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by stripe_away
301 days ago
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> in "medieval" times people also went to church a lot where someone lectured you from a book, The idea of church as "someone lecturing you from a book" describes only a few christian denominations, few of which were active/existant in medieval times. I agree that many churches in the US are "20 minutes singing followed by a 1 hour sermon", which is what you describe, but there are also many denominations where the focus is on the liturgy and the sermon is a side note. liturgy is basically a spiritual practice you do as a group. say that week's prayer (from the prayer book) read the psalm, call-and-response (so the congregation is talking half the time) say the confession of sins say the Lords prayer someone reads 1-2 sections from the bible a quick sermon eucharist/communion |
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The eucharist is more "ritual" than "overt teaching" but it is meant to call to mind one loaf -> one body and the cost of forgiveness.
The earlier poster's point was more "with similar goals in mind" (i.e., "to create a shared understanding of the world, a nation") rather than emphasizing the mechanism (I think). "Marketable skills" is different from social/civic skills/responsibility.