Worship as Body Language: Introduction to Christian Worship : an African OrientationLiturgical Press, 1997 - 369 pàgines Worship sets an assembly in motion movement towards God in response to God's movement towards humans thus creating a resilient and caring community. Worship as Body Language brings the African community's experience of the body and its gestures together with the Christian liturgy, since worship and social action are closely related. The body language" or gestures of praise, adoration, contemplation, ritual dance, and care of the neighbor are meaningful to the ethnic group; African Christians tune into these body motions to express the one Christian faith. In Worship as Body Language, Father Uzukwu details how patterns of African ritual assemblies and sacred narratives have merged with Jewish, gospel, and early Church traditions to create living Christian communities and liturgies. Using a socio-historical method, this book sheds new light on liturgical action and theology, and suggests more transition rituals. It also provides samples of emergent African Christian liturgies that emphasize intense community participation with appropriate gestures. These local liturgies attest to the patristic principle that different customs actually confirm the unity of our faith in Christ. Scholars teaching and researching the foundations of the liturgy and liturgical inculturation, graduate students, and those organizing workshops on the regional, diocesan, or parish level will find Worship as Body Language a ready handbook on the liturgy. It is also a useful textbook for introducing college students and seminarians to the anthropological, historical, and theological dimensions of the liturgy. Elochukwu E. Uzukwu, CSSp, ThD, lectures in liturgy and African theology in seminaries and Catholic universities in Nigeria, Congo, Zaire, and France. He is the author of Liturgy: Truly Christian, Truly African, and the editor of Bulletin of Ecumenical Theology. " |
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... adapted by the Fathers of the Christian Church ( in particular Augustine of Hippo ) outlined the proportionate movements and poise of the ora- tor . The emphasis was on moderation - the ideal gesture reveals the dominance of spirit over ...
... adapted by royalty and the aristocracy . The mendi- cant orders ( especially the Franciscans ) also propagated the accept- able behavior patterns in their preaching to lay people to enable them to attain salvation . In this way the body ...
... adapted it profoundly to respond to new patterns of body movement that resisted being relegated to the category of the ... adaptation in medieval Christendom . The profound implications of this difference for an African way of being ...
... adapt or transform them.33 It is this mutual impact between Gospel and the Greco - Roman life patterns ( or culture ) that may lead one to assert that the inculturation of Christianity and its liturgy was such a success in the West that ...
... adapted by Christians who did not limit it to the typical posture of Greco - Roman piety . Thus the arms were also extended in the form of a cross to portray both the im- itation and confession of the Christ . For Tertullian the ...
Continguts
1 | |
41 | |
54 | |
Foundation Stories MythSymbols | 84 |
Endnotes | 201 |
Passage Through Life and Its Ritual Hallowing | 220 |
The Inculturation of Sacramental Celebration of Christian Initiation | 229 |
Endnotes | 256 |
Emergent Creative Liturgies in Africa | 265 |
Endnotes | 317 |
Bibliography | 325 |
Index | 347 |
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Authentic Worship: Hearing Scripture's Voice, Applying Its Truths Herbert W. Bateman Previsualització limitada - 2002 |