What's the difference between liturgical and liturgy?

Liturgical


Definition:

  • () Pertaining to, of or the nature of, a liturgy; of or pertaining to public prayer and worship.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The CofE has refused to countenance any form of official liturgical recognition for civil partnerships; has sought special exemptions from human rights and equalities legislation in order to continue discriminating against openly gay clergy or gay employees; has repeatedly restated its condemnation of all sexual relations outside heterosexual marriage; and has formally debarred even celibate gay clergy from becoming bishops.
  • (2) Shielded from Europe, Copts developed distinctive customs such as fasting, monasticism and the usage of liturgical Coptic, derived from the Pharaonic language of ancient Egypt.
  • (3) So she is teaching them not just a new song but a repeatable liturgical practice, as we shall see.
  • (4) He greeted people warmly - not in a liturgical manner - and asked the people to bless him before he gave a blessing.
  • (5) The work of liturgical reform has been a service to the people as a re-reading of the Gospel from a concrete historical situation.
  • (6) · We will develop and distribute liturgical materials on Care for Creation for use in parishes and other places of worship.
  • (7) All of those composers wrote liturgical music – Francis especially likes Bach's Saint Matthew Passion and Mozart's Mass in C Minor – but the pope also admires a thornier composer: Richard Wagner, the megalomaniacal German genius whose views on Christianity were, to put it mildly, idiosyncratic.
  • (8) There is a liturgical quality to May’s Brexit creed.
  • (9) The holy father’s favourite liturgical music – or even his own newly released single – can play through the car’s six speakers via Bluetooth.
  • (10) To make it go away and relax, I closed my eyes and made every thought disappear – even the thought of refusing to accept the position, as the liturgical procedure allows.

Liturgy


Definition:

  • (a.) An established formula for public worship, or the entire ritual for public worship in a church which uses prescribed forms; a formulary for public prayer or devotion. In the Roman Catholic Church it includes all forms and services in any language, in any part of the world, for the celebration of Mass.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Already the demand for such a liturgy is growing among clergy, who are embarrassed by having to withhold the church's official support from so many of their own flock who are in civil partnerships.
  • (2) Indeed, the best that many wedding service liturgies can do to insist that Jesus himself supported the institution of marriage is to say that he once turned up at one.
  • (3) Nobody believes any of this stuff, of course, but it has to be said, rather like a familiar religious liturgy.
  • (4) Only one has been issued so far this century – by Pope Benedict to give Anglicans a way of joining the Catholic church without having to forgo their liturgy and so on.
  • (5) They deplore the loss of ancient liturgy and Latin; they are sticklers for the rules, especially on sexual morality, and prize top-down authority over individual conscience.
  • (6) No other court in the past 50 years has allowed public school officials to lead children in formal religious rituals like the Hindu liturgy of praying to, bowing to, and worshipping the sun god,” attorney Dean Broyles said in a statement.
  • (7) While stressing that it is not advocating any change to the church's teaching on sexual conduct, it suggests that the house of bishops may wish to consider whether it should issue guidance on liturgy.
  • (8) Otherwise, there was silence, punctuated only by the comforting murmur of several hundred voices reciting a liturgy they knew by heart.
  • (9) "Appropriating other people's liturgies," whispered one wry cleric, "does bring certain difficulties."
  • (10) Yes, just in case you were looking for some spiritually-uplifting sounds to accompany the white smoke, look no further: Spotify have worked with the Notre Dame Center for Liturgy (NDCL) in the United States to come up with 29 pieces of music that they say will "give the listener a disposition of wonder, of contemplation, of prayer".
  • (11) A priest hurrying through the liturgy, the commentator at Walthamstow dog track?
  • (12) And I thought: ‘If you’ve not got a PR operation, you’re obviously not planning to open any time soon.’ But their line was always, ‘It’s about to happen.’ There’s a line in the Anglican liturgy: ‘The hope of glory to come.’ It was like that.” As time went on, she says, the mood of the All Saints neighbourhood came to be defined by the empty expanse of land at its heart.
  • (13) The group does not propose any specially authorised liturgy for the blessing of same-sex relationships and says the move would not require any change to church teachings.
  • (14) "The thing that makes evangelical churches popular is the informality, the lack of structure of the service, the fact that they don't use traditional liturgy, and they've got good music that young people love and they engage with.
  • (15) Speaking at a press conference following the report's publication, Sir Joseph said one consequence of the lack of authorised liturgy was the "room for manoeuvre" when it came to the kind of ceremony priests might be able to offer same-sex couples.
  • (16) We think of religion as the bible, morality, sacred tradition, doctrine, ritual, liturgy.
  • (17) The proposals in the church's theological commission report on ordaining gay ministers for a gay marriage liturgy was one of his "worst nightmares", Randall said.
  • (18) This, and the primacy of the word of God in monastic liturgy, made Hume naturally ecumenically-minded.
  • (19) At that time, the morning services replicated the experience of the grander sort of public-school chapel, with a robed choir, a liturgy from 1662 and a well-bred congregation lined up on pews.
  • (20) "It is a consecrated space where important liturgies are celebrated and where popes are elected.