Nevertheless, women noticed the prevalence of men as teachers and other Buddhist authorities, and the androcentric language of most liturgies. |
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Some Seekers create innovative liturgies that will involve children in their Sunday service. |
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Sunday liturgies will include prayers and reflections on the theme of poverty. |
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There are two places in Western Europe where the old Gallican liturgies are still used. |
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When did liturgies of contrition and dependence become examples of negative thinking? |
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They found their way into various early liturgies, especially the Gallican and Mozarabic. |
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Every denomination has its theological articles and books of theology, its liturgies and confessional statements. |
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They composed new liturgies in his honor and celebrated his death with a full octave of worship. |
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He continued to defend the right of Slavs to have liturgies in their own language and read the holy books in this language too. |
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Memories of the first two phases of their ancestors' traumatization were continually reinforced by liturgies of lament in the exilic community. |
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Though meditation is the main religious discipline practiced by convert Buddhists, chanted liturgies are an important part of many meditations. |
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They are a religious people, with a captivating religiosity, particularly in their lively and participative liturgies. |
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The various liturgies abound in prayers of blessing and epiclesis asking God's grace and blessing on the new couple, especially the bride. |
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We find here that sense of sin and fear of the Last Judgment which are so characteristic of the Syriac liturgies. |
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In liturgies and gatherings, inwardness can be combined with a communal and festive dimension. |
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Even in liturgies which used the interrogative form, worship leaders used the classic language for anointing and exorcising. |
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Yet as the mainstream wanes, traditionalists wax. Take the Latin mass, dumped by the Vatican in 1962 for liturgies in vernacular languages. |
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Generally speaking, both text and music evolved from a synthesis of liturgies from different religious sects. |
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The stated groups often organise to draw people away from their parishes to attend liturgies and other activities reserved to group initiates. |
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This means that we are in fact talking about two different messages M and M'' which stand for two entirely different liturgies. |
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Worship styles may range from following formal liturgies to including spontaneous testimonies. |
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These documents also show that the words and gestures used in baptismal liturgies are important because of the meanings they convey. |
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As a first step, baptismal liturgies from eight member churches were compared to identify both common and divergent elements. |
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One notices that most of the churches of the land seemed to be satisfied with the celebration of their liturgies and masses on Sundays. |
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The Middle East churches retain distinct liturgies, which are recited in ancient Coptic, Aramaic, Syriac, or Chaldean depending upon the particular sect. |
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I'm put off by the rote lingo of liturgies, and I can never quite square the exceedingly European Jesus of my childhood lesson books with the physiognomy of the region. |
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Preparation for baptism, first reconciliation, first communion and special family liturgies and celebrations are offered as excellent occasions to introduce the leaflet to parents so as to encourage prayer in the home. |
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The brothers were welcomed warmly everywhere they went, with prayers with the songs of Taizé, they took part in beautiful liturgies, and enjoyed meetings and moments of sharing with students. |
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We have no need, or wish, to invent our own creative liturgies in order to be seen to be partaking fully in the life of the Church, or in taking part in local parish communities celebrating themselves. |
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The diversity of languages used in our liturgies and dialogues are, equally, a small indication of the understanding of our identity as a worldwide Fraternity in the state of mission. |
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They then provided pages of quotations, detailing Roman and Orthodox liturgies that they considered guilty of the same alleged offenses. |
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I have attended more debates like this than I care to remember here in the European Parliament and at some point they start to sound like empty liturgies. |
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The pilgrims will consciously continue the journey towards the mystery of their faith and life during the daily walks and in the various liturgies. |
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The provision of contemporary language liturgies has been approved by convocation and a process of drafting and authorisation has begun. |
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Section 2 of part 1 discusses the sources of Egyptian liturgies, the anaphoras, and how they express the Christology in the context of worship. |
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The liturgies are organised according to the traditional liturgical year and the calendar of saints. |
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The baptismal catechumenate is therefore a model of the catechesis of the journey, with emphasis on missionaries, liturgies, and communities that are intergenerational and available to all. |
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The contemporary feminist critique of all forms of patriarchy includes a challenge to the church to further revise the way it celebrates liturgies. |
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Parish liturgies include prayers for those who may be victims. |
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The liturgies of the Eucharist and the other sacraments vary from rite to rite based on differing theological emphasis. |
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All clergy, whether deacons, priests or bishops, may preach, teach, baptise, witness marriages and conduct funeral liturgies. |
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The metropolitan is to be commemorated in the liturgies celebrated within his province. |
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Medieval Scandinavian liturgies feature Augustine of Canterbury quite often, however. |
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Bishops may determine whether churches and priests within their dioceses are permitted to use the new liturgies. |
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I want mankind to wake up and for its spirit to ascend to Me, and that in his ascension he can behold the true splendor of the Father, forgetting the false splendors of the liturgies and rites. |
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Also important was Gregory's flexibility and willingness to allow the missionaries to adjust their liturgies and behaviour. |
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Homilies in non-eucharistic liturgies may be preached by the non-ordained faithful only when expressly permitted by law and when its prescriptions for doing so are observed. |
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Still, no Episcopal priest is required to perform the new liturgies, even in dioceses in which they are permitted. |
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The prophets likewise rejected liturgies incorrectly performed. |
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In 1884 the church published its own prayer book based on the Anglican, Roman and Mozarabic liturgies. |
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These parishes were already in communion with Rome and use modified Anglican liturgies approved by the Holy See. |
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Both are extremely old, going back at least to the third century, and are the oldest extant liturgies continually in use. |
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Those who use the BAS have cited various shortcomings as it ages and newer liturgies are produced elsewhere in the Communion. |
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At the 2007 General Synod, a resolution was passed which will begin the process of revising the modern language liturgies. |
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As varied as services can be, the central binding aspect is the Book of Common Prayer or supplemental liturgies. |
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Could our liturgies, without in any way neglecting the communal dimension, lead to more adoration, to inwardness, to a personal communion with God? |
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It was called common prayer originally because it was intended for use in all Church of England churches which had previously followed differing local liturgies. |
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Contrariwise, Sykes notes a high degree of commonality in Anglican liturgical forms, and in the doctrinal understandings expressed within those liturgies. |
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The liturgies of the sacraments are central to the church's mission. |
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Full rubrics regarding matters such as vesture, appearance of the altar, timing of specific liturgies, and similar matters still may be published separately. |
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Little is known of it, though several texts and liturgies survive. |
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These books contain the liturgies of the church that are generally derived from Wesley's Sunday Service and from the 20th century liturgical renewal movement. |
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The idea of anointing Charles may be owed to Archbishop Hincmar of Reims, who composed no less than four ordines describing appropriate liturgies for a royal consecration. |
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Some precisionist English Protestants were wary of set prayers and liturgies of any kind, believing that they inevitably produced rote religiosity. |
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