Servant of God Sister Maria Brigida Postorino, who founded the Religious Institute of the Daughters of Mary Immaculate, which inspired the birth of the movement of the Church of the Friends of Mary Immaculate.
Dorothy Day (1897–1980) Catholic social activist recognized as a Servant of God
Guy de Fontgalland (November 30, 1913-January 24, 1925), Servant of God, was regarded in the inter-war period as the youngest potential Catholic saint who was not a martyr.
In 17 December 1982 her Beatification cause was formally opened by Pope John Paul II; thereby, bestowing upon her the title of "Servant of God ISABEL LARRAÑAGA RAMÍREZ, ("ISABEL OF THE HEART OF JESUS")".
Servant of God Mar Varghese Payyappilly Palakkappilly had served as the parish priest of Kadamakkudy Syrian Catholic Church (1909–11).
One of them, Teresa De La Cruz, founded the convent Canonesas de La Cruz, and was given the title of Servant of God in 1981 by the Catholic Church, which means her life is being studied in order to eventually grant her the title of Saint.
In 1991 his successor, Cardinal John O'Connor, strongly supported Toussaint for sainthood and began the official process, thereby according him the title of Servant of God, and sent the needed documentation to the Vatican for this process.
Josip Stadler, Servant of God - the first modern archbishop of Vrhbosna and the founder of the religious order of the Servants of the Infant Jesus.
God | God Bless America | god | God Save the Queen | Assemblies of God | Servant of God | Lamb of God | Thank God You're Here | Jupiter (god) | God of War III | Children of God | God the Father | God Forbid | Church of God in Christ | Their Eyes Were Watching God | Thank God It's Friday | Names of God | Lamb of God (band) | God Save the Queen (Sex Pistols song) | The Wrath of God | The Trial of God | The God of Small Things | John of God | God of Gamblers | God in Christianity | God Alone | Charmion (servant to Cleopatra) | by the Grace of God | Back to God's Country (1953 film) | Back to God's Country |
Sister Mary Annella Zervas, Servant of God (born April 7, 1900, Moorhead, Minnesota – died August 14, 1926 Moorhead, Minnesota) was an American Benedictine nun who died after a three-year battle with the skin disease Pityriasis rubra pilaris.
The Servant of God, Abbé Pierre-Victor Braun, (5 June 1825 – 18 May 1882) was a French Catholic priest who ministered to the poor of Paris.
The register of John Thoresby, Archbishop of York, confirming the enclosure suggests to Hughes that "in common with the epistles of Rolle, Margaret desired an eremitic life in order that she might fashion herself as a servant of God more freely and more quietly with pious prayers and vigils. Such language indicates how she and Rolle were pioneering a change in the conception of the eremitic vocation".
On January the 24th, the day before the Blessed Beatification of the Venerable Servant of God Maria Cristina of Savoy, the Dukes of Castro and of Noto signed an "Act of Reconciliation" at 5.30 in the evening at Naples' Excelsior Hotel.