View allAll Photos Tagged SACREDHEART
Sacred Heart Cathedral in Hamilton, Newcastle, Australia was opened in 1930 to serve the Catholic Diocese of Maitland - Newcastle (www.mn.catholic.org.au/about/cathedral).
An uncropped image taken with an IRIX 15mm f2.4 Blackstone lens.
Day 2 of Pentax Forum's Daily in July 2017 Challenge.
This Chicago west side hospital closed due to taking kickbacks for referring medicare and medicaid patients to Sacred Heart Hospital. They were also making up fake and ghost patients that received care but did not. The FBI and Chicago police raided the hospital records and sadly it was shut down. The hospital has been abandoned since 2013.
This Chicago west side hospital closed due to taking kickbacks for referring medicare and medicaid patients to Sacred Heart Hospital. They were also making up fake and ghost patients that received care but did not. The FBI and Chicago police raided the hospital records and sadly it was shut down. The hospital has been abandoned since 2013.
Jesus: Diego Parenti
The New Cult of The Sacred Heart!
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Detail of a stained glass window in Mary Immaculate Traditionalist Catholic Church in Omaha, Nebraska, USA
Completed in 2000
Design: Allmann Sattler Wappner Architekts
www.allmannsattlerwappner.de/en/projects/detail/60/info/#...
detail-online.com/inspiration/church-of-the-sacred-heart-...
The altar in the Sacred Heart Church in Tampa, FL, is really a thing of beauty from any angle! This was captured through the side chapel.
www.facebook.com/pages/Simple-Elegance-By-Laura/132391823...
I've had this chestpiece for several years now, but this is only the second picture I have ever taken of it, and the first was a grainy Quickcam snapshot from 2003!
This is the Sacred Heart of Darwin. The birds were done by my ex-fiance, Steve, of Smooth Groove Tattoo in Deep Ellum, Dallas. The rest was done by Caleb at Holdfast Tattoos on Greenville Ave. in Dallas.
Completed in 2000
Design: Allmann Sattler Wappner Architekts
www.allmannsattlerwappner.de/en/projects/detail/60/info/#...
detail-online.com/inspiration/church-of-the-sacred-heart-...
Completed in 2000
Design: Allmann Sattler Wappner Architekts
www.allmannsattlerwappner.de/en/projects/detail/60/info/#...
detail-online.com/inspiration/church-of-the-sacred-heart-...
"Devotion to the heart of Christ is not the veneration of a single organ apart from the Person of Jesus. What we contemplate and adore is the whole Jesus Christ, the Son of God made man, represented by an image that accentuates his heart. That heart of flesh is seen as the privileged sign of the inmost being of the incarnate Son and his love, both divine and human. More than any other part of his body, the heart of Jesus is “the natural sign and symbol of his boundless love”.
It is essential to realize that our relationship to the Person of Jesus Christ is one of friendship and adoration, drawn by the love represented under the image of his heart. We venerate that image, yet our worship is directed solely to the living Christ, in his divinity and his plenary humanity, so that we may be embraced by his human and divine love.
Whatever the image employed, it is clear that the living heart of Christ – not its representation – is the object of our worship, for it is part of his holy risen body, which is inseparable from the Son of God who assumed that body forever. We worship it because it is “the heart of the Person of the Word, to whom it is inseparably united”. Nor do we worship it for its own sake, but because with this heart the incarnate Son is alive, loves us and receives our love in return. Any act of love or worship of his heart is thus “really and truly given to Christ himself”, since it spontaneously refers back to him and is “a symbol and a tender image of the infinite love of Jesus Christ”.
For this reason, it should never be imagined that this devotion may distract or separate us from Jesus and his love. In a natural and direct way, it points us to him and to him alone, who calls us to a precious friendship marked by dialogue, affection, trust and adoration. The Christ we see depicted with a pierced and burning heart is the same Christ who, for love of us, was born in Bethlehem, passed through Galilee healing the sick, embracing sinners and showing mercy. The same Christ who loved us to the very end, opening wide his arms on the cross, who then rose from the dead and now lives among us in glory."
– Pope Francis, 'Dilexit Nos', 48-51.
Detail from a chapel in the Stations of the Cross complex at Banská Štiavnica in Slovakia.
"At that time: Jesus told the Pharisees and scribes this parable: ‘What man of you, having a hundred sheep, if he has lost one of them, does not leave the ninety-nine in the open country, and go after the one that is lost until he finds it? And when he has found it, he lays it on his shoulders, rejoicing. And when he comes home, he calls together his friends and his neighbours, saying to them, “Rejoice with me, for I have found my sheep that was lost.” Just so, I tell you, there will be more joy in heaven over one sinner who repents than over ninety-nine righteous persons who need no repentance.’" –Luke 15:3-7, which is today's Gospel for the Solemnity of the Sacred Heart.
Mosaic from the tomb of Bl. Pius IX in San Lorenzo fuori le mura, in Rome.
Completed in 2000
Design: Allmann Sattler Wappner Architekts
www.allmannsattlerwappner.de/en/projects/detail/60/info/#...
detail-online.com/inspiration/church-of-the-sacred-heart-...
"But God proves his love for us
in that while we were still sinners Christ died for us."
– Romans 5:8, which is part of today's 2nd reading at Mass.
Carving from the church of the Sacred Heart in Lille.