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doxology

[ US /dɑkˈsɑɫədʒi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a hymn or verse in Christian liturgy glorifying God

How To Use doxology In A Sentence

  • There they get a fairly strong whiff of academic-left doxology.
  • The songs may have archaic, cryptic names such as "Old Hundred," better known in many hymnbooks as the doxology; "Amazing Grace" appears in shape-note books as "New Britain. Shape-Note Singing Lives On Through Small Dedicated Following
  • Be that as it may, however, it is not true that the doxology "Quia tuum est regnum, et potestas, et gloria in saecula" is gone. URGENT The "Reform of the Reform" is in motion
  • This twelfth poem or hymn contains 52 iambic dimeter strophes, and an irregular selection from its 208 lines has furnished four hymns to the Roman Breviary, all of which conclude with the usual Marian doxology "Jesu tibi sit gloria" etc., not composed by Prudentius, slightly varied to make the doxology appropriate for the several feasts employing the hymns. Archive 2008-08-01
  • Characteristically the past is given in doxology, not in positivistic reportage.
  • A doxology is a short hymn of praise to God in various Christian worship services. No Fat Clips!!! : MICHAEL LANGAN – Doxology
  • These words are part of the doxology at the end of Psalm 106 and not really part of the psalm itself.
  • The doxology, which, according to a common tradition was added to the Office by Pope Saint Damasus I, (366 – 384), is everywhere omitted, as are the Invitatory, Hymns, Little Chapters, and indeed, all the elements which have been added to the Office over the course of the centuries to increase its beauty and solemnity. Compendium of the 1955 Holy Week Revisions of Pius XII: Part 5 - Tenebrae and the Divine Office of the Triduum
  • Paul recognizes his own capacity for evil, his actual sin and the forgiveness he has received, and his words explode into a doxology.
  • Further, changes that have been promulgated to promote clarity may be incompatible with the very nature of doxology.
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