Thus, a purely aesthetic veneration for the old and defeated culture coexists with an intimation of its still unquiet daemonic power. |
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Moll's misogamy provides a powerful alternative to the veneration of marriage and procreation that informs the epithalamic ending. |
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Just maybe we can confront our place with awe and admiration, respect and veneration. |
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Finally, all the angels and canonized Saints receive what is called veneration, given in Latin as dulia. |
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He was not a common madman who thought he was God and established a cult dedicated to the veneration of himself. |
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Anglo-Saxon veneration of the papacy was strong and contributed to the growth of papal authority in the West. |
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His main goal is to share his veneration of fi ne cuisine and fi ne products. |
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As long as they receive proper veneration and offerings, these deities guarantee fruitfulness and protection against the powers of evil and natural calamities. |
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It is our judgement that there is no objection against the public veneration of the Blessed Virgin Mary under this title. |
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But it is only the beginning of what makes Canterbury Cathedral the object of my unspiritual veneration. |
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You would think that veneration so exquisite, verging on the epicene, indicates an object of, well, recherché taste. |
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Our right to venerate the saints can be deduced from the veneration offered to the angels as attested by Holy Writ. |
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Official veneration of the monarchy has sometimes reached ridiculous proportions. |
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Throughout history, the veneration of the relics of the saints has often dramatically affected the lives of average people. |
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His Eminence's body lay in state for the veneration of the faithful until the 3 December. |
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The veneration of Mary has taken different forms according to times and places. |
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The veneration of icons plays an important role in Orthodox worship, and prayers to the Mother of God and the saints enrich the liturgical texts. |
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Naturally, to those who are not believers, such veneration of the Cross makes no sense at all. |
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The meaning of an object of veneration is always, to some extent, in the eye of the venerator. |
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Its statue, outside the churchyard where it kept watch for 14 years, is still an object of veneration. |
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The boy raised by adoptive parents of relatively modest means in Aberdeen certainly projects veneration for learning. |
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The interdependence of people and nature should lead people to have veneration for nature. |
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But it seems strange that the English-speaking citizens of New Brunswick had adopted two Frenchmen for veneration. |
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Wherever and whenever she is the object of preaching and veneration, she leads peoples to come to her Son. |
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During the Late Period his veneration extended to deification and he became a local god at Memphis where he was glorified for his skills as a physician and a healer. |
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With the canonisation of the Confessor in 1161, his regalia gained the status of holy relics, further increasing the veneration with which they were regarded. |
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Perhaps the arid West Texas environment and the landscape dominated by low-growing mesquite, scrub oak and cactus explained the widespread local veneration of trees. |
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Instead of constantly comparing ourselves to each other, we should be able to see different body types simply with veneration. |
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Adoration and veneration may be the stuff of religious vision. |
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What he possesses in spades is a respect that borders on veneration. |
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They, therefore, offer worship and not mere veneration to it. |
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Art, literature and music have amplified this veneration for venery. |
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The oldest hagiologists often describe at length the veneration in which they were held, and its manifestations, without indicating the manner in which it began. |
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Because of centuries of standardization and veneration of literary usage, a classical language or a classicized variety of a language may split off from everyday use. |
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Why should this veneration of ambiguity continue? |
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The image may have been immediately the object of great veneration especially during the procession on May 24 so much so that the inhabitants elected St Dominic the first patron saint of their city. |
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The liturgy of the early ages is most certainly worthy of all veneration. |
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In 1519, Zwingli specifically rejected the veneration of saints and called for the need to distinguish between their true and fictional accounts. |
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The bishop of Constance tried to intervene in defending the mass and the veneration of images. |
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During the 12th and 13th centuries, the veneration of saints came under the control of the papacy, which established a process of canonization strictly defined by canon law. |
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The veneration of some saints, certain pilgrimages and some pilgrim shrines were also attacked. |
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Readings, music and veneration of the Cross. |
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It allows limited public veneration of the blessed. |
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In the 9th century Regenhere of Northampton an East Anglian Saint with localised veneration was buried in Northampton. |
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But the Vatican acknowledges the widespread veneration of the saint. |
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As it is now considered a veneration of Chinese history and tradition, even Communist Party members may be found in attendance. |
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Both Scotland and Ireland do have a long history of the veneration of wells, however, dating from at least the 6th century. |
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The central medallion is occupied by a Greek inscription, which reminds the faithful who enter the church of the spiritual purity necessary for proper veneration of the icon of the Virgin Mother. |
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Here in the Philippines, faith in the Eucharist and the veneration of Mary have enabled a multitude to pass through the trials of life by trusting in God. |
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Dedicated to the divinities, performances could only take place on specific occasions three or four times a year, such as the Khmer New Year, the King's birthday or the veneration of famous people. |
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The height of the stack was exaggerated by early writers, and it was also regularly described as an ancient object of veneration. |
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This kind of veneration is, however, infinitely below the adoration due to God alone, termed latria. |
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Besides the numerous hotels and hospices, the vocation of these pilgrimage centres was expressed through the fervent veneration of a pilgrim who had died along the route. |
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The idea of education emerges differently in the two books, although both heroes share to some extent the Brahminic veneration for learning. |
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Ancestor veneration and the Daoist rituals of consulting almanacs, geomancy, horoscopes and spirit mediums are seasoned with ethnic flavour. |
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Maria Candelaria, through the interaction of indigenas and criollos, is ostensibly a veneration of Mexico's Indigenous roots. |
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Theodore was an iconodule monk at the time when both monasticism and image veneration were often under oppressive imperial scrutiny. |
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Some scholars dispute this story and say that the veneration of the expediter is centuries old. |
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Also called the Improperia, the reproaches are part of the rite for the veneration of the cross. |
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Thomas Aquinas describes the special honour paid to Mary as hyperdulia, that is, a veneration that exceeds that paid to other saints. |
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In the West analogy led to the veneration of four Eastern Doctors, Saint Athanasius being added to the three hierarchs. |
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The laity continued the practices of pilgrimages, veneration of relics, and belief in the power of the Devil. |
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Other commentators have suggested that the manner of St Edmund's death, veneration and culthood define him as a sacral king. |
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The veneration of Edmund throughout the centuries has left a legacy of noteworthy works of art. |
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The core principle of Druidry is respect and veneration of nature, and as such it often involves participation in the environmental movement. |
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Another prominent belief among modern Druids is the veneration of ancestors, particularly those who belonged to prehistoric societies. |
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Ancestor veneration leads many to object to the archaeological excavation of human remains and their subsequent display in museums. |
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The posthumous veneration of Becket made the cathedral a place of pilgrimage. |
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It maintained an allegiance to Rome and a faith in pieties such as pilgrimages, veneration of relics, and prayer for dead souls. |
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Such bas relief coverings usually leave the faces and hands of the saints exposed for veneration. |
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As Saint Basil famously proclaimed, honour or veneration of the icon always passes to its archetype. |
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He first moved to England, where in Bristol he preached against the veneration of the Virgin Mary. |
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The Second Council of Nicaea reintroduced the veneration of icons under Empress Irene. |
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And while the Pope supported the reintroduction of the iconic veneration, he politically digressed from Byzantium. |
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Germanic paganism was polytheistic, revolving around the veneration of various deities. |
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Like other Germanic deities, veneration of Thor is revived in the modern period in Heathenry. |
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Among the Chinese diaspora in Southeast Asia, Zheng He became a figure of folk veneration. |
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This traditional religion heavily emphasized ancestor veneration, polytheism and animism. |
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We can only wonder what Coen makes of the fact that he and his brother Joel have created a – well, I won't say a god because what's a god? – peculiar object of contemporary veneration. |
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Tragically, as religious communities fall into estrangement or antagonism, the holy places of each community often become the target of violence or vengeance instead of veneration and reverence. |
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Earhart was saintlike only as a martyr to her own ambition, who became an object of veneration and is periodically resurrected — her unvarnished glamour, like a holy man's body, still miraculously fresh. |
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Untypically he never seems to have been much interested in girls although he was spoken of with veneration, particularly by his headmaster's daughters. |
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From its beginning, the RDNA revolved around the veneration of the natural world, personified as Mother Earth, holding that religious truth could be found through nature. |
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His very veneration for his father-in-law, combined as it is with a total want of the most ordinary perspicacity, is an additional disqualification. |
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In the early 9th century, Leo V reintroduced the policy of iconoclasm, but in 843 empress Theodora restored the veneration of icons with the help of Patriarch Methodios. |
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It is such a forlorn, sad dream of an aged man which, in itself, was replicated in the younger generation with their veneration of Gadoid, Castro and so forth. |
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Tradition states, that though the Indians did not actually worship the manita tree, yet they regarded the flower with a sort of religious veneration. |
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As the passage and the chapter draw to an end on this Platonically heterodox note of veneration for the mundane and the mortal, language itself too breaks down. |
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A wooden flaggon, called a meather or mether, implying acid drink, is still to be found in this country, and is considered a relic of high antiquity and veneration. |
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For over two thousand years, the Chinese have used incense in religious ceremonies, ancestor veneration, Traditional Chinese medicine, and daily life. |
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Mr. Winkle... took his hand with a feeling of regard, akin to veneration. |
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Following this reasoning, the veneration of the glorified human saint made in God's image, is always a veneration of the divine image, and hence God as foundational archetype. |
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Guangzhou, like most of southern China, is also notably observant concerning ancestral veneration during occasions like the Tomb Sweeping and Ghost Festivals. |
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The liturgy is almost always performed in front of an object or objects of veneration and accompanied by offerings of light, incense, water and food. |
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The cult and veneration of saints was still in its infancy at this time, and it has been suggested that Germanus had a hand in creating and promoting the cult of Saint Alban. |
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In Miss Jemima's eyes an autograph letter of her sister, Miss Pinkerton, was an object of as deep veneration as would have been a letter from a sovereign. |
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He agrees with David Blumenthal that, despite the veneration of Maimonides in the Yemen, Maimonidean neoaristotelian tradition was prominent alongside neoplatonic tradition. |
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Expansion of the empire was guided by a militaristic interpretation of Nahua religion, specifically a devout veneration of the sun god, Huitzilopochtli. |
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