In the face of voluntary church membership, ministers engineered revivals to recruit congregants. |
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Studies of religious revivals throughout the former Soviet Union must account for the impact of decades of forced secularization. |
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Religious revivals may occur from time to time, particularly when the relatively impious find that their cultural identity under attack. |
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Consider the violent mood swings, between ecstasy and despair, that characterized historic religious revivals. |
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In fashion and music, cycles of revivals, retrospectives, and recombinations have emerged, defining styles with an eerie predictability. |
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Perversely, the Trocks, who always have one foot in genuine balletomania, are ahead of the curve when it comes to historic revivals. |
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It only affirms the hugely popular, superficial notion of a culture in crisis, of a culture lost in a constant loop of revivals. |
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With so many works and productions new to the repertory, the revivals are likely to be overlooked. |
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The troupe ushered in three successful premieres and produced several revivals of note. |
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As soon as the suppressive policy relaxed, however, religious revivals burst through the vast land. |
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The structure and content of religious celebrations, processionals, revivals and regular religious meetings also require analysis. |
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Design directions were many, including revivals of Art Deco, '50s Brights, Euro-Classic, Victorian and Colonial. |
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Wealthy Victorians turned to historical styles for inspiration and championed many different architectural revivals for their homes. |
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Also striking was the fact that the Best Directors for the Play all helmed revivals. |
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And although street clocks went out of vogue in the 1920s, Verdin resuscitated the analog timepieces in the 1980s for small towns undergoing Main Street revivals. |
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More significantly, this newfound appreciation of Johnson's work has sparked the latest in a series of blues revivals in North America and Europe. |
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Religious revivals swept through Europe and America periodically. |
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It speaks of these very revivals, showing that time was closing in and that the time for the Book of Revelation to be unveiled was very near. |
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Production also covers stage revivals and may include presentation in certain fields, such as theatre or dance. |
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This system has been found to be the most suited for restoring to the art forms their former glory, by enabling revivals, innovations and creative elaboration. |
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Both Arminians and Calvinists can believe in and seek revivals. |
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In a typical Broadway fall, star-led revivals and glittery new songfests might make the news. |
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Stand for the Word of God and you shall have a part in the endtime revivals that are coming very soon. |
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The occasional revivals of the catastrophist worldview became the domain of cranks. |
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Frequently there are rather sentimental and pietistic revivals among protestant sects and small conservative groups. |
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What better place for a company that specializes in well-upholstered revivals of classics? |
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Whereas stars were associated with sure-fire old plays and revivals, especially Shakespeare, stock companies offered new plays, and especially melodrama, in order to compete. |
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His turtlenecked product launches are like tent revivals, only more hushed and reverential. |
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Notwithstanding their Marxist pasts, genuine religious revivals are also going on in China and Russia. |
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Since then, I make it a point never to miss revivals of this old-fashioned but superbly effective play. |
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I wanted exceedingly to see him, and felt like sitting at his feet, almost as I would at the feet of an apostle, from what I had heard of his success in promoting revivals. |
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After all, many other countries, including America, have undergone religious revivals without descending into violence. |
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From hipsters to Mad Men to A streetcar Named Desire to pompadours and victory rolls, nostalgic revivals are everywhere. |
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They reflect the priority for national revivals, even if at the same time, a consensus is emerging on the need to strengthen global governance. |
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This is only one in a series of revivals of traditional culture. |
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Our interface of mediation organizes also the revivals near the site and will follow the progression and the results of the step. |
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The intellectual emphasis of the earlier revivals had left a dearth of religious imagery that the visions supplied. |
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For in there great revivals occurred, but also great persecution! |
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The flipside to this burger is that the level of noise is likely to be a one-off and any future revivals will smack of a rehash of a reboot, which is possibly one step too post-mod for the old golden arches. |
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The Plan is also innovative in the broadness of its scope, rather than in the detail of the actions, since many of these are continuations of existing measures or revivals of past practices. |
