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liturgical

[ UK /lɪtˈɜːd‍ʒɪkə‍l/ ]
[ US /ɫəˈtɝdʒɪkəɫ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to or in accord with liturgy

How To Use liturgical In A Sentence

  • They impose liturgical traditions, organisational structures, communication methods and leadership models which are alien to their environment.
  • We've had our reports, commissions, conferences, seminars, missions, synodical reviews, liturgical reforms - the lot.
  • I believe this is in retaliation for all the nescient liturgical nonsense that I've been trying to ingest the past few days. Chewing on clouds
  • Like Psalters they often contained historiated initials or at least decorated initials that marked important liturgical events such as Christmas. Sensual Encounters: Monastic Women and Spirituality in Medieval Germany
  • On those occasions the CHAzn presents a veritable concert of liturgical selections, often with a choir to assist him.
  • Lengeling provides tables of the frequency of readings from both Testaments in fourteen Western liturgical books but without indicating where there might be only one such usage on the vigil of a feast not celebrated widely.
  • The Book of Psalms is a compilation of songs for liturgical use. Archive 2007-01-01
  • The work combines Latin and English liturgical texts and medieval poetry, with a dramatic enaction of the Passion story.
  • Article IX called into question the right of episcopal conferences to oversee their own liturgical translations. Paul VI - The First Modern Pope
  • An exaggerated sense of antiquarianism, anthopologism, confusion of roles between the ordained and the non-ordained, a limitless provision of space for experimentation -- and indeed, the tendency to look down upon some aspects of the development of the Liturgy in the second millennium -- were increasingly visible among certain liturgical schools. Clear Words of Msgr Ranjith on the Flaws of the Postconciliar Liturgical Reforms and the Need for a Reform of the Reform
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