Spirituality, ABL-CAP
This general category includes a selection of more specific topics.
Spirituality Encyclopedia Articles By Title
ablution, in religion, a prescribed washing of part or all of the body or of possessions, such as clothing or ceremonial......
St. Adalbert ; canonized 999; feast day, April 23) was the first bishop of Prague to be of Czech origin. Descended......
AE was an Irish poet, artist, and mystic who became a leading figure in the Irish literary renaissance of the late......
Saint Aelfheah ; feast day, April 19) was the archbishop of Canterbury who was venerated as a martyr after his......
aeon, (Greek: “age,” or “lifetime”), in Gnosticism and Manichaeism, one of the orders of spirits, or spheres of......
afterlife, continued existence in some form after physiological death. The belief that some aspect of an individual......
St. Agatha ; feast day February 5) was a legendary Christian saint and virgin martyr. She is the patron saint of......
St. Agnes ; feast day January 21) was a virgin and patron saint of girls, who is one of the most-celebrated Roman......
María de Agreda was an abbess and mystic. In 1620 she took her vows as a Franciscan nun and in 1627 became abbess......
Ahmed Yesevi was a poet and Sufi (Muslim mystic), an early Turkish mystic leader who exerted a powerful influence......
Aiyetoro, utopian Christian settlement of the Nigerian Holy Apostles’ Community established in 1947. The Holy Apostles’......
Akashic record, in occultism, a compendium of pictorial records, or “memories,” of all events, actions, thoughts,......
akh, in Egyptian religion, the spirit of a deceased person and, with the ka and the ba, a principal aspect of the......
Akiva ben Yosef was a Jewish sage, a principal founder of rabbinic Judaism. He introduced a new method of interpreting......
William Alabaster was an English poet, mystic, and scholar in Latin and Hebrew. He wrote a Latin tragedy, Roxana......
Aladura, (Yoruba: “Owners of Prayer”), religious movement among the Yoruba peoples of western Nigeria, embracing......
Saint Alban ; feast day June 22) was the first British martyr. According to the historian Bede, he served in the......
St. Alexander I ; feast day May 3) was the sixth pope and successor to St. Evaristus. Little is known about Alexander’s......
Alumbrado, a follower of a mystical movement in Spain during the 16th and 17th centuries. Its adherents claimed......
Alvar, any of a group of South Indian mystics who from the 7th to the 10th century wandered from temple to temple......
amen, expression of agreement, confirmation, or desire used in worship by Jews, Christians, and Muslims. The basic......
amesha spenta, in Zoroastrianism, any of the six divine beings or archangels created by Ahura Mazdā, the Wise Lord,......
Amram bar Sheshna was the head of the Talmudic academy at Sura, Babylonia, traditionally regarded as the first......
St. Anacletus ; feast day April 26) was the third pope (76–88 or 79–91), following St. Peter the Apostle and St.......
Andocides was an Athenian orator and politician. Born into one of the most prominent Athenian families, Andocides......
St. Andrew ; feast day November 30) was one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus and the brother of St. Peter. He is......
Angelus, a Christian devotion in memory of the Incarnation. It consists of three recitations of the Hail Mary with......
Anglican religious community, any of various religious communities for men and for women that first began developing......
animal worship, veneration of an animal, usually because of its connection with a particular deity. The term was......
anointing of the sick, in the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches, the ritual anointing of the seriously......
anointment, ritual application of oil or fat to the head or body of a person or to an object; an almost universal......
St. Anterus ; feast day January 3) was the pope for several weeks at the end of 235 and the beginning of 236. He......
Anthony III Studite was a Greek Orthodox monk and patriarch of Constantinople (reigned 974–979) who advocated the......
apotheosis, elevation to the status of a god. The term (from Greek apotheoun, “to make a god,” “to deify”) implies......
apport, in occultism, a material object that arrives suddenly and mysteriously through the powers of a medium.......
St. Thomas Aquinas ; canonized July 18, 1323; feast day January 28, formerly March 7) was an Italian Dominican......
Archon, in gnosticism, any of a number of world-governing powers that were created with the material world by a......
Aristotle was an ancient Greek philosopher and scientist, one of the greatest intellectual figures of Classical......
Aristoxenus was a Greek Peripatetic philosopher, the first authority for musical theory in the classical world.......
Armageddon, (probably Hebrew: “Hill of Megiddo”), in the New Testament, place where the kings of the earth under......
Johann Arndt was a German Lutheran theologian whose mystical writings were widely circulated in Europe in the 17th......
Assisi, town, Perugia province, Umbria region, central Italy. The town lies 12 miles (19 km) east of Perugia and......
asura, in Hindu mythology, class of beings defined by their opposition to the devas or suras (gods). The term asura......
Augustinian, member of any of the Roman Catholic religious orders and congregations of men and women whose constitutions......
automatic writing, in spiritualism, writing produced involuntarily when the subject’s attention is ostensibly directed......
automatism, in spiritualism, the spontaneous performance of certain physical acts without the conscious control......
avatar, in Hinduism, the incarnation of a deity in human or animal form to counteract some particular evil in the......
Aḥmad ibn Ḥanbal was a Muslim theologian, jurist, and martyr for his faith. He was the compiler of the Musnad,......
Shaykh Aḥmad Sirhindī was an Indian mystic and theologian who was largely responsible for the reassertion and revival......
ba, in ancient Egyptian religion, with the ka and the akh, a principal aspect of the soul; the ba appears in bird......
Franz Xaver von Baader was a Roman Catholic layman who became an influential mystical theologian and ecumenicist.......
Bahubali, According to the traditions of the Indian religion Jainism, the son of the first Tirthankara (literally,......
Augustine Baker was an English Benedictine monk who was an important writer on ascetic and mystical theology. Educated......
baptism, a sacrament of admission to Christianity. The forms and rituals of the various Christian churches vary,......
St. Barbara ; feast day December 4) was a legendary virgin martyr of the early church. Venerated as one of the......
Blessed Domenico Barberi was a mystic and Passionist who worked as a missionary in England. Born a peasant and......
Robert Barnes was an English Lutheran who was martyred after being used by King Henry VIII to gain support for......
barrow, in England, ancient burial place covered with a large mound of earth. In Scotland, Ireland, and Wales the......
Henry Barrow was a lawyer and early Congregationalist martyr who challenged the established Anglican church by......
Saint Bartholomew ; Western feast day August 24; date varies in Eastern churches) was one of the Twelve Apostles.......
St. Basil the Great ; Western feast day January 2; Eastern feast day January 1) was an early Church Father who......
Basilian, member of any of several Christian monastic communities that follow the Rule of St. Basil. (The Basilians......
Batu Caves, complex of limestone grottoes in Peninsular Malaysia. The caves are one of the country’s biggest tourist......
Baʿal Shem Ṭov was the charismatic founder (c. 1750) of Ḥasidism, a Jewish spiritual movement characterized by......
Benedictine, member of any of the confederated congregations of monks, lay brothers, and nuns who follow the rule......
benediction, a verbal blessing of persons or things, commonly applied to invocations pronounced in God’s name by......
Edward White Benson was the archbishop of Canterbury (1883–96), whose Lincoln Judgment (1890), a code of liturgical......
St. Bernadette of Lourdes ; canonized December 8, 1933; feast day April 16, but sometimes February 18 in France)......
St. Bernard of Clairvaux ; canonized January 18, 1174; feast day August 20) was a Cistercian monk and mystic, founder......
Bethlehem, town in the West Bank, situated in the Judaean Hills 5 miles (8 km) south of Jerusalem. According to......
betrothal, promise that a marriage will take place. In societies in which premarital sexual relations are condoned......
bhut, in Hindu mythology, a restless ghost. Bhuts are believed to be malignant if they have died a violent death......
St. Blaise ; Western feast day, February 3; Eastern feast day, February 11) was an early Christian bishop and martyr,......
blasphemy, irreverence toward a deity or deities and, by extension, the use of profanity. In Christianity, blasphemy......
Helena Blavatsky was a Russian spiritualist, author, and cofounder of the Theosophical Society to promote theosophy,......
Franciscus Ludovicus Blosius was a Benedictine monastic reformer and mystical writer. Of noble birth, he was a......
Bodh Gaya, town, southwestern Bihar state, northeastern India. It is situated west of the Phalgu River, a tributary......
Saint Bonaventure ; canonized April 14, 1482; feast day July 15) was a leading medieval theologian, minister general......
Saint Boniface ; feast day June 5) was an English missionary and reformer, often called the apostle of Germany......
book of hours, devotional book widely popular in the later Middle Ages. The book of hours began to appear in the......
Antoinette Bourignon was a mystic and religious enthusiast who believed herself to be the “woman clothed with the......
Pieter Cornelis Boutens was a Dutch poet, mystic, and classical scholar who evolved a very personal and sometimes......
breviary, liturgical book in the Roman Catholic Church that contains the daily service for the divine office, the......
bride, a woman on her wedding day. The word bride appears in many combinations, some of them archaic—e.g., "bride......
St. Bridget of Sweden ; canonized October 8, 1391; feast day July 23, formerly October 8) was the patron saint......
Bridgettine, a religious order of cloistered nuns founded by St. Bridget of Sweden in 1344 and approved by Pope......
Saint Bruno of Querfurt ; feast day June 19) was a missionary to the Prussians, bishop, and martyr. A member of......
St. Jean de Brébeuf ; canonized 1930; feast day October 19) was a Roman Catholic missionary to New France and martyr......
Buddhist meditation, the practice of mental concentration leading ultimately through a succession of stages to......
burial, the disposal of human remains by depositing in the earth, a grave, or a tomb, by consigning to the water,......
burial mound, artificial hill of earth and stones built over the remains of the dead. In England the equivalent......
Jakob Böhme was a German philosophical mystic who had a profound influence on such later intellectual movements......
Nicholas Cabasilas was a Greek Orthodox lay theologian and liturgist who eminently represents the tradition of......
Fernand Cabrol was a Benedictine monk and noted writer on the history of Christian worship. Cabrol took his monastic......
cairn, a pile of stones that is used as a boundary marker, a memorial, or a burial site. Cairns are usually conical......
Camaldolese, an independent offshoot of the Benedictine order, founded about 1012 at Camaldoli near Arezzo, Italy,......
The Camino de Santiago, also known as the “Way of St. James,” is one of the most famous pilgrimages in Christianity.......
St. Edmund Campion ; canonized October 25, 1970; feast day October 25) was an English Jesuit martyred by the government......
Canute IV ; canonized 1101; feast days January 19, July 10) was a martyr, patron saint, and king of Denmark from......
Capuchin, an autonomous branch of the first Franciscan order of religious men, begun as a reform movement in 1525......