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  2. Secular music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secular_music

    Secular music also was aided by the formation of literature during the reign of Charlemagne that included a collection of secular and semi-secular songs. Guillaume de Machaut was another example of a leading composer who continued the trouvere tradition.

  3. Secular hymn (genre) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secular_hymn_(genre)

    A secular hymn is a type of non-religious popular song that has elements in common with religious music, especially with Christian hymns. The concept goes back at least as far as 17 BCE when the Roman emperor Augustus commissioned the Roman poet Horace to write lyrics by that title ("Carmen Saeculare" in Latin).

  4. Religious music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_music

    Religious music (also sacred music) is a type of music that is performed or composed for religious use or through religious influence. It may overlap with ritual music, which is music, sacred or not, performed or composed for or as ritual. Religious songs have been described as a source of strength, as well as a means of easing pain, improving ...

  5. Moravian Church music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moravian_Church_music

    The second type of music is the secular instrumental music in the Moravian collections. This includes some music by Moravian composers, but by far the greater part of the instrumental music is not by Moravians, instead by composers who were the most popular ones in Europe in the middle 18th century and later.

  6. Secular theology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secular_theology

    Secular theology is a term applied to theological positions influenced by humanism and secularism, rejecting supernatural metaphysical positions related to the nature of God. Secular theology can accommodate a belief in God, like many nature religions, but as residing in this world and not separately from it.

  7. Religious Jewish music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_Jewish_music

    The history of religious Jewish music is about the cantorial, synagogal, and the Temple music from Biblical to Modern times. The earliest synagogal music was based on the same system as that used in the Temple in Jerusalem. According to the Mishnah, the regular Temple orchestra consisted of twelve instruments, and the choir of twelve male singers.

  8. Protestant church music during and after the Reformation

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protestant_church_music...

    Like all who followed the regulative principle, he was extremely cautious about how worship music was utilized, because he believed God laid out very specific directions in the Bible on how one could worship. For example, Calvin initially allowed the use of instruments in worship music, but “advocate[ed] a careful and skillful use” of them ...

  9. A cappella - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_cappella

    A cappella music was originally used in religious music, especially church music as well as anasheed and zemirot. Gregorian chant is an example of a cappella singing, as is the majority of secular vocal music from the Renaissance .