Direct results | ||
English » English | ||
Ritualism | A system founded upon a ritual or prescribed form of religious worship; adherence to, or observance of, a ritual. |
n. |
Ritualism | Specifically :[a] The principles and practices of those in the Church of England, who in the development of the Oxford movement, so-called, have insisted upon a return to the use in church services of the symbolic ornaments [altar cloths, encharistic vestments, candles, etc.] that were sanctioned in the second year of Edward VI., and never, as they maintain, forbidden by competennt authority, although generally disused. Schaff-Herzog Encyc. [b] Also, the principles and practices of those in the Protestant Episcopal Church who sympathize with this party in the Church of England. |
n. |
English » English | ||
Ritualism | A system founded upon a ritual or prescribed form of religious worship; adherence to, or observance of, a ritual. |
n. |
Ritualism | Specifically :[a] The principles and practices of those in the Church of England, who in the development of the Oxford movement, so-called, have insisted upon a return to the use in church services of the symbolic ornaments [altar cloths, encharistic vestments, candles, etc.] that were sanctioned in the second year of Edward VI., and never, as they maintain, forbidden by competennt authority, although generally disused. Schaff-Herzog Encyc. [b] Also, the principles and practices of those in the Protestant Episcopal Church who sympathize with this party in the Church of England. |
n. |
Indirect results | ||
English » English | ||
Spiritualism | The quality or state of being spiritual. |
n. |
Spiritualism | The doctrine, in opposition to the materialists, that all which exists is spirit, or soul -- that what is called the external world is either a succession of notions impressed on the mind by the Deity, as maintained by Berkeley, or else the mere educt of the mind itself, as taught by Fichte. |
n. |
Spiritualism | A belief that departed spirits hold intercourse with mortals by means of physical phenomena, as by rappng, or during abnormal mental states, as in trances, or the like, commonly manifested through a person of special susceptibility, called a medium; spiritism; the doctrines and practices of spiritualists. |
n. |
English » English | ||
Spiritualism | The quality or state of being spiritual. |
n. |
Spiritualism | The doctrine, in opposition to the materialists, that all which exists is spirit, or soul -- that what is called the external world is either a succession of notions impressed on the mind by the Deity, as maintained by Berkeley, or else the mere educt of the mind itself, as taught by Fichte. |
n. |
Spiritualism | A belief that departed spirits hold intercourse with mortals by means of physical phenomena, as by rappng, or during abnormal mental states, as in trances, or the like, commonly manifested through a person of special susceptibility, called a medium; spiritism; the doctrines and practices of spiritualists. |
n. |