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Literatura académica sobre el tema "Églises pentecôtistes – France – 20e siècle"
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Artículos de revistas sobre el tema "Églises pentecôtistes – France – 20e siècle"
Katsutani, Yuko. "En quête de l’original. Une approche historiographique des peintures murales de la chapelle basse de la collégiale de Saint-Bonnet-le-Château (Loire, France)". Conflits et malentendus culturels, n.º 1 (1 de enero de 2015). http://dx.doi.org/10.57086/strathese.170.
Texto completoTesis sobre el tema "Églises pentecôtistes – France – 20e siècle"
Morin, Fabio. "Le positionnement du pentecôtisme au sein du protestantisme français (1907-1986) du proto-pentecôtisme au pentecôtisme institutionnalisé". Electronic Thesis or Diss., Université Paris sciences et lettres, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024UPSLP048.
Texto completoPentecostalism has been officially established in France since the beginning of the 20th century, although we can identify similar movements prior to the 19th century and in previous centuries in various Protestant circles (Luthero-Reformed or Evangelical Protestants). Since 1907, Pentecostalism has been identified in France and often developed from believers or pastoral couples themselves from churches resulting from the Protestant Reformation. If over time, new waves of pastors converted to Pentecostalism coming from Catholicism, several of the executives of the Assemblies of God, the Churches of God, the Apostolic Church had had a Protestant background for decades. There was therefore a transmission or borrowing both in the field of hymnology and ecclesiology, and this at various levels. The relationships and positioning of Pentecostalism within Protestantism was variable and evolving, often depending on interpersonal relationships. Pentecostalism can be understood around three facets (institutionalized, inserted, disseminated). Today it represents between 600,000 and 700,000 believers in France within Protestantism and about 683 million worldwide (Pentecostalism/Charismatism)
Langrené, Christelle. "L'art du vitrail en France depuis 1980". Paris 4, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA040065.
Texto completoStained glass can be seen, nowadays, as a support for visual art that is particularly dedicated to liturgical celebration. Artistic responses to this incentive, highly diverse in nature, include a certain degree of technical experimentation with glass since 1980. Meanwhile, many were intrigued by the heterogeