He is calling neither for the restoration of the Tridentine Latin liturgy nor for a return to the devotional practices of past generations. |
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After that we will have some readings, and then the responsive liturgy which is in your newsletter inserts. |
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We then will read a Psalm or other piece of responsive liturgy. After that, we will go into the more contemporary part of our service. |
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In reality, there has always been growth and development in Orthodox liturgy. |
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John takes this opportunity to provide his reader with something equally important to Eucharistic liturgy. |
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As we know, they had maintained the practice of ordaining women deacons during the Eucharistic liturgy. |
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They are all integral parts of church interiors and of the Orthodox liturgy and private devotion. |
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Driven by hysterical choirs and crashing percussion, the Latin liturgy is indeed rather scary. |
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When sacramental participation had ceased to be the norm, people needed a reason for attending the liturgy. |
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A year earlier, Communion had been denied to two women present at a conciliar liturgy, which attracted much attention in the press. |
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The Vigil of Easter liturgy held yearly on Holy Saturday in my former campus congregation always is a special occasion. |
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Kindly inform any person residing outside the parish who might wish to attend this special liturgy. |
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Soloists, organists and all musicians are reminded that their primary role is one of service to the liturgy. |
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The original hearers of the work were, after all, the congregation present at a solemn liturgy, not the audience at a concert. |
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The guidelines focus on key areas of the liturgy and offer suggestions as to the best way in which to approach the music choices. |
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Pope Benedict XVI is an expert on liturgy and the rubrics of liturgical celebration. |
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At the Eucharist with the September CPT delegation, we began the liturgy with asperges. |
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The last words of the Passover Haggadah, the liturgy used for the Seder, are a good example. |
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The thurifer helps to engage all of our senses in prayer, heightening the solemnity of the liturgy. |
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The children all participated in the liturgy while the senior school children sang suitable hymns. |
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And all associated with the liturgy and celebration were warmly applauded and accorded an ovation at the end of the Mass. |
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The hymns, the readings, are in modern Chaldean, but the language of the Chaldean liturgy is ancient Aramaic. |
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I wonder what part he daily participation in the liturgy in Christ Church Cathedral has played in this movement into orthodoxy. |
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In my early years I was puzzled by the fact that a priest from a neighboring men's cloister came to celebrate the liturgy exclusively for women. |
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Is the church merely updating its musical liturgy, or has it fallen victim to the nearly omnipotent power of popular culture? |
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Basic texts for the liturgy were translated by ecumenical committees for use in the various churches. |
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The whole liturgy is sung, the characteristic deep Russian bass of the priest alternating with canticles by the choir. |
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Central to any such liturgy would be the great hagiographical texts describing the life, death, and miraculous presence of the saint at his tomb. |
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Devoid of the ceremony and liturgy associated with the Church of England, charismatic itinerants made a straightforward appeal. |
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In fact, the liturgy should consider unselfish love and joyful praise as the most important element of liturgical service. |
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There is something natural and uncontrived about the presence of children at the liturgy in Byzantine and Oriental churches. |
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The Mozarabic liturgy had perfected the deathbed penance more than any other liturgy. |
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In life the king and his family could watch the liturgy from the tribune above, and in death their tombs occupied the Pantheon itself. |
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Through such liturgy, both the universe as macrocosm and the individual human being as microcosm are transformed, transfigured and deified. |
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It is the liturgy in its entirety that calls into being this alternative community. |
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My passion and death are that definitive liturgy, that glorification of God which is the light and salvation of the world. |
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Despite these efforts to rely on wall-to-wall ditties, psalmodic chant still figures prominently in the Weekday liturgy. |
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The exterior nature of the liturgy helps to kindle in us a strong interior faith and devotion. |
