Lexicographical Neighbors of Concelebrated
Literary usage of Concelebrated
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Catholic Encyclopedia: An International Work of Reference on the by Charles George Herbermann, Edward Aloysius Pace, Condé Bénoist Pallen, Thomas Joseph Shahan, John Joseph Wynne (1913)
"Long after the subject is ordained priest, after he has concelebrated, the bishop
gives him the power of forgiving sins ..."
2. The Annual Register edited by Edmund Burke (1824)
"Russians, elated with past victories, portant office on the death of the and
eagerly bent on farther concelebrated Hassan Au, was reduced quests, ..."
3. Handbook to Christian and Ecclesiastical Rome by Mildred Anna Rosalie Tuker, Hope Malleson (1897)
"The consecration takes place in the mass, which is concelebrated by the consecrator
and the bishop-elect. The consecrator wears the precious mitre, ..."
4. Syria and the Holy Land: Their Scenery and Their People. Being Incidents of by Walter Keating Kelly (1844)
"Ten minutes above the town, on the same side of the Kadisha as tlie castle, stands
the concelebrated for the exquisite beauty of its situation. ..."
5. The Patriarch and the Tsar by William Palmer (1876)
"Indeed, when they had followed hia private instructions, and had sat with him in
synod, and concelebrated and communicated with him, it would have been mere ..."
6. The Civil and Ecclesiastical History of Scotland: A. D. LXXX.-DCCXVIII. by Thomas Innes (1853)
"... by twelve priests, who concelebrated or jointly celebrated with him; pronouncing
with him the words of consecration, and all the Canon of the Mass. ..."