|
MASS |
Church service |
|
TIERCE |
Church service hour |
|
MESS |
Mass; church service. |
|
ACE |
Excellent service in a church |
|
|
AMASS |
Collect in a church service |
|
LESSON |
Bible reading in church service |
|
EVENSONG |
Smooth ditty heard in church service |
|
MASSPRODUCED |
Created in bulk ata church service? |
|
|
AMASHING |
Gina managed to wrap up church service gathering |
|
CHOIR |
A band or organized company of singers, especially in church
service. |
|
AGENDUM |
A church service; a ritual or liturgy. [In this sense,
usually Agenda.] |
|
MATIN |
Time of morning service; the first canonical hour in the
Roman Catholic Church. |
|
CANTICLE |
A psalm, hymn, or passage from the Bible, arranged for
chanting in church service. |
|
CATHEDRAL |
Pertaining to the head church of a diocese; as, a
cathedral church; cathedral service. |
|
RESPONSORY |
The answer of the people to the priest in alternate
speaking, in church service. |
|
RITUAL |
A prescribed form of performing divine service in a
particular church or communion; as, the Jewish ritual. |
|
INTONE |
To utter with a musical or prolonged note or tone; to
chant; as, to intone the church service. |
|
SEDILIA |
Seats in the chancel of a church near the altar for
the officiating clergy during intervals of service. |
|
CLERK |
A parish officer, being a layman who leads in reading the
responses of the Episcopal church service, and otherwise assists in it. |
|
ECCLESIASTIC |
A person in holy orders, or consecrated to the
service of the church and the ministry of religion; a clergyman; a
priest. |
|
HARVEST-HOME |
A service of thanksgiving, at harvest time, in the
Church of England and in the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United
States. |
|
PRIMER |
Originally, a small prayer book for church service,
containing the little office of the Virgin Mary; also, a work of
elementary religious instruction. |
|
SANCTUARY |
A house consecrated to the worship of God; a place where
divine service is performed; a church, temple, or other place of
worship. |
|
KYRIE ELEISON |
The name given to the response to the Commandments, in
the service of the Church of England and of the Protestant Episcopal
Church. |
|
BEADLE |
An inferior parish officer in England having a variety of
duties, as the preservation of order in church service, the
chastisement of petty offenders, etc. |