To further clarify a prohibited time Lent (the forty days before Easter)
would be a prohibited time also I believe the 4 weeks prior to
Christmas. Normally Weddings did not take place on Sundays in the
Catholic Church.
Rick
Richard Francis Pimentel
Epping, New Hampshire, USA
Researching
Hi JR,
Could you give an example of such a religious time that would prohibit
receiving the blessing and can they get it blessed later?
Thanks,
Nancy
Date: Tue, 20 Apr 2010 05:39:37 -0700
Subject: [AZORES-Genealogy] Re: need eyes, too
From: jro...@rogers.com
To:
Thank you very much. There is so much to learn. I, as many of you, wish we
had our relatives to answer our questions.
It is so nice to have such knowledgeable relatives to answer many of our
questions. I have learned so much in such
a short time.
Thank you once again,
Tish
On Tue, Apr 20, 2010 at
In a message dated 4/20/2010 8:39:50 AM Eastern Daylight Time,
jro...@rogers.com writes:
They did not receive the blessings because it was at a time that was
prohibited. This is common enough and usually means they are marrying
or asking for the blessing at a prohibited religious time. The
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