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"liturgical" Definitions
  1. connected with liturgy (= the fixed form of public worship used in churches)

129 Sentences With "liturgical"

How to use liturgical in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "liturgical" and check conjugation/comparative form for "liturgical". Mastering all the usages of "liturgical" from sentence examples published by news publications.

And very few have the resources to address liturgical music.
In what sense is "Moon Fate Sin" a liturgical dance?
Beck: You describe your faith as more liturgical than theological.
On the Christian liturgical calendar, February 2 is Candlemas Day.
She appreciated both liturgical music and Ella Fitzgerald, as he did.
They broadcast liturgical music, meditations and interviews with theologians and activists.
In our pamphlets, Leonard Cohen's "Hallelujah" was printed like a liturgical poem.
"The time of the liturgical change was not easy," Bishop Ochiagha told me.
He believes it was probably a liturgical crown used in Orthodox Christian ceremonies.
Mr Power uses rhythm and repetition to give the play a distinctive liturgical quality.
Palm Sunday marks the start of the busiest week in the Catholic liturgical calendar.
They convey impermanence from the inside, convert anxiety and despair into something nearly liturgical.
Guido Marini, the papal master of liturgical celebrations and the keeper of the sacristy.
A liturgical action that suspends the ordinary, loading it with an excess of intensity.
For every profane holy, fucking, and shit, there's a technical and anodyne liturgical, copulation, or excretion.
As a child, he was captivated by the liturgical music of his family's Coptic Christian tradition.
Two weeks after his election, he included women in a liturgical service open only to men.
He wrote on Saturday that "vernacular languages themselves, often only in a progressive manner, would be able to become liturgical languages, standing out in a not dissimilar way to liturgical Latin for their elegance of style and the profundity of their concepts with the aim of nourishing the faith."
She has written 10 books, including a recent biography, "Flannery O'Connor: Fiction Fired by Faith" (Liturgical Press, 2015).
Classically trained and raised Catholic, he initially sculpted mostly liturgical scenes or portraits of saints and local priests.
The researcher said it was a rare object, one of only about 20 such liturgical crowns in existence.
Her early dance experiences, long before she took ballet and modern classes, were as a liturgical praise dancer.
Some sang liturgical music in harmonies late into the night as they stood vigil, while others recited prayers.
They give evangelical-type sermons and are backed by a gospel choir that sings liturgical music often in Hebrew.
Ross taps into his liturgical side to recommend a solution to the seasonal "Merry Christmas" versus "Happy Holidays" dilemma.
The distinction they observed was between liturgical music (for the church service) and secular music (out in the world).
The program moves through the liturgical year while also progressing through the centuries, from Gregorian chant to contemporary composition.
We know that at least some of the artists who made anatomical models also created wax pieces for liturgical use.
For an atheist who misses the liturgical solemnity and theological strangeness of High Church, ''Dopesmoker'' delivers the next best thing.
Dead Procession's long, languid compositions traffick in slow, liturgical drone, menacing quiet, and forceful, spare drumbeats that verge on ceremonial.
They are mainly liturgical books, but there are also Old Testament stories, books on medicine, and miniatures drawn by monks.
Good Friday, the most somber day of the Christian liturgical calendar, commemorates the day the Bible says Jesus was crucified.
The concept is derived from the ancient simantra, an Eastern Orthodox liturgical instrument that dates back to the sixth century.
Easter, the most important day in the Church's liturgical calendar, commemorates the day Christians believe Jesus rose from the dead.
He suggested a liturgical chant to Mr. Glass, himself a student of Buddhist chant, as the basis for a piece.
Bach was reprimanded for neglecting his teaching duties and for inserting himself into musical and liturgical matters around the city.
One hundred and nine paintings, sculptures and decorative objects (ceramics, furniture, jewelry, liturgical pieces, etc.) represent every corner of the empire.
It may be ironic that the underground Costume Institute became the setting for its copes, chasubles and dalmatics—all liturgical vestments.
Every two years, Catholic church officials gather in Northern Italy for the World Fair for Church Supplies, Liturgical and Ecclesiastical art.
Outsiders may still be fascinated by the spirit of Orthodox Christianity, as expressed through cultural mediums like art or liturgical chants.
Anchored by anaphoric constructions, the poem generates a liturgical insistence in its desire for rapture: Would the upward rush were angelic.
