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  2. Liturgy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liturgy

    Liturgy is the customary public ritual of worship performed by a religious group. [1] As a religious phenomenon, liturgy represents a communal response to and participation in the sacred through activities reflecting praise , thanksgiving, remembrance, supplication , or repentance .

  3. Liturgics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liturgics

    Liturgics, also called liturgical studies or liturgiology, is the academic discipline dedicated to the study of liturgy (public worship rites, rituals, and practices). Liturgics scholars typically specialize in a single approach drawn from another scholarly field. The most common sub-disciplines are: history or church history, theology, and ...

  4. Sacred language - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_language

    Koine Greek and Church Slavonic are the main sacred languages used in communion. Other languages are also permitted for liturgical worship, and each country often has the liturgical services in their own language. This has led to a wide variety of languages used for liturgical worship, but there is still uniformity in the liturgical worship itself.

  5. Prostration - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prostration

    Major world religions employ prostration as an act of submissiveness or worship to an entity or to the Supreme Being (i.e. God), as in the metanoia in Christian prayer used in the Eastern Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Churches, and in the sujud of the Islamic prayer, salat. [1]

  6. Religious music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_music

    The Al Salat is the most widely used word to mean institutionalized prayer and is one of the oldest forms of prayer in Islam. [19] Islamic prayer, traditions, and ideals had influence from these Abrahamic religions. [20] The time of origination of Salah came from Muhammad in a cave as he began to worship Allah

  7. Christian worship - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_worship

    Throughout most of Christianity's history, corporate Christian worship has been liturgical, characterized by prayers and hymns, with texts rooted in, or closely related to, the Bible (Scripture), particularly the Psalter, and centered on the altar (or table) and the Eucharist; this form of sacramental and ceremonial worship is still practiced ...

  8. Christian liturgy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_liturgy

    By 1962 the Liturgy Committee was able to prepare a number of Orders. They were Eucharist, Morning and Evening Prayer, Marriage Service, Burial Service, Ordination Service and Covenant Service (1954), Holy Baptism (1955) and Almanac (1955–56). The Book of Common Worship of the CSI was published in 1963 with all the above orders of service ...

  9. Catholic Church and Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church_and_Islam

    Due to geographical proximity, most of the early Christian critiques of Islam were associated with Eastern Christians. The Quran was not translated from Arabic into the Latin language until the 12th century, when the English Catholic priest Robert of Ketton made the Lex Mahumet pseudoprophete translation (Robert was active in the Diocese of Pamplona, not far removed from the Arabic-speakers in ...