Liturgy

[ US /ˈɫɪtɝdʒi/ ]
[ UK /lˈɪtɜːd‍ʒi/ ]
NOUN
  1. a Christian sacrament commemorating the Last Supper by consecrating bread and wine
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How To Use Liturgy In A Sentence

  • The Stabat Mater has been retained as an optional Sequence for September 15 in the reformed Roman Missal and as the hymn for the Office of Readings, Morning Prayer, and Evening Prayer in the new Liturgy of Hours. Archive 2009-04-01
  • When sacramental participation had ceased to be the norm, people needed a reason for attending the liturgy.
  • It is worth noting again that the liturgy is not a ‘tool’ used to catechize Christians.
  • Devoid of the ceremony and liturgy associated with the Church of England, charismatic itinerants made a straightforward appeal.
  • Likewise, among Christians it has long been conventional to use uppercase Orthodox as a term distinguishing the Christianity that shared forms of liturgy and theology rooted in the Byzantine, or Greek-speaking, part of the Roman Empire from those who took a separate path in the West. Jewschool
  • He thereby provides both a theology of the resurrection and a theology of the liturgy: one encounters the risen Christ in the word and in the sacrament; divine service is the fashion in which he becomes touchable to us and recognizable as the living Christ. The book by Joseph Ratzinger that "changed history"
  • Driven by hysterical choirs and crashing percussion, the Latin liturgy is indeed rather scary.
  • Far too often the only children who come forward for the children's Liturgy of the Word are the children of the catechists themselves.
  • In reality, there has always been growth and development in Orthodox liturgy.
  • The Liturgy of the Hours is centered on chanting or recitation of the Psalms, using fixed melodic formulas known as psalm tones.
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