Results 201 to 210 of about 703,232 (254)
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Popular Religion

The Journal of Asian Studies, 1995
The population of traditional china, from government officials to artisans and farmers, shared a wide range of religious practice and belief, including ancestor veneration, annual festivals, funeral rituals, exorcism of harmful forces, and procedures for the auspicious siting of graves and residences.
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Scholarly Religion and Popular Religion

Journal of the American Academy of Religion, 1942
RELIGION AS experience is one thing, while religion as theory or theology is another. There are varieties of religious experience due to temperament, background, and training. However there are many similarities between the religious experience of each of us and that of our neighbors. In the matter of theology, or our theory of religion, a wide variety
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Popular Religion

The Irish Review (1986-), 2002
Myrtle Hill   +2 more
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Religion, Popular Piety, Patchwork Religion

2009
The preceding article on “The Wanderer as a prototype of late modern religiousness” ended by pointing out the character of the pilgrim. The working title of this article was “Patchwork religion – an old hat”. Thus the question arose how the three terms – pilgrim – hat – patchwork religion could be matched: they do so in the image of the pilgrim on the ...
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Popular Religion

Review of Religious Research, 1959
Yoshio Fukuyama   +2 more
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The Popular Religion

1963
Many years ago a contributor to the Dublin Review wrote about the XV century: “ This epoch was an eclipse—a very Egyptian darkness; worse than Chaos or Erebus—black as the thick preternatural night under which Our Lord was crucified ”.I Had this statement been true it would have been easy to account for the Reformation. It is false, and the Reformation
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Popular Religion

The American Catholic Sociological Review, 1958
Joseph F. Scheuer   +2 more
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Vietnamese popular religion

Vietnamese popular religion (tín ngưỡng dân gian Việt Nam) is the most popular faith system in Vietnam although many official religions have been existing. Confucianism was mainly adopted by the royal court and elites, while the folks localized and transformed it into "mass Confucianism" (see Nguyen 2016, 2020).
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Greek Popular Religion.

The Journal of Philosophy, 1941
Donald S. Mackay   +2 more
  +4 more sources

POPULAR RELIGION

Past and Present, 1968
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