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  2. Cherokee spiritual beliefs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cherokee_spiritual_beliefs

    Cherokee spiritual beliefs are held in common among the Cherokee people – Native American peoples who are Indigenous to the Southeastern Woodlands, and today live primarily in communities in North Carolina (the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians), and Oklahoma (the Cherokee Nation and United Keetoowah Band of Cherokee Indians). Some of the ...

  3. Mi Shebeirach - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mi_Shebeirach

    Prayer healing became less popular as medicine modernized, and many Reform Jews came to see healing as a purely scientific matter. [40] The Union Prayer Book, published in 1895 and last revised in 1940, lacked any Mi Shebeirach for healing, rather limiting itself to a single line praying to "comfort the sorrowing and cheer the silent sufferers ...

  4. Aztec calendar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aztec_calendar

    The tōnalpōhualli ("day count") consists of a cycle of 260 days, each day signified by a combination of a number from 1 to 13, and one of the twenty day signs. With each new day, both the number and day sign would be incremented: 1. Crocodile is followed by 2. Wind, 3. House, 4. Lizard, and so forth up to 13. Reed.

  5. Spirituality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spirituality

    The meaning of spirituality has developed and expanded over time, and various meanings can be found alongside each other. [1] [2] [3] [note 1] Traditionally, spirituality is referred to a religious process of re-formation which "aims to recover the original shape of man", [note 2] oriented at "the image of God" [4] [5] as exemplified by the founders and sacred texts of the religions of the world.

  6. Navajo medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Navajo_medicine

    In addition, medicine and healing are deeply tied with religious and spiritual beliefs, taking on a form of shamanism. These cultural ideologies deem overall health to be ingrained in supernatural forces that relate to universal balance and harmony. The spiritual significance has allowed the Navajo healing practices and Western medical ...

  7. Religious tourism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_tourism

    Religious tourism, spiritual tourism, sacred tourism, or faith tourism, [1] is a type of tourism with two main subtypes: pilgrimage, meaning travel for religious or spiritual purposes, and the viewing of religious monuments and artefacts, a branch of sightseeing.

  8. Spiritual practice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spiritual_practice

    A common metaphor used in the spiritual traditions of the world's great religions is that of walking a path. [1] Therefore, a spiritual practice moves a person along a path towards a goal. The goal is variously referred to as salvation, liberation or union (with God). A person who walks such a path is sometimes referred to as a wayfarer or a ...

  9. Shiva (Judaism) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shiva_(Judaism)

    For these seven days the mourners' home is generally an open house for friends and family to come to offer comfort. The stage of mourning known as sheloshim (literally "thirty") lasts until thirty days after the burial. The first seven days of sheloshim is the period of shiva; sheloshim continues after shiva has ended.