enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Christian liturgy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_liturgy

    Christian liturgy is a pattern for worship used (whether recommended or prescribed) by a Christian congregation or denomination on a regular basis. The term liturgy comes from Greek and means "public work". Within Christianity, liturgies descending from the same region, denomination, or culture are described as ritual families.

  3. Liturgy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liturgy

    The word liturgy (/ l ɪ t ə r dʒ i /), derived from the technical term in ancient Greek (Greek: λειτουργία), leitourgia, which means "work or service for the people" is a literal translation of the two affixes λήϊτος, "leitos", derived from the Attic form of λαός ("people, public"), and ἔργον, "ergon", meaning "work, service".

  4. Catholic liturgy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_liturgy

    Catholic Church. Catholic liturgy means the whole complex of official liturgical worship, including all the rites, ceremonies, prayers, and sacraments of the Church, as opposed to private devotions. In this sense the arrangement of all these services in certain set forms (including the canonical hours, administration of sacraments, etc.) is meant.

  5. Eastern Catholic liturgy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eastern_Catholic_liturgy

    The Eastern Catholic Churches of the Catholic Church utilize liturgies originating in Eastern Christianity, distinguishing them from the majority of Catholic liturgies which are celebrated according to the Latin liturgical rites of the Latin Church. While some of these sui iuris churches use the same liturgical ritual families as other Eastern ...

  6. Tridentine Mass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tridentine_Mass

    t. e. The Tridentine Mass, [1] also known as the Traditional Latin Mass, [2][3] the Traditional Rite, [4] or the Extraordinary Form, is the liturgy in the Roman Missal of the Catholic Church codified in 1570 and published thereafter with amendments up to 1962. Celebrated almost exclusively in Ecclesiastical Latin, it was the most widely used ...

  7. Mass (liturgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_(liturgy)

    Mass is the main Eucharistic liturgical service in many forms of Western Christianity. The term Mass is commonly used in the Catholic Church, [ 1 ] Western Rite Orthodoxy, Old Catholicism, and Independent Catholicism.

  8. Catholic particular churches and liturgical rites - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_particular...

    A particular church (Latin: ecclesia particularis) is an ecclesiastical community of followers headed by a bishop (or equivalent), as defined by Catholic canon law and ecclesiology. A liturgical rite, a collection of liturgies descending from shared historic or regional context, depends on the particular church the bishop (or equivalent ...

  9. Divine Liturgy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Divine_Liturgy

    Basil the Great (left) and John Chrysostom, ascribed authors of the two most frequently used Eastern Orthodox Divine Liturgies, c. 1150 (mosaic in the Palatine Chapel, Palermo). Divine Liturgy (Greek: Θεία Λειτουργία, translit. Theia Leitourgia) or Holy Liturgy is the usual name used in most Eastern Christian rites for the ...