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Version 2.0: Multiple Bible windows, Bible text formatting, dockable windows and layouts; Version 3.0: Integration of non-Bible resources with search capabilities, priced copyrighted modules, user-created modules; Version 4.0: New program icon, first alpha implementation of hybrid modules (books and commentaries), new default tw4 theme
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Liber Orationum Psalmographus (LOP), subtitled The Psalter Collects of the Ancient Hispanic Rite (that is Mozarabic Rite) – recomposition and critical edition, [1] is a unique edition of 591 so-called prayers on psalms or psalm-prayers rendered from Latin orationes super psalmos or orationes psalmicae respectively.
Title page of the 1979 Book of Common Prayer. The 1979 Book of Common Prayer [note 1] is the official primary liturgical book of the U.S.-based Episcopal Church.An edition in the same tradition as other versions of the Book of Common Prayer used by the churches within the Anglican Communion and Anglicanism generally, it contains both the forms of the Eucharistic liturgy and the Daily Office ...
Its resemblance to Hebrew tefillah "prayer" is wholly coincidental. The English word "phylactery" ("phylacteries" in the plural) derives from Ancient Greek φυλακτήριον phylaktērion (φυλακτήρια phylaktēria in the plural), meaning "guarded post, safeguard, security", and in later Greek, "amulet" or "charm".
This Bible version is now Public Domain due to copyright expiration. Judaism: Jubilee Bible JUB Modern English 2000 Aims for a unique English word for each original Hebrew and Greek word. Influenced by Spanish Bible translations by Casiodoro de Reina (1569), Francisco de Enzinas (1543), and Juan Pérez de Pineda (1557).
A prayer book is a book containing prayers and perhaps devotional readings, for private or communal use, or in some cases, outlining the liturgy of religious services. Books containing mainly orders of religious services, or readings for them are termed "service books" or "liturgical books", and are thus not prayer-books in the strictest sense, but the term is often used very loosely.
The doxology sometimes attached to the prayer in English is similar to a passage in 1 Chronicles 29:11 – "Yours, O LORD, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory and the majesty, for all that is in the heavens and in the earth is yours. Yours is the kingdom, O LORD, and you are exalted as head above all."