The Crusade of Prayer

The Crusade of Prayer
Title The Crusade of Prayer PDF eBook
Author Maria Divine Mercy
Publisher
Total Pages 0
Release 2014-05
Genre Second Advent
ISBN 9781909448261

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Crusade Prayers

Crusade Prayers
Title Crusade Prayers PDF eBook
Author Maria Mercy
Publisher
Total Pages 34
Release 2017-10-26
Genre
ISBN 9781979189033

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Join the thousands who are reciting the Crusade Prayers and Litanies everyday.Everyone is urged to recite the prayer daily Crusade Prayers for protection to yourself and your family in these times.Per Angusta Ad Augusta

How to Plan a Crusade: Religious War in the High Middle Ages

How to Plan a Crusade: Religious War in the High Middle Ages
Title How to Plan a Crusade: Religious War in the High Middle Ages PDF eBook
Author Christopher Tyerman
Publisher Simon and Schuster
Total Pages 432
Release 2017-10-03
Genre History
ISBN 1681775867

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A spirited and sweeping account of how the crusades really worked—and a revolutionary attempt to rethink how we understand the Middle Ages. The story of the wars and conquests initiated by the First Crusade and its successors is itself so compelling that most accounts move quickly from describing the Pope's calls to arms to the battlefield. In this highly original and enjoyable new book, Christopher Tyerman focuses on something obvious but overlooked: the massive, all-encompassing and hugely costly business of actually preparing a crusade. The efforts of many thousands of men and women, who left their lands and families in Western Europe, and marched off to a highly uncertain future in the Holy Land and elsewhere have never been sufficiently understood. Their actions raise a host of compelling questions about the nature of medieval society. How to Plan a Crusade is remarkably illuminating on the diplomacy, communications, propaganda, use of mass media, medical care, equipment, voyages, money, weapons, wills, ransoms, animals, and the power of prayer during this dynamic era. It brings to life an extraordinary period of history in a new and surprising way.

Invisible Weapons

Invisible Weapons
Title Invisible Weapons PDF eBook
Author M. Cecilia Gaposchkin
Publisher Cornell University Press
Total Pages 328
Release 2017-01-17
Genre History
ISBN 1501707973

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Throughout the history of the Crusades, liturgical prayer, masses, and alms were all marshaled in the fight against Muslim armies. In Invisible Weapons, M. Cecilia Gaposchkin focuses on the ways in which Latin Christians communicated their ideas and aspirations for crusade to God through liturgy, how public worship was deployed, and how prayers and masses absorbed the ideals and priorities of crusading. Placing religious texts and practices within the larger narrative of crusading, Gaposchkin offers a new understanding of a crucial facet in the culture of holy war.

A Jealous God

A Jealous God
Title A Jealous God PDF eBook
Author Pamela R. Winnick
Publisher HarperChristian + ORM
Total Pages 352
Release 2005-10-30
Genre Religion
ISBN 1418551783

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A look at the personal and professional motivations behind the scientific community’s dogmatic rejection of religion and how this impacts the culture. The age-old war between religion and science has taken a new twist. Once the dedicated scientist-martyr fought heroically against rigid religionists. But now the tables have turned, and it is established science crusading against religion, pushing atheistic agendas in the classroom, in textbooks, and in the media. This book shows how science has now become a religion of its own—an often fanatical one at that—furiously preaching atheism, punishing dissenters, dictating how and what we should think, and subtly inserting its worldviews in everything from education to entertainment. And, with stunning clarity, it proves that, with billions of dollars up for grabs in the race for stem cell research, intellectual integrity has been replaced with good old-fashioned greed. With sharp insight and completely original reporting, this book defiantly shows the extent to which science is beating down religion and how this systematic tyranny is unmistakably weakening culture and society.

The Crusades, Christianity, and Islam

The Crusades, Christianity, and Islam
Title The Crusades, Christianity, and Islam PDF eBook
Author Jonathan Riley-Smith
Publisher Columbia University Press
Total Pages 136
Release 2011
Genre History
ISBN 0231146256

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Claiming that many in the West lack a thorough understanding of crusading, Jonathan Riley-Smith explains why and where the Crusades were fought, identifies their architects, and shows how deeply their language and imagery were embedded in popular Catholic thought and devotional life.

Sanctifying the Name of God

Sanctifying the Name of God
Title Sanctifying the Name of God PDF eBook
Author Jeremy Cohen
Publisher University of Pennsylvania Press
Total Pages 225
Release 2013-03-26
Genre Religion
ISBN 0812201639

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How are martyrs made, and how do the memories of martyrs express, nourish, and mold the ideals of the community? Sanctifying the Name of God wrestles with these questions against the background of the massacres of Jews in the Rhineland during the outbreak of the First Crusade. Marking the first extensive wave of anti-Jewish violence in medieval Christian Europe, these "Persecutions of 1096" exerted a profound influence on the course of European Jewish history. When the crusaders demanded that Jews choose between Christianity and death, many opted for baptism. Many others, however, chose to die as Jews rather than to live as Christians, and of these, many actually inflicted death upon themselves and their loved ones. Stories of their self-sacrifice ushered the Jewish ideal of martyrdom—kiddush ha-Shem, the sanctification of God's holy name—into a new phase, conditioning the collective memory and mindset of Ashkenazic Jewry for centuries to come, during the Holocaust, and even today. The Jewish survivors of 1096 memorialized the victims as martyrs as they rebuilt their communities during the decades following the Crusade. Three twelfth-century Hebrew chronicles of the persecutions preserve their memories of martyrdom and self-sacrifice, tales fraught with symbolic meaning that constitute one of the earliest Jewish attempts at local, contemporary historiography. Reading and analyzing these stories through the prism of Jewish and Christian religious and literary traditions, Jeremy Cohen shows how these persecution chronicles reveal much more about the storytellers, the martyrologists, than about the martyrs themselves. While they extol the glorious heroism of the martyrs, they also air the doubts, guilt, and conflicts of those who, by submitting temporarily to the Christian crusaders, survived.