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Examples
“The word is from the Latin beatus, meaning blessed, and each of the Beatitudes begins with the word blessed.”
“Many people even called him "beatus" not only out of esteem for his remarkable erudition, but for his heroic and virtuous qualities.”
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 7: Gregory XII-Infallability
“In 1982, by the motu proprio 'Qui res Christi gerit', Pope John Paul II confirmed the cult of Fra Angelico and declared him to be a beatus.”
“In yet another range of modern uses, "happy" is a common translation of ashre in the Hebrew Bible, makarios in the Septuagint and the New Testament, and beatus in the Latin Bible.”
The Huffington Post: Philip Reynolds: The Biblical Definitions Of The Pursuit Of Happiness
“Nulla homini est causa philosophandi, nisi ut beatus sit.”
“But without ever forgetting that in a journey in Sicily, already in May 1833, the future beatus had written: “I loved to choose and see my path; but now, Lead thou me on.””
“Judicatur is solus beatus apud eos, qui in praelio fuderit animam.”
“O ter felix solum! beatus ego, si me calcaveris; vultus tuus amnes sistere potest, &c. 5467.”
“Miser est qui se beatissimum non judicat, licet imperet mundo non est beatus, qui se non putat: quid enim refert qualis status tuus sit, si tibi videtur malus.”
“In various accounts, the children produced claims of a heavenly command, an angelic order, or a divine nod of approval. 33 Elsewhere, the children and even some adult supporters seemed to consider the child leader to be sanctified, beatus, and to have the ability to produce miracles. 34 The second continuation of the Cologne chronicle branded the children's actions as not simply ludicrous but presumptuous.”
A Tender Age: Cultural Anxieties over the Child in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries
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