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The one who practices or studies homiletics is called a homilist.
These are all, the Christian homilist says, "demons" who should not be believed in or invoked.
He began publication of The Homilist in 1852, and proceeded to publish over forty volumes.
The homilist, Cardinal Law, will then speak in the one part of the Mass that is not scripted.
The next great name in preaching is that of St. Gregory the Great, particularly as a homilist.
"He had asked Cardinal O'Connor to be homilist."
His supporters praise him as a hands-on administrator, a successful fund-raiser, a lively intellectual and a talented homilist.
Monsignor Fulton J. Sheen was the homilist for the ordination.
Jellinek was a powerful apologist and an accomplished homilist, at once profound and ingenious.
Here the scriptures are proclaimed, the responsorial psalm is sung, and the homilist addresses the congregation.
Monsignor Gerald L. Lewis was the homilist.
The chief celebrant and homilist at the funeral was his successor, Bishop Michael Bransfield.
Together with his father, he was a patron of the homilist, Ælfric of Eynsham.
He was a successful homilist and a connoisseur of art, especially religious art (through the 1990s, he also hosted shows on Catholic television).
Timothy Manning, the Cardinal Archbishop of Los Angeles, was the homilist.
The Cambrai homilist elaborates also on a distinction made by Gregory between inward and outward martyrdom.
There are some indications that he was a student of Ælfric of Eynsham, the homilist.
David Thomas (1813 - 1894) was an English preacher and publisher of The Homilist, a magazine of liturgical thought.
Noel Vasquez, SJ with homilist Fr.
There is little known about the homilies and their origin or the homilist, so the purpose and principles behind the homilies will never be fully known.
At his funeral Mass, homilist Monsignor Ronald Knox observed, "No man of his time fought so hard for the good things."
Achilles Daunt (1832-1878) was a noted Irish preacher and homilist, and Anglican dean of Cork.
"12 The homilist of Interpretation urges each pneumatic member of that "body" to share his pneumatic gifts with the psychics in order to "fill" their "deficiencies.
Perhaps it is not so surprising that a homilist such as Wulfstan would try to demonize, or humanize, the deities of a culture they were trying to convert.
In this age Chrysostom was the great model for imitation; but it was Chrysostom the orator, not Chrysostom the homilist.