
San Ambrosio de Milan
San Andrés, Apostol
San Antonio de Padua
San Antonio del desierto (Egypto)
San Bruno, fundador de los cartujos
San Carlos Borromeo
San Ciril and Metodio
San Columbanus 1,2
San Daniel Comboni
San Domingo de Guzman, dundador de los Dominicos
San Dominic Savio
San Esteban, proto-martir
San Felipe Neri
San Francis co de Asís 1,2,3,4
San Francisco de Sales
San Francisco Xavier
San Ignacio de Loyola
San Joaquin y Santa Ana
San José, obrero, marido, padre
San Juan Bosco, fundador de los Salesianos
San Juan Crisostom
San Juan de la cruz
San Juan Ma Vianney, Curé de'Ars
San Juan E. Newman, cardinal
San Juan N. Neumann, obispo de Filadelfia
San Juan Paul II, Karol Wojtyla
San Juan, Apostol y Evangelista
San Leon el Grande
San Lukas, Evangelista
San Marcos, Evangelista
San Martin de Porres
San Martin de Tours
San Mateo, Apostol y Evangelista
San Maximiliana Kolbe
San Nazareo y Celso, martires
San Nicolas (Santa Claus)
San Pablo, 1 + 2
San Padre Pio de Pietralcina
San Patricio de Irlanda
San Pedro Claver
San Roberto Bellarmino
Santiago, Apostol
San Simon y Judas Tadeo, apostoles
San Zacharias e Isavel, padres de Juan el Bautista
San Tomás Beckett
San Tomás de Aquinas
San Valentino
San Vincent e de Paul
San Zacharias y Santa Isabel
Sant’ Agueda, virgen and martir
Santa Bernadita de Lourdes
Santa Brigid a de Irlanda
Santa Caterina de Alexandria, virgen y martir
Santa Caterina de Siena
Santa Cecilia, virgen e martir
Santa Faustina and divine mercy
Sant’ Agnes of Rome, virgen y martir
Sant’ Isabel de Hungria
Sant’ Inés, virgen y martir
Santa Lucia, virgen y martir
Santa Margarita de Escocia
Santa Maria Goretti
Santa Maria Magdalena
Santa Marta, Maria y Lazaro
Santa Monica, madre de San Augustine
Santa Rita de Cascia
Santa Teresa deAvila
Santa Teresa de Calcutta
Santa Terese de Lisieux 1 + 2
Para commentarioa – email – mflynn@lcegionaries.org
fb – Martin M Flynn