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Coptic, a late form of ancient Egyptian language, was the common speech of Egypt and was used by the Coptic church in its liturgy. |
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I taped the liturgy, played the tape in the car, and sang along with gusto. |
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The Church of England allows its celestial liturgy to be displaced by electric guitars. |
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An important truth is that we need full and active participation in liturgy and you don't get that by dissipating your resources. |
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As liturgy it is approached experientially, bringing people into a dynamic contemporary encounter with God. |
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To be ordained a priest in the Church, a person had to be able to read Syriac and learn the Syriac liturgy by heart. |
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The deacon is defined in relation to bishops and presbyters, helping as a minister of word, liturgy, and charity. |
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The recovery of the Eucharist as the normative liturgy of the Lord's Day is another significant development of the 1979 prayer book. |
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The liturgy observed was that of the Gallican rite until Pepin and Charlemagne imposed the Roman rite. |
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When we speak of the Gallican Rite we mean a type of liturgy rather than a stereotyped service. |
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Perhaps these Galilean parables aren't so different from the large-scale dramas in this month's Exodus history and psalmist liturgy. |
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From the perspective of the liturgy of the Church this understanding of spirit has created a very formal and lifeless kind of worship. |
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In the Byzantine intercessional liturgy the two virtues that were mentioned in commemoration for the emperor were orthodoxy and piety. |
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The guidelines for the celebration of this sacrament in the liturgy of marriage are the same as for any congregational Eucharist. |
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One of the antiphons for Aunemund's liturgy at Saint-Nizier makes such a move. |
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In the Baptism liturgy, there is clear involvement of the whole congregation as a baptizing community. |
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The latter is mystical, fideistic, evangelical, and Roman, into pilgrimage, procession, chant, and punctilious liturgy. |
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The great defender of traditional liturgy could also be its critic when he thought the fog of incense was merely hiding a vacancy at the altar. |
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Again, the miserable poverty of so much contemporary hymnody likewise undermines the most careful attention to liturgy. |
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Therefore, congregations have had the liberty to choose their own liturgy, including their hymns and hymnals. |
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Everyone involved in organising the liturgy from the paschal fire to the music, readings, must be congratulated. |
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He defended sacred art, reformed the Roman liturgy, and perhaps established a choir school. |
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His ideas and their realization in church social service, mission, pastoral care, liturgy, education, and homiletics come from one vision. |
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In fact they expurgated any reference to animal sacrifices from their liturgy. |
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We repeat a few prayers in Albanian, but the liturgy is otherwise in English. |
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Youth were routinely invited to lead the entire liturgy, craft prayers, offer faith witnesses and even preach sermons. |
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I was a sixth grader, an altar boy awed by liturgy, and determined to be a priest. |
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The final chapter summarizes and integrates the previous chapters with a study of Genesis that examines themes and suggests a brief liturgy as a conclusion to the study. |
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This is a far cry from Corbon's more simplistic description of the Eucharistic canon as prelude, liturgy of the word, anaphora, communion, and finale. |
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Is not the cost of keeping our churches open, offering the liturgy, and reserving the Eucharist a price the Church can afford, no matter the monetary price? |
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The Wednesday lunchtime mass featured chanting, responsive liturgy, hymns, prayers, readings from the Epistle and Gospel lessons, and a brief homily. |
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So the liturgy of the word was replaced by Stations of the Cross! |
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We were driven to a village three hours away from our centre where we were presented as guests at a Sunday liturgy, an incredibly lively and moving event. |
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The eucharistic epiclesis in its classical form is a potent indicator of the deeper question concerning the relation of the Holy Spirit to the liturgy. |
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After all, is that not the intention of the liturgy of the word? |
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How can a devotee of Chaucer feel otherwise when the liturgy recalls what the church historically is-a parade of human beings fallible and peccable? |
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It is an emphasis and a faith apparent in the manuscript illumination and the great crucifixes of the Ottonian period and expressed in the liturgy of the church. |