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The Quebec City crooner and his comrades are back to charm you with their original contemporary revivals of great crooner classics and sensational compositions. |
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In the 19th century there were revivals, and wooden churches were built with classicist or neo-Gothic features but mostly in details and interiors. |
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Following the successful revival of 'Opal Fruits' and Cadburys 'Wispa' bar, it seems that mining old products for rose-tinted revivals is a good way to boost revenue in the face of a lack of recent innovations. |
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Merce Cunningham Dance Company Barbican Theatre, EC2, Sat At 89, the magisterial Cunningham is still making dances and the UK premiere of XOVER comes with revivals of recent and classic work. |
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A more supple, sinuous vocabulary was restored during the historicist revivals of the early nineteenth-century, and many of the pieces from this era echo earlier stylistic themes. |
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The Manhattan-based Nikolais-Louis Foundathat for Danye revivals that any revival of a work by Alwin Nikolais or Murray Louis two years after its staging must be restaged by the designated reconstructor. |
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These biblical principles and practices are also mirrored by the experiences of major changes throughout church history, whether reformations or revivals. |
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As far as fashionable revivals go, this resuscitation of the home front's dourest hour is fascinating, and not just because the ration-book years have been thus far immune to trendy retrogazing. |
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After doing tours on the edge of separation, Noir Désir got into the habit of long, vague periods on the brink of breaking up, followed by ever more committed revivals. |
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Given the history of religion in the United States, which includes both religious persecutions and religious revivals, Americans as a people tend to be both religious and wary of religious authority. |
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The different revivals since the time of Reformation, too, are well documented, even the Pentecostal revival which began around the turn of the last century and still continues. |
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Today's Pentecostal movement in Quebec originates from spiritual revivals which broke out in many places of the world at the beginning of the 20th century. |
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It wasn't until the disco boom of the 1970s, followed by the burgeoning club scene and the tango, salsa and samba revivals in the 1980s, that a new buzz surrounding discos, clubs and dance halls was to emerge in the cities. |
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In the euro area, after a series of aborted revivals, the recovery finally materialised, the main factor being the restored vigour of domestic demand, and particularly investment. |
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Nelson's influence continued long after his death, and saw periodic revivals of interest, especially during times of crisis in Britain. |
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He preached successful revivals until 1802, when he saw revivals leading to dissension and division. |
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The band were also strongly influenced by the music of the British, Celtic, and American folk revivals. |
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In Shaw's view, the London theatres of the 1890s presented too many revivals of old plays and not enough new work. |
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While the two artists worked out their differences, Carte kept the Savoy open with revivals of their earlier works. |
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In one of the most carefully chronicled of all revivals there are common themes. |
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Glam has since enjoyed sporadic modest revivals through bands such as Chainsaw Kittens, the Darkness and in R n' B crossover act Prince. |
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In Europe in the 1990s, examples of proponents of ethnic revivals were from Celtic fringes in Wales and nationalists in the Basque Country. |
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Nevertheless, there were earlier developments within the larger Protestant world that preceded and influenced the later evangelical revivals. |
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In the 1730s, Evangelicalism emerged as a distinct phenomenon out of religious revivals that began in Britain and New England. |
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It clung to its intellectual prestige for much longer, with sporadic revivals under Hellenophile emperors of Rome. |
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While religious revivals had occurred within Protestant churches in the past, the evangelical revivals that marked the 18th century were more intense and radical. |
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Moody's revivals, the beginning of the widespread Pentecostal movement in the US is generally considered to have begun with Seymour's Azusa Street Revival. |
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Rising nationalism brought Celtic revivals from the 19th century. |
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While by no means the best known of revivals, it was one of the most dramatic in terms of its effect on the population, and triggered revivals in several other countries. |
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Folk music revivals or roots revivals also encompass a range of phenomena around the world where there is a renewed interest in traditional music. |
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Due to its lack of clear boundaries and a perceived lack of identity in its folk music, the English Midlands attracted relatively little interest in the early revivals. |
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Bourne pioneered revivals of Messiah in Handel's orchestration, and Bourne's work was the basis for further scholarly versions in the early 20th century. |
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The custom waxed and waned over the years, but has seen revivals in Derbyshire, Staffordshire, South Yorkshire, Cheshire, Shropshire, Worcestershire and Kent. |
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