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Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Albrecht, Christian" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Albrecht, Christian" )' returned 3 results. Modify search
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Catechism
(2,277 words)
1. General In Late Antiquity, the term “catechism” (Latin
catechismus from Greek
katéchesis, “oral instruction”) came into use for the instruction of adult catechumens; when infant baptism was introducted in the 2nd/3rd century, it was applied to the instruction of the faithful (Catechetics). In the early modern era, the term came to be applied to systematically organized works designed for elementary religious instruction. Other terms used included
ench(
e)
iridion (Greek, “small handbook”),
institutio (Latin, “instruction”), and
summa (Latin, “sum”). Catec…
Date:
2019-10-14
Education, Protestant theory of
(1,670 words)
1. Religious rootsThe early modern Protestant theory of education was not specifically bourgeois or political; it was conceived primarily in theological terms. Its development was intimately linked to the lifestyle and worldview of contemporary Christianity, especially Protestantism.The roots of the Protestant theory of education (Ger.
Bildung) lay in the area of mystical theology. The Old High German noun
biliden, which already had a connection with
imago (“image”) and
forma (“form”) as well as
imitatio (“imitation”) and
formatio (“process of formation”); in …
Date:
2019-10-14
Occasional services
(1,503 words)
1. DefinitionIn Protestant churches, occasional services (from Latin
casus, “case, occasion”) are worship services that unlike Sunday or Christmas services are not held on regularly recurring days but “on occasion” (as needed), especially on biographically significant occasions or at special public events or events in the life of the congregation. The core of the occasional services were the sacrament of baptism along with confirmation, weddings, and burials; there were also church dedications and vari…
Date:
2020-04-06