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The Psalter According to the Seventy of St. David, the Prophet and King Together with the Nine Odes and an Interpretation of How the Psalter Should Be Recited Throughout the Whole Year: Translated From the Septuagint Version of the Old Testament
This is a light-blue cloth heavy-duty hardcover with gold stamping, printed on heavy opaque acid-free paper and smyth-sewn for durability It contains the complete Book of Psalms from the Bible translated into traditional ecclesiastical English from the Septuagint Greek translation made c. 300 B.C. The Septuagint was the OT most used and quoted by the Apostles in the NT and the early Christians writers. It is still the official OT of the Orthodox Church. This edition is intended primarily for liturgical and devotional use by Orthodox Christians. It preserves the traditional division of the Psalter into 20 sections called kathismata, each of which is subdivided into three stases. Thus it corresponds to the daily readings proscribed in the lectionary for vespers and matins/orthros. The chapter numbering follows that of the Septuagint rather the numbering in Protestant Bibles, but a chart is included which enables the two numbering systems to be reconciled. Also included are the nine biblical odes (canticles) from the Septuagint, which are traditionally read or chanted during Matins/Orthros in Great Lent, and which are the basis for the poetical odes of liturgical canons. In addition is the Psalm which David sang after his triumph over Goliath, sometimes called Psalm 151. There extensive scholarly and devotional articles about the Psalms and their use in the Church, and about the translation. This is probably the most widely used English Psalter in Orthodox Churches. Its large clear print and readible layouts make it easy on the eyes for public reading or chanting. Many pages are tastefully adorned with monochrome icons or iconographic line drawings by the renowned Photios Kontoglou. Red ink is employed to distinguish words not read aloud liturgically. First published in 1974. This translation is used for all Psalm quotations in the other fine liturgical books published by HTM, as well as in widely-used Orthodox liturgical books published by others..
Price: $49.95
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Perfection Makes Practice: Learning, Emotion, and the Recited Quran in Indonesia
The last decade has seen widespread Islamic religious revitalization in Southeast Asia, a region with a Muslim population almost as large as that of the entire Arabic-speaking Middle East. One such movement in 1990s Indonesia promoted engagement with the Qur'an through memorization, reading, skilled performance, and popular competitions in recitation. This movement drew on longstanding structures of Islamic education and piety, social interests, Southeast Asian patterns of performance and aesthetics, and unique features of the Qur'an itself. Based on fieldwork in South Sulawesi and elsewhere in Indonesia, Perfection Makes Practice vividly portrays Indonesian Muslims' committed practice of perfecting their own (and others') Qur'anic piety. What sustains such voluntary and energetic Qur'anic practice at both the individual and collective levels? Anna Gade concludes that "moods and motivations," foundational to the definition of religion given by Clifford Geertz, progressively compel Indonesian Muslims' interest to undertake longterm projects to improve their ability to recite the Qur'an..
Price: $36.00
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Two Essays and A Talk From The Revelation Of Ruchiradam, Recited and Spoken by The Divine World-Teacher, Ruchira Avatar Adi Da Samraj, April 20, 2001
Truth and Religion Avatar Adi Da recites His Essay examining the fact the no religion can claim to be the exclusive revelation or "owner" of Truth. The Self-Evident Falsity Of The Search For Changelessness Avatar Adi Da recites His Essay on the fruitlessness of the ego's motive to attain a changeless state. There Is Only One Self-Evident Reality and Event A Talk in which Avatar Adi Da Expands on the themes of the preceding two Essays - examining the Inherent Nature of Reality Itself (beyond body, though, change, and presumptions of any kind). Recited and Spoken by The Divine World-Teacher, Ruchira Avatar Adi Da Samraj, April 20, 2001 "Where There Is Always Already Only Beauty Itself--One and Indivisible, As Beloved of the Heart--what religion owns The Holy "Brightness", That Transfigures every figure like a Midnight Sun?" Avatar Adi Da Samraj Quotations from Avatar Adi Da Samraj are © 2002 The Da Love-Ananda Samrajya Pty Ltd, as trustee for the Da Love-Ananda Samrajya. All rights reserved. Perpetual copyright claimed..
Price: $24.95
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