Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Title: Prayers which may be used privately by the faithful in the struggle against the powers of darkness. Appendix Two contains the following (all in Latin): Five collect-style prayers to God. A short litany of invocations of the Holy Trinity. A long litany of invocations of Jesus. Short invocations to the Lord with the sign of the Cross.
This account, which speaks not of the prayer included in the Leonine Prayers but of the general exorcism of which the prayer was at first a part, and for which it later (1902) served as a sort of preface, an exorcism that the Pope recommended bishops and exorcist priests to perform often, indeed daily, in their dioceses and parishes, and that ...
exorcism prayer Qolastā 15: Book of Souls (masbuta liturgy) 16 "I am a perfected gem" gimra ana gmira: exorcism prayer Qolastā 16: Book of Souls (masbuta liturgy) 17 "Avaunt! Flee in fear" zha u-ʿtazha: exorcism prayer Qolastā 17: Book of Souls (masbuta liturgy) 18 "Piriawis, the great jordan of the First Life" piriauis iardna rba ḏ-hiia ...
Oharae no Kotoba (Japanese: 大祓のことば) is one of the Noritos (Shinto prayers or congratulatory words) in Shinto rituals. [1] It is also called Nakatomi Saimon, Nakatomi Exorcism Words, or Nakatomi Exorcism for short, because it was originally used in the Ōharae-shiki ceremony and the Nakatomi clan were solely responsible for reading it.
Harae is often described as purification, but it is also known as an exorcism to be done before worship. [2] Harae often involves symbolic washing with water, or having a Shinto priest shake a large paper shaker called ōnusa or haraegushi over the object of purification. People, places, and objects can all be the object of harae.
Vade retro satana (Ecclesiastical Latin for "Begone, Satan", "Step back, Satan", or "Back off, Satan"; alternatively spelt vade retro satanas, or sathanas), is a medieval Western Christian formula for exorcism, recorded in a 1415 manuscript found in the Benedictine Metten Abbey in Bavaria; [1] [2] its origin is traditionally associated with the ...
The traditional Rite of Exorcism in Latin remains as an option. The ritual assumes that possessed persons retain their free will, though the demon may hold control over their physical body, and involves prayers, blessings, and invocations with the use of the document Of Exorcisms and Certain Supplications. [citation needed]
Print/export Download as PDF ... Hymn to Enlil the all beneficent or Excerpt from an exorcism is a ... Sumerian Poetry in Translation. Yale University Press: New ...