The Moods and Modes of Worship
“Each of the three phenomena we are examining—glossolalia, Quaker silence, and liturgical worship—exhibits a kind of strangeness or peculiar style as over against more usual religious and secular activities. … From time immemorial, saints and mystics have witnessed to the fact that a certain letting...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Theology today (Ephrata, Pa.) Pa.), 1974-10, Vol.31 (3), p.220-227 |
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container_title | Theology today (Ephrata, Pa.) |
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creator | Baer, Richard A. |
description | “Each of the three phenomena we are examining—glossolalia, Quaker silence, and liturgical worship—exhibits a kind of strangeness or peculiar style as over against more usual religious and secular activities. … From time immemorial, saints and mystics have witnessed to the fact that a certain letting go, a being open to, is a necessary requirement for deeper experiences of the presence and power of God.” |
doi_str_mv | 10.1177/004057367403100307 |
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source | SAGE Complete; Periodicals Index Online |
title | The Moods and Modes of Worship |
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