"It was [always] a beautiful, liturgical moment," Rabbi Jonah Pesner, director of the Religious Action Center of Reform Judaism, told Vox.
Secular and liturgical works were both religious: A central purpose of all serious-minded music, wherever performed, was to honor God.
But others have used the opportunity to try something new, turning the church into a kind of greenhouse for liturgical experiments.
The choir did not need to limit itself to liturgical works, the statement said, or to rewrite lyrics for political correctness.
Black Emperor's Efrim Menuck, Noveller, and Egyptrixx's Ceramic TL project scattered among a diverse range of experimental, liturgical, and very noisy artists.
He also mounted shows of liturgical manuscripts, Japanese handscrolls and works of the 19th-century French printmakers Charles Meryon and Félix Buhot.
So dioceses do what they can to keep places of worship open — for the faithful and tourists alike — even outside liturgical hours.
In a liturgical dance, the performers and audience are together in a space to be in contact with something else, something immaterial.
Those indicators include a wooden liturgical platform that has been constructed in the Saint-Germain church to resemble Notre Dame&aposs own.
"Scenes from the Collection" is a heftier continuation of that project, and expands on its free exchange of art and liturgical objects.
In particular, after 1517, reformers in England shifted toward music that was less florid (and less Latin) than traditional Catholic liturgical music.
This is what the church does in its liturgical service and also in canonising those who are believed to be martyrs and confessors.
I slipped back into my role of Catholic-in-Chief at our Washington bureau, passing along my liturgical knowledge of the funeral Mass.
But in recent decades, as religion has faded from public life nationwide, most chaplains increasingly focused less on liturgical services for their faith.
The Vatican refuses to permit bishops ordained without papal approval to take part in liturgical acts and has excommunicated Chinese bishops who do so.
Palm Sunday marks the start of a hectic week of activities leading to Easter Sunday, the most important day on the Christian liturgical calendar.
Cohen's lyrics were no less imaginative or charged, no less ironic or self-investigating, but he was clearer, more economical and formal, more liturgical.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art is displaying a half-dozen fragments in "New Discoveries: Early Liturgical Textiles From Egypt, 200 to 400," through Sept. 5.
Those in attendance were given headphones so they could hear a simultaneous translation of the pope's words, a rarity at liturgical services in the basilica.
It is important to note that the word "Hours" in the Book of Hours signifies a strict adherence to the rule of the liturgical hour.
" One reviewer, writing about a program of Marian liturgical music, likened the ensemble's sound to the Virgin herself: "serenely pure, sweetly distant and ineluctably graceful.
The Mass in this clue is a liturgical service in the Church, and it is hidden at the beginning of the clue for a reason.
His father, a composer of symphonic, chamber and liturgical music, has had works performed by the New York Pops and the West Virginia Symphony Orchestra.
Historically, Advent, the liturgical season that begins four Sundays before Christmas Day, is a way to prepare our hearts (and minds and souls) for Christmas.
They are typically made from burning the ceremonial palm fronds used in the previous year's Palm Sunday service: symbolically bringing the liturgical calendar full-circle.
The platform themes, she added, connected to her own history; some of her earliest dance experiences were as a liturgical dancer in a predominantly black church.
Menorahs have been used in churches as liturgical objects, said Arnold Nesselrath, deputy director of the Vatican Museums and one of the curators of the exhibit.
But as the songs were scrambled, the tenor of the music took on an eerie liturgical quality, as if each singer were performing an individual Gregorian chant.
" This unlikely word has come up because Philip Taaffe – the subject of a monographic essay I'm writing – defined his painting practice as a form of "liturgical enactment.
Classical music has proved adept at preserving a language like Latin through liturgical settings that expose listeners to a language they no longer encounter in spoken form.
A late-53th-century Frankish liturgical book with "Scenes From the Life of Christ" has powerfully geometric framing designs highlighted with blocks of gold and ultramarine blues.
After leaving Ramparts in a dispute over editorial control, Mr. Colaianni became director of the Liturgical Conference, a Christian ecumenical organization in Washington committed to revitalizing worship.
Op-Ed Contributor Growing up in a big Irish Catholic family, I knew the liturgical seasons of the year — Advent, Christmas, Lent, Triduum, Easter and Ordinary Time.
Although most of the debate is conducted in a rhetoric that is almost liturgical in its strictures, there is a growing space for differing points of view.
The amendment is a significant development in a liturgical schism that has split Catholics across the world and was evident at the highest echelons of the church.