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While Episcopalianism stands at a crossroads at present, that which remains of their traditional liturgy has become almost unconsciously Catholicized in the past century. |
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The problem, from a pastoral point of view, may indeed be a real one, but the inner laws of liturgy should not be altered for contemporary catechetical purposes. |
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Without adequate catechetical formation of the people, the liturgy proclaims signs of faith which they are not able fully to claim and integrate into their daily lives. |
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Theodorakis spent his childhood on the island of Kefalonia, where there was a local tradition of harmonising the melodies of the orthodox liturgy. |
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This Haitian Vodou praise exclamation was immediately picked up and repeated by all of the Beninese participants as if it had already become part of Benin's Vodun liturgy. |
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Although the Eastern Church had been responsible for the conversion of Moravia and Bohemia, by the 10th century both duchies had turned to the Western, Latin liturgy. |
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The only problem was that the priest delivered the liturgy in a monotone. |
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Last night we had a bit of a show-and-tell session in the liturgy group. |
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The interior remains faithful to the traditional Sephardic liturgy, with the congregation seated face to face and the Rabbi standing on the bimah opposite the Ark. |
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He paid lavish praise to the girls for their wonderful liturgy. |
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Outside of sermons during the celebration of the divine liturgy it could not instruct or evangelise to the faithful or its youth. |
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If the ritual does not have this purpose it is not liturgy but only ritual. |
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There was only limited enthusiasm amongst ritualists to introduce the widespread use of Latin in the liturgy. |
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The main liturgy on Sunday is the eucharist, which is said in the vernacular. |
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The first set of refugees to arrive in Frankfurt had subscribed to a reformed liturgy and used a modified version of the Book of Common Prayer. |
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King Charles I and William Laud, Archbishop of Canterbury, met with a reverse in their efforts to impose a new liturgy on the Scots. |
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These were based on the older liturgy but influenced by Protestant principles. |
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It incited rancor and division between the new revivalists and the old traditionalists who insisted on ritual and liturgy. |
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The lack of translated religious literature and liturgy at a time of religious playing a significant part in identity has been noted. |
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Churchmanship can be defined as the manifestation of theology in the realms of liturgy, piety and, to some extent, spirituality. |
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Good liturgy demands songs that are singable and a choir that has good leadership, says Ruff. |
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A technique for Theurgic ascent in the Mithras liturgy, the Chaldean Oracles and some Mithraic frescoes. |
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Two are Minor Canons with particular areas of specialist responsibility, including ceremony, music, liturgy and daily services. |
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In the Middle Ages, the Sancta Sanctorum served as the pope's private chapel and often functioned as a staging point for the stational liturgy. |
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In the Middle Ages, drama in the vernacular languages of Europe may have emerged from enactments of the liturgy. |
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Its main tasks include maintaining and defining doctrinal orthodoxy, the adoption and prescription of liturgy. |
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His legacy lives on in the confessions, liturgy, and church orders of the Reformed churches of today. |
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The Beneventan rite is more closely related to the liturgy of the Ambrosian rite than to the Roman rite. |
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His reputation preceded him and the excitement of hearing the liturgy in Danish brought thousands of people out to hear him. |
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There were other less significant catalysts for the Schism however, including variance over liturgy. |
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The church had a liturgy written in Cyrillic and a corpus of translations from Greek that had been produced for the Slavic peoples. |
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The Church of England's official book of liturgy as established in English Law is the Book of Common Prayer. |
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Calvinists who disliked the more ceremonious style of liturgy were opposed by an Episcopalian faction. |
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On Maundy Thursday, 13 April 1525, Zwingli celebrated communion under his new liturgy. |
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The bishop's introduction in 1637 of a formal liturgy to the antipapal Scots resulted in outrage among the people of Brechin. |
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The two managed to do the entire service of the liturgy until others could be trained. |
