Bureaucrats, Moderators (CommentStreams), Interface administrators, Push subscription managers, Suppressors, Administrators
11,987
edits
| Line 53: | Line 53: | ||
== Relics == | == Relics == | ||
Explain | Explain known or documented relics in the parish. | ||
* '''Common practice''': Almost every Catholic church has at least some third-class relics (touched cloths) and often small first- or second-class relics embedded in the altar stone (required by traditional canon law—Canon 1237 §2 in the 1983 Code still encourages it). | * '''Common practice''': Almost every Catholic church has at least some third-class relics (touched cloths) and often small first- or second-class relics embedded in the altar stone (required by traditional canon law—Canon 1237 §2 in the 1983 Code still encourages it). | ||
* '''Altar relics''': When a Catholic church is consecrated, a small first-class relic (usually of a martyr) is traditionally sealed into the altar. You can often see a small sepulcrum (cavity) covered by a stone in the mensa (top) of the altar. | * '''Altar relics''': When a Catholic church is consecrated, a small first-class relic (usually of a martyr) is traditionally sealed into the altar. You can often see a small sepulcrum (cavity) covered by a stone in the mensa (top) of the altar. | ||
* '''Side altars or reliquaries''': Larger or older parishes frequently have glass-fronted reliquaries containing visible relics of popular saints (St. Anthony of Padua, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, St. Maria Goretti, St. John Paul II, etc.). | * '''Side altars or reliquaries''': Larger or older parishes frequently have glass-fronted reliquaries containing visible relics of popular saints (St. Anthony of Padua, St. Thérèse of Lisieux, St. Maria Goretti, St. John Paul II, etc.). | ||
The Catholic Church officially classifies relics into three categories: | |||
# '''First-class relics''': Actual parts of a saint’s body (bone fragments, blood, hair, flesh, teeth, etc.). | |||
# '''Second-class relics''': Objects that belonged to or were touched by the saint (clothing, rosaries, books, crucifixion nails, pieces of the True Cross, etc.). | |||
# '''Third-class relics''': Any object (cloth, medal, holy card) that has been touched to a first- or second-class relic. | |||
== Related parishes == | == Related parishes == | ||
| Line 64: | Line 68: | ||
Finally add appropriate categories including: <nowiki>[[Category:Parish in [Administrative subdivision name]]]</nowiki>, <nowiki>[[Category:Parish in [Diocese]]]</nowiki> <nowiki>[[Category:Parish in [Country]]]</nowiki>, <nowiki>[[Category:Parish founded in [time period]]]</nowiki>, <nowiki>[[Category:Parishes built in the [Architectural styles name]]]</nowiki>. Categories are intended to group together pages on similar subjects. They are implemented by a MediaWiki feature that adds any page with a text like <nowiki>[[Category:XYZ]]</nowiki> in its wiki markup to the automated listing that is the category with name XYZ. Categories help readers to find, and navigate around, a subject area, to see pages sorted by title, and to thus find article relationships. They should follow https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Category. | Finally add appropriate categories including: <nowiki>[[Category:Parish in [Administrative subdivision name]]]</nowiki>, <nowiki>[[Category:Parish in [Diocese]]]</nowiki> <nowiki>[[Category:Parish in [Country]]]</nowiki>, <nowiki>[[Category:Parish founded in [time period]]]</nowiki>, <nowiki>[[Category:Parishes built in the [Architectural styles name]]]</nowiki>. Categories are intended to group together pages on similar subjects. They are implemented by a MediaWiki feature that adds any page with a text like <nowiki>[[Category:XYZ]]</nowiki> in its wiki markup to the automated listing that is the category with name XYZ. Categories help readers to find, and navigate around, a subject area, to see pages sorted by title, and to thus find article relationships. They should follow https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Category. | ||
==Hallucination Guidance== | |||
You are a fact-conscious language model that prioritizes epistemic accuracy over speed or persuasion. Your core principle: "if it is not verifiable, do not claim it." | |||
Before responding, verify your answer follows these rules: | |||
Clearly distinguish between verified facts, probabilistic inference, and unknown areas | |||
Use cautious qualifiers: "According to...", "As of [date]...", "It appears that..." | |||
When unsure, say "I don't know" or "This cannot be confirmed" | |||
Never fabricate data, names, dates, events, studies, or quotes | |||
Only reference known, trustworthy sources when providing evidence | |||
When users challenge your accuracy: | |||
Acknowledge immediately and apologize genuinely | |||
Redirect to authoritative sources (FAR, agency policy, contracting officers) | |||
Ask for clarification to improve future responses | |||
Include disclaimers when appropriate: | |||
"Based on general general knowledge... but verify with current verifiable sources" | |||
"This is a common approach, though your specific situation may require different considerations" | |||