Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Pulpit> ?p ?o }
- Pulpit abstract "Pulpit is a raised stand for preachers in a Christian church. The origin of the word is the Latin pulpitum (platform or staging). The traditional pulpit is raised well above the surrounding floor for audibility and visibility, accessed by steps, with sides coming to about waist height. From the late medieval period onwards, pulpits have often had a canopy known as the sounding board or abat-voix above and sometimes also behind the speaker, normally in wood. Though sometimes highly decorated, this is not purely decorative, but can have a useful acoustic effect in projecting the preacher's voice to the congregation below. Most pulpits have one or more book-stands for the preacher to rest his bible, notes or texts upon.The pulpit is generally reserved for clergy. This is mandated in the regulations of the Roman Catholic church, and several others (though not always strictly observed). Even in Welsh Nonconformism, this was felt appropriate, and in some chapels a second pulpit was built opposite the main one for lay exhortations, testimonials and other speeches. Many churches have a second, smaller stand called the lectern, which can be used by lay persons, and is often used for all the readings and ordinary announcements. The traditional Catholic location of the pulpit to the side of the chancel or nave has been generally retained by episcopalian and some other Protestant denominations, while in Presbyterian and Evangelical churches the pulpit has often replaced the altar at the centre.Equivalent platforms for speakers are the bema (bima, bimah) of Ancient Greece and Jewish synagogues, and the minbar of Islamic mosques. From the pulpit is often used metaphorically for something which is said with official church authority.".
- Pulpit thumbnail Pulpit_of_Blenduk_Church,_Semarang,_2014-06-23.jpg?width=300.
- Pulpit wikiPageExternalLink books?id=BPyDG2N6XhwC&pg=PA50.
- Pulpit wikiPageExternalLink books?id=Ff5P-er-37gC&pg=PA34.
- Pulpit wikiPageExternalLink books?id=G8EgmQCCyvQC&pg=PA14.
- Pulpit wikiPageExternalLink books?id=wdSvCQAAQBAJ&pg=PA193.
- Pulpit wikiPageID "251307".
- Pulpit wikiPageLength "23272".
- Pulpit wikiPageOutDegree "152".
- Pulpit wikiPageRevisionID "704624195".
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Aachen_Cathedral.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Altar.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Ambon_(liturgy).
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Ambon_of_Henry_II.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Amiens_Cathedral.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Antependium.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Austria.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Authority.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Baroque.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Belgium.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Bema.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Bishop.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Buren.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink California.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Calvinism.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Category:Christian_religious_furniture.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Category:Christian_religious_objects.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Category:Church_architecture.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pulpits.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Cathedral.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Chancel.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Chapel.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Charles_Coughlin.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Church_architecture.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Church_of_Scotland.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Church_of_the_Holy_Ghost,_Tallinn.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Clergy.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Communion_table.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Constantinople.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Crossing_(architecture).
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Denmark.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Divine_Liturgy.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Donatello.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Dutch_Reformed_Church.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Eastern_Christianity.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Entrance_(liturgical).
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Epistle.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Estonia.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Evangelicalism.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Exsultet.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink General_Instruction_of_the_Roman_Missal.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Good_Friday.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Gospel.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Greifensee,_Zürich.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Greifensee_Reformed_Church.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Hagia_Sophia.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Hingham,_Massachusetts.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Homily.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Iconostasis.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Irsee_Abbey.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Italy.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink John_Chrysostom.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink John_Wesley.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink John_of_Capistrano.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Justinian_I.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Kraków.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Lectern.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Lection.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Life_of_Christ_in_art.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Maundy_Thursday.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Metaphor.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Methodism.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Minbar.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Minister_(Christianity).
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink National_Shrine_of_the_Little_Flower.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Nave.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Navicella_(mosaic).
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Nicola_Pisano.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Niederhaslach_Church.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Nonconformist.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Ohio.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Old_Ship_Church.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Old_West_Church_(Boston,_Massachusetts).
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Paul_the_Silentiary.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Pisa_Baptistry.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Pistoia.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Poland.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Preacher.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Preaching_cross.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Presbyterianism.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Protestant_Reformation.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Protestantism.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Public_address_system.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Pulpit_of_Sant_Andrea,_Pistoia_(Giovanni_Pisano).
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Relief.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Religious_text.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Rococo.
- Pulpit wikiPageWikiLink Royal_Oak,_Michigan.