Billed as a "liturgical dance" for St. Mark's Church, the work juxtaposes a kind of physical severity with stillness in its attempt to evoke and transcend death.
In his youth, Gurdjieff had traveled throughout the Caucasus, Middle East and North Africa collecting melodies: shepherd tunes and songs for plowing, liturgical chants and funerary rites.
In his youth, Gurdjieff had traveled throughout the Caucasus, Middle East and North Africa collecting melodies: shepherd tunes and songs for plowing, liturgical chants and funerary rites.
"You could think about it this way: They're making sneakers a liturgical garment," said Anthea Butler, an associate professor of religious studies at the University of Pennsylvania.
We're tempted to call it liturgical techno, consisting as it does of ethereal organ runs and shuffling chord patterns evocative of classical compositions from the Baroque period.
Under church law, clergy who have been excommunicated - the harshest punishment that can be imposed on a Catholic - cannot actively participate in liturgical acts such as an ordination.
He was the first to translate the Bible into an East Slavic vernacular—until then, the Orthodox Church had disseminated information in Church Slavonic, an arcane liturgical language.
Whatever the hell it is—it's been called liturgical power electronics, operatic brutalism, beautified death industrial, 'Girl Swans,' whatever —I'm grateful that people respond to it at all.
" Hecker also adds that it is informed by notions of "liturgical aesthetics after [the Kanye West album] Yeezus" and the "transcendental voice in the age of auto-tune.
A lot of new church music was not of very high quality, and he wished to show that fine composers were still willing to write for liturgical settings.
A 1555 Titian painting of the Crucifixion fell off the wall at the Royal Monastery of San Lorenzo de El Escorial and onto a dresser containing liturgical objects.
The single room of Gladstone Gallery feels almost sacred, as even the floor reflects the stained glass of the four walls, like the liturgical imagery of a historic chapel.
There's something vaguely liturgical about the whole affair, like sitting in a cold room at night, staring at a sputtering candle and thinking of someone who is far away.
The sensuous and vaguely suggestive staging of the liturgical work, with the singers seeming sometimes to personify Mary and Jesus and sometimes not, serves mainly to confuse and distract.
During the special Mass, the relics will be on display in the cathedral's baptistery and the Sistine Chapel Choir will alternate with the cathedral choir in performing liturgical songs.
In New Orleans, Carnival season begins on January 6 — the holiday of Epiphany and the last day of the liturgical season of Christmas — and consists of numerous parades and celebrations.
"The grammar, spelling, and vocabulary would have been quite different, especially for a manuscript like the Voynich that is scientific (as opposed to Biblical or liturgical) in nature," says Davis.
Adonis's language casts a liturgical spell: Here he comes from under the ruins in the climate of new words, offering his poems to grieving winds unpolished but bewitching like brass.
St. Paul's Chapel (Episcopal) Trinity Church's choirs perform in a service that weaves liturgical readings among musical works by Charles Wood ("This Joyful Eastertide") and John Taverner ("Dum transisset sabbatum").
An impassioned ecumenicist, he could companionably marry Renaissance liturgical music to a foxtrot, as he did on at least one occasion, in "Missa Super l'Homme Armé," an opera of 20123.
An overwhelming majority of the Vietnamese community here is Roman Catholic, and the local church, Mary Queen of Vietnam, serves the residents in ways that extend far beyond the liturgical.
He then called for "reciprocal trust" between the local churches and the Vatican department with liturgical oversight, known as the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments.
In one recent story, the groom was descended from the family whose lives inspired "The Sound of Music," while the bride was a fellow graduate student who loved liturgical music.
He is said to have set up a commission to review new translations of liturgical texts, cutting out the relevant Vatican department, which is headed by Cardinal Robert Sarah, a conservative.
However, very little was known about them, and, because there were conflicting reports on the Saint Valentine's Day story, the feast day was removed from the Christian liturgical calendar in 1969.
On the liturgical question, obviously I grew up with what's now called the extraordinary form of the Roman Rite, the mass that existed until the reform after the Second Vatican Council.
After 13 years in Israel, he returned to New York in 1969 to become director of the Jewish Museum, where he sought to reconcile its liturgical agenda with more contemporary art.
"For priests, this is the foundation of the necessity of celibacy but also of liturgical prayer, meditation on the Word of God and the renunciation of material goods," the book states.