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As indicated above, attempts to strike election themes from the liturgy are by no means new to Reconstructionism. |
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The next morning, Easter Sunday proper, there is no Divine Liturgy, since the liturgy for that day has already been celebrated. |
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The outdoor procession during Bright Week takes place either after paschal matins or the paschal divine liturgy. |
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This is why, in the Byzantine liturgy, we commemorate her in first place after the epiclesis. |
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The restoration of the epiclesis to the liturgy that invokes the Holy Spirit, identifies the Spirit as the sacramental agent. |
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The musical liturgy of the church was being more and more influenced by secular tunes and styles. |
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There will be a Resurrection Service at midnight followed by matins and divine liturgy. |
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Increasingly the Byzantine Church differed in language, practices, and liturgy from the western Church. |
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Anglicanism has traditionally expressed its doctrinal convictions based on the prayer texts and liturgy of the church. |
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The term reflects the Lutheran belief that the liturgy was instituted by God. |
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It thus forms the basis for establishing a relationship with a divine agency, as well as with other participants in the liturgy. |
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It was a royal ceremonial funeral including royal pageantry and Anglican funeral liturgy. |
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When ritual is undertaken to participate in a divine act or assist a divine action, it is liturgy. |
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There are also 50 canticles and psalms, selected on the basis of their use within liturgy. |
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The nature of the liturgy varies according to the theological tradition of the priests, parishes, dioceses and regional churches. |
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The new ordo was influenced by West Frankish liturgy and in turn became one of the sources of the medieval French ordo. |
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Wesley was unhappy about the idea of field preaching as he believed Anglican liturgy had much to offer in its practice. |
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For the next nine years Wilfrid discharged his episcopal duties, founded monasteries, built churches, and improved the liturgy. |
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It was followed by the beginnings of a reformed liturgy and of the Book of Common Prayer, which would take until 1549 to complete. |
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A second directive, dated 29 November, issued detailed instructions regarding Byrd's use of the organ in the liturgy. |
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In the Roman liturgy there are many texts which appear repeatedly in different liturgical contexts. |
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Since the English Reformation, the Church of England has used a liturgy in English. |
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In the Middle Ages, drama in the vernacular languages of Europe may have emerged from religious enactments of the liturgy. |
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Congregations employ its liturgy and rituals as optional resources, but their use is not mandatory. |
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The enforcement of the new liturgy did not always take place without a struggle. |
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During Kingdomtide, Methodist liturgy emphasises charitable work and alleviating the suffering of the poor. |
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This liturgy was not a marriage rite, but the blessing included an exchange of vows and the couple's agreement to enter into a lifelong committed relationship. |
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A further Eucharistic prayer is provided in the Marriage liturgy. |
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In 1635, Charles I authorised a book of canons that made him head of the Church, ordained an unpopular ritual and enforced the use of a new liturgy. |
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The exact liturgy that Augustine introduced to England remains unknown, but it would have been a form of the Latin language liturgy in use at Rome. |
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Charlemagne sponsored changes in church liturgy, imposing the Roman form of church service on his domains, as well as the Gregorian chant in liturgical music for the churches. |
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In the liturgy of the New Covenant every liturgical action, especially the celebration of the Eucharist and the sacraments, is an encounter between Christ and the Church. |
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It incorporated ideas and practices related to the practice of liturgy and ceremony to incorporate more powerful emotional symbolism in the church. |
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To these names others have subsequently been added to the liturgy. |
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There is normally no sung or responsive liturgy, but worship is the responsibility of the minister in each parish, and the style of worship can vary and be quite experimental. |
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In the 12th and 13th centuries, religious dramas taught the liturgy. |
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As the heir to a considerable estate and a pious layman, Robert would also have been given working knowledge of Latin, the language of charter lordship, liturgy and prayer. |
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In modern usage, however, the Mizrahim are sometimes termed Sephardi due to similar styles of liturgy, despite independent development from Sephardim proper. |
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At least on Sundays and Holy Days of Obligation, a homily, a sermon that draws upon some aspect of the readings or the liturgy of the day, is then given. |
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It was in Strasbourg that German was first used for the liturgy. |
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The Serbs adopt the Old Slavonic liturgy instead of the Greek. |
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Another legend holds that two priests saying divine liturgy over the crowd disappeared into the cathedral's walls as the first Turkish soldiers entered. |
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Originally indicating how the voice should be modulated when chanting the liturgy, the positurae migrated into any text meant to be read aloud, and then to all manuscripts. |
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Luther's service, however, included congregational singing of hymns and psalms in German, as well as of parts of the liturgy, including Luther's unison setting of the Creed. |
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Calvin provided many of the foundational documents for reformed churches, including documents on the catechism, the liturgy, and church governance. |
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In 1525, Zwingli introduced a new communion liturgy to replace the Mass. |
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As a religious phenomenon, liturgy is a communal response to and participation in, the sacred through activity reflecting praise, thanksgiving, supplication or repentance. |
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The liturgy is almost always performed in front of an object or objects of veneration and accompanied by offerings of light, incense, water and food. |
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The entire congregation participates in and offers the liturgy to God. |
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A Portuguese language Prayer Book is the basis of the Church's liturgy. |
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In 1881 the church combined a Spanish translation of the 1662 edition of the Book of Common Prayer with the Mozarabic Rite liturgy, which had recently been translated. |
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In his autonomous Church it is for him to ordain and enthrone bishops and his name is to be mentioned immediately after that of the Pope in the liturgy. |
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Thomas Arkadyaqon who was consecrated as Mar Thoma I entered into a relationship with the West Syriac Orthodox Church and gradually adopted West Syrian liturgy and practices. |
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After Mar Thoma Church had begun to use the liturgy in mother tongue Malayalam, other churches continued to follow the same for a deeper engagement with the laity. |
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The Apostolic succession of Marthoma Episcopacy, St James liturgy, Ecclesiastical tradition and order are all from West Syriac Tradition of Antioch. |
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During the liturgy at the conference, Gately said the words of consecution along with more than 2,000 other participants, including about 200 priests. |
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Eight essays explore the hundred or so offertories of Gregorian chant and their melodies for solo and choir performance in the Roman and Frankish liturgy of the Middle Ages. |
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Sadly, the monks of Emmaus eventually joined the heretical Hussite Utraquists, who demanded, among other things, communion under both species as in the Byzantine liturgy. |
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One highlight of the liturgical year is the Passion Sunday liturgy, which includes a danced procession with palms and other choreographed moments throughout the service. |
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They also reveal that the Gautamas, too, knew a liturgy for the installation of the post, and that it must have been formulaically very similar to that of the Vaisvamitras. |
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By contrast, in the Orthodox Liturgy, there is an air of reverence, as well as an atmosphere of informality. |
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Even now, in our celebration of the Mass, the Liturgy of the Word comes before the Liturgy of the Eucharist. |
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The Liturgy of the Hours is centered on chanting or recitation of the Psalms, using fixed melodic formulas known as psalm tones. |
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Good Friday, April 9, the Young People's Choir will sing Liturgy of the Lord's Passion, and the Easter Vigil will be on Easter Saturday. |
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The Liturgy of the Passion of Jesus will be at 3 p.m. in Stradbally and at 4 in the other two churches. |
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Following the Easter Liturgy, the priest blesses colored eggs, sausage, babka, and cheese. |
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Liturgy exists for the glorification of God and, consequently, for the sanctification of the worshiping community. |
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Far too often the only children who come forward for the children's Liturgy of the Word are the children of the catechists themselves. |
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In 1777 Maria Theresa secured the erection of a diocese for the Uniat Greeks, with the Eastern Rite and the Old Slavonic Liturgy. |
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I cooked alone, ate alone, and walked alone four times a day up the steep hill to the monastery to participate in the Eucharist and the Liturgy of the Hours. |
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In addition the Orthodox Liturgy links the kiss of peace with the profession of faith, the Creed. |
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As I observed the Divine Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom, an explosion of genetic responses went off deep inside me. |
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At the heart of this quadruple bill was Liturgy, an enthralling pas de deux by the clever Christopher. |
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The same argument can be applied to those who oppose the Latin Mass, or to the Latinisers who oppose the full authentic Byzantine Liturgy with all its glorious ceremonial! |
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Leading the Liturgy of the Word that forms the first part of every service of Holy Eucharist, lectors proclaim the Word of God from the Old and New Testaments. |
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For the next forty days, there are more requiems, prayers and recitals of psalms until there is a Divine Liturgy held, such as on the day of the funeral. |
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There may be one, two, or three readings from the Apostol during a single Liturgy. |
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Tallis was content to draw his texts from the Liturgy and wrote for the worship services in the Chapel Royal. |
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At the stroke of midnight the Paschal celebration itself begins, consisting of Paschal Matins, Paschal Hours, and Paschal Divine Liturgy. |
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The final reading and high point of the Liturgy of the Word is the proclamation of the Gospel by the deacon or priest. |
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The Liturgy of St James was an early form, but each bishopric tended to develop its own. |
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In practice, it is the partaking of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ in the midst of the Divine Liturgy with the rest of the church. |
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This applies to the Liturgy of the Mass and the restoration of the key role of the Epiclesis. |
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The priest and altar boys enter and exit through these doors during appropriate parts of the Divine Liturgy. |
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A number of services besides the Divine Liturgy will have an Epistle and Gospel reading. |
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In the Eastern liturgical tradition, a priest can celebrate the Divine Liturgy only with the blessing of a bishop. |
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Jacques has been president of the Servite International Liturgy Commission. |
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Liturgy is the customary public worship performed by a religious group, according to its beliefs, customs and traditions. |
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The celebration of the Divine Liturgy, and then breakfast with my fellow parishioners in our church hall. |
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There are Epistle lessons for every day of the year, except for weekdays during Great Lent, when the Divine Liturgy is not celebrated. |
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Williams was attracted to Eastern Orthodoxy at a young age, often attending the Sunday Divine Liturgy at a local Orthodox church. |
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Each priest may only celebrate the Divine Liturgy once a day. |
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That faith is expressed most fundamentally in Scripture and in worship, and the latter most essentially through the mystery of Baptism and in the Divine Liturgy. |
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Not only does it initiate the most solemn portion of the Divine Liturgy, the Eucharist, but it also covers several protracted liturgical actions performed by the celebrants. |
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The Bishop of Varna and Veliki Preslav, Kiril, stunned Tuesday his congregation, arriving to serve the festive Divine Liturgy for St Nicholas Day in a luxury limousine. |
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During the Paschal Triduum, after the fashion of the original vigils, rcsponsories that form part of the Liturgy of the Hours will be heard after 9 pm. |
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Brom expressed opposition to retranslation of the Liturgy of the Hours and other liturgical books because of negative reactions to the new missal on the part of priests. |
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The Order of Saint Benedict has never had a rite of the Mass peculiar to it, but it keeps its very ancient Benedictine Rite of the Liturgy of the Hours. |
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Liturgy is a constitutive element of the holy and living Tradition. |
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The main Anaphora of the East Syrian tradition is the Holy Qurbana of Addai and Mari, while that of the West Syrian tradition is the Liturgy of Saint James. |
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After Lazarus Saturday comes Palm Sunday, Holy Week, and finally Easter itself, and the fast is broken immediately after the Paschal Divine Liturgy. |
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Subdeacons are ordained during the Little Hours, but the ceremonies surrounding his blessing continue through the Divine Liturgy, specifically during the Great Entrance. |
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This position is still maintained today in the Roman Liturgy. |
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In addition to the Choir, a Chanter is always present at the front of the church to chant responses and hymns that are part of the Divine Liturgy offered by the Priest. |
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The antimins is a silk cloth, signed by the appropriate diocesan bishop, upon which the sanctification of the holy gifts takes place during each Divine Liturgy. |
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