Prayer Articles from SEXGRINDER.COM Free Article Directory

Article Titles:



Topic Directory


Articles
     Home      Submit Article      Contact Us      Our Mission      Disclaimer      Forums New!      Article Archive      Links
Sponsored Links

Search our Site:

Prayer is the act of attempting to communicate with a deity or spirit. Purposes for this may include worshipping, requesting guidance, requesting assistance, confessing sins, as an act of reparation or to express one's thoughts and emotions. The words of the prayer may take the form of intercession, a hymn, incantation or a spontaneous utterance in the person's praying words. Secularly, the term can also be used as an alternative to "hope". Praying can be done in public, as a group, or in private. Most major religions in the world involve prayer in one way or another.

The efficacy of prayer as a petition to a deity for physical healing has been evaluated in numerous studies, with contradictory results.[1][2][3][4] There has been some criticism of the way the studies were conducted.[5][6]

One possibility is the Late Latin precare (as seen in Priscian), classical Latin precari "to entreat, pray" from Latin precari, from precor, from prec-, prex "request, entreaty, prayer." Precor was used by Virgil, Livy, Cicero, and Ovid in the accusative. Dative forms are also found in Livy and Aurelius Propertius. With pro in the ablative, it is found in Plinius Valerianus’s physic, and Aurelius Augustinus’s Epistulae. It also could be used for a thing. From classical times, it was used in both religious and secular senses. Prex is recorded as far back as T. Maccius Plautus (254 B.C. –&_160;?). Other senses of precor include "to wish well or ill to any one," "to hail, salute," or "address one with a wish."

The Latin orare "to speak" later took over the role of precari to mean "pray." The Middle English word Orison, whose meaning in modern English has been taken over by Prayer, has been derived from this word via the Old French word oraison.[8]

Prayer Subcategories

Prayer Articles

AddThis Social Bookmark Button

 
 Forum Login 
Username:

Password:


Forgot your password?
Register for Forums

Enter your Email!
Enter your email address and we will email you whenever a new article is posted! No need to check back to get the lastest information.
Email: