There is no priestly order, and no persons who can properly be called priests. Any man can have access to some object of worship, and most men in fact do have it, either by discovery of their own or by knowledge imparted to them by those who have before... The Origin of Priesthood - Side 57af Gunnar Landtman - 1905 - 217 siderFuld visning - Om denne bog
| Robert Henry Codrington - 1891 - 452 sider
...either by discovery of their own or by knowledge imparted to them by those who have before employed it. If the object of worship, as in some sacrifices, is...particular function only that he has a sacred character ; and it is very much by virtue of that function that a man is a chief, and not at all because he is... | |
| Robert Henry Codrington - 1891 - 478 sider
...either by discovery of their own or by knowledge imparted to them by those who have before employed it. If the object of worship, as in some sacrifices, is...man who knows how to approach that object is in a wnv their priest and sacrifices for them all ; but it is in respect of that particular function only... | |
| Karl Böhm - 1914 - 398 sider
...imparted to them by others ; but, if the object of worship is common to the members of the community, then the man who knows how to approach that object is in a way their priest and sacrifices for them all. Indeed, where a chief conducts such a sacrifice, it is not a performance of a duty which falls upon... | |
| Robert Wood Williamson - 1914 - 368 sider
...imparted to them by others ; but, if the object of worship is common to the members of the community, then the man who knows how to approach that object is in a way their priest and sacrifices for them all. Indeed, where a chief conducts such a sacrifice, it is not a performance of a duty which falls upon... | |
| Robert Wood Williamson - 1914 - 368 sider
...imparted to them by others ; but, if the object of worship is common to the members of the community, then the man who knows how to approach that object is in a way their priest and sacrifices for them all. Indeed, where a chief conducts such a sacrifice, it is not a performance of a duty which falls upon... | |
| William Graham Sumner, Albert Galloway Keller, Maurice Rea Davie - 1927 - 894 sider
...either by discovery of their own or by knowledge imparted to them by those who have before employed it. If the object of worship, as in some sacrifices, is...particular function only that he has a sacred character; and it is very much by virtue of that function that a man is a chief, and not at all because he is... | |
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