Consecrator - Law Dictionary Search Results
Sacred
a good sense made holy set apart to religious use consecrated not profane or common as a sacred place a sacred
Sacration
Consecration
Confirmation of Bishop
and chapter under the king's letter missive prior to the consecration of the bishop by the archbishop, as directed (see CONGE
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Candlemas-day
Mary; so called from the processions with lighted candles, and consecration of candles on that day for the service of the
Inauguration
with solemnity, as the coronation of the sovereign, or the consecration of a prelate.
Cremation
v. Williams, (1882) 20 Ch D 659. If burial in consecrated ground and cremation are both desired, cremation should precede and
Deacon
which a priest may, except only pronouncing the absolution and consecrating the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper. By the Clergy Ordination
Ecclesiastic, or ecclesiastical
with regard to the world. A clergyman; a priest; one consecrated to the service of Church, Black's Law Dictionary, 7th Edn.,
Exhumation
common law misdemeanour. Unless a body is removed from one consecrated burial place to another by faculty, it is unlawful to
Hosti'
Hosti' [fr. hostia, Lat., a victim], host-bread, or consecrated wafers in the Holy Eucharist.
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