When a Muslim was hired to teach Sanskrit at Banaras Hindu University, Hindu students protested, saying that it was improper for a Muslim to teach the primary liturgical language of Hinduism.
On Easter Sunday, the most important day in the Christian liturgical calendar, he will read his twice-annual "Urbi et Orbi" ("To the City and the World") message in St. Peter's Square.
THE only historical record of Queen Chammathewi, the legendary founder of the Thai city of Lamphun, comes from a fanciful 15th-century chronicle written on palm leaves in an ancient liturgical language.
Onstage costume changes — into a liturgical robe and cap for a section of "Dead Sea," or white face paint and red lips for "La Argentina" — underscored the premise of becoming someone else.
The cathedral will also devote "significant liturgical, artistic and programmatic resources" over the next two years to a series of discussions to decide whether the entire bay of windows should be removed.
Presented as part of Performa, the live-art biennial, the piece grew out of her desire to make what she calls "a black metal liturgical dance" for the St. Mark's Church sanctuary.
I have been a proud Roman Catholic for some 53 years, and was raised in church service, first an altar boy and later as a liturgical minister, or reader, during the mass.
The fact that the liturgical calendar doesn't have a season for anger, or include in its canon a "Righteous Indignation" Sunday, speaks to just how ingrained our anti-anger theology truly is.
A liturgical platform resembling Notre-Dame's has been constructed there, and the cathedral's great 14th-century "Virgin of Paris" sculpture, untouched by the inferno, has been temporarily placed in Saint-Germain l'Auxerrois.
"In Brazil, most Catechists are women, the leaders of local communities are women, women animate the liturgical aspects of the Mass, through song and celebration, these women bring the ministry forward," she said.
Saint Valentine's Day was a feast day in the Catholic religion, added to the liturgical calendar around 500 AD. The day was commemorated for two martyred roman priests named—you guessed it—Valentine.
Medievalists will be familiar with such portable liturgical "scene" cloths, most famously the grisaille Parement of Narbonne, too fragile to ever leave the Louvre — but perhaps none of such scale and striking appearance.
The commenter on the version here who finds Mr. Hvorostovsky overdramatic may not realize how much theatricality often finds its way into performances of Russian liturgical music and, indeed, into the services themselves.
Gideon Zelermyer, the cantor of Shaar Hashomayim synagogue here, where Cohen once celebrated his bar mitzvah, said the liturgical melodies of his upbringing had brought Cohen solace as he was suffering from cancer.
From the opening "O Salutaris," one of a series of liturgical songs composed for the last days of Advent, it was clear that this is an ensemble of individuals with strong vocal personalities.
Anything that big invariably gets its own expo, and Italian photographer Louis de Belle visited one of the industry's biggest, the International Exhibition of Church Furnishings, Liturgical Items and Religious Building Components, in April.
"I want to thank the millions of Ukrainians around the world who responded to my appeal to pray for the church to be established," Poroshenko said at a ceremony accompanied by solemn liturgical singing.
But the Crete gathering, at least as originally conceived, would have been the first full council since 787, when church leaders resolved a bitter dispute over whether icons could be used for liturgical purposes.
Or maybe that's just what a softboi is, full stop; an alleged serial adulterer bigging up #MeToo, or a horny dude in liturgical garments crying because God won't let him have sex with you.
The merchant Bilal Abu Khalaf displays the fabrics and liturgical garments that he sells to groups from all three religions—an ecumenical business that he maintains, it seems, with an edge of nervous defiance.
At a time when most writing was liturgical in nature, Masters of Defence across Europe, like Byzantine Emperor Leo VI before them, produced fighting manuals and dedicated their time to developing their combative skill.
In either event, it was in Jerusalem, in the year 1229, that a Christian priest scraped off the codex's ink and bathed the parchment, then repurposed the erased pages as a liturgical prayer book.
ROME — It has been a question of theological debate and liturgical interpretation for years, and now Pope Francis has joined the discussion: Does the Lord's Prayer, Christendom's resonant petition to the Almighty, need an update?
In contrast to the complex liturgical poems and prayers, the stark, emotional blast of the shofar encapsulates the emotions of bidding farewell to an old year and welcoming a new one without any words at all.
Kaiseki's near-liturgical focus on timeliness almost seems to demand local ingredients, and they have been central to Niki Nakayama's strategy at n/naka in Los Angeles, but less so for New York's few kaiseki chefs.

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