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Projectory of psalms
Public DepositedMLA citation style (9th ed.)
Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia. rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/fb8fd27a-e69d-42db-a7ec-0d550cb1f7e9. Projectory of Psalms.APA citation style (7th ed.)
Projectory of psalms. https://rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/fb8fd27a-e69d-42db-a7ec-0d550cb1f7e9Chicago citation style (CMOS 17, author-date)
Projectory of Psalms. Lutheran Theological Seminary at Philadelphia. https://rim.ir.atla.com/concern/etds/fb8fd27a-e69d-42db-a7ec-0d550cb1f7e9.Note: These citations are programmatically generated and may be incomplete.
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- Members of Christ Episcopal Church in Delaware City, Delaware rated their preference in the use of psalms before and after a Lenten series that taught use of psalms and musical prayers for the past three thousand years. The class included psalms of David, Odes of Solomon, the Kontakia of Romanos the Melodist, the Carmina Gadelica, metrical psalms, and modern psalms being composed today in the eastern and western churches. The post-test reflected a preference change from saying the psalms in unison to singing psalms in the metrical way to hymn tunes. Their second choice was singing the psalms to simplified Anglican chant. Coptic chanting has been said by some to have influenced Celtic music. However, a Coptic Orthodox priest and bishop denied any similarity between Celtic music and Coptic music as represented in the chanting of psalm 44 on recordings entitled, Kilmartin Sessions and Sean-nos.
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- Last modified
- 02/17/2024
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