Display the worship prayers and litanies on the screen in a typeface large enough to be seen from the back of the worship space. |
|
The rite involves incense, candles, litanies and novenas, and set hymns, often in Latin. |
|
We went then from the cold church in solemn procession, singing litanies into the thin air. |
|
We've all hurled invective into voicemail's dead ears as it runs through its unholy litanies. |
|
Each of the first four sections includes prayers, litanies, and many other types of texts. |
|
He'd have to endure endless litanies about how naive and gullible he was to sign up for this trip. |
|
For many who are, like Peter, in the course of progressive dementia, litanies, prayers, and hymns often have a deep emotional significance. |
|
Many times in my life, I have heard Perpetua and Felicity mentioned in litanies of saints and prayers of the Church. |
|
Men and women traveled in separate companies, chanting litanies and prayers as they went barefoot along the road from one city to another. |
|
Into the eternal repetition of human failures slips the sadness of all litanies. |
|
Diviners started to include seven Psalms with litanies and prayers. |
|
This year's Budget speech was another in his series of rapid-fire litanies of facts and figures with plenty of content but not much in the way of rhetorical flourish. |
|
Gone are the days when the community of Sisters which at times numbered about twenty were in their pews at 6.30 am reciting their prayers and litanies. |
|
Of course, we had the month of Mary with processions, rosary, and litanies. |
|
The litanies, which have to be performed in a low voice, should be pronounced in such a way that the follower can hear himself reciting them. |
|
Without such an expanded understanding we are unlikely to progress beyond the repetitious, sterile litanies of this tired and tiresome debate. |
|
People gathered by the church gates before dawn, and left the place singing litanies for Saint Justa. |
|
Some parade with lighted candles and chant litanies. |
|
Cuba's musicians borrowed everything, from Spanish flamenco to African drumming, from European dances to tribal litanies, to the work-songs of coffee-pickers and sugar-cane pounders. |
|
The litanies of common and specific eucalyptus names which Cave effortlessly recites are, in their way, as richly sensuous as any of the seductive tales told by the charismatic stranger. |
|
|
Singers recite litanies and then some 8,000 dancers take over, split into 45 groups according to a ritual transmitted from generation to generation. |
|
The litanies in congregation must be performed aloud but harmoniously. |
|
Such litanies of equilibrium in economics annually agitate the Economic Summit in Davos, Switzerland, and lugubriate in the worldly wisdom of such sages. |
|
When imagination fails doctrines become ossified, witness and proclamation wooden, doxologies and litanies empty, consolations hollow, and ethics legalistic. |
|
Litanies of this type are frequently encountered in the services of the Orthodox Church and in the non-Roman rites of the Latin West. |
|
Neither Marshall nor Bouterwek makes clear the connection existing between the Gang-days and the Major and Minor Litanies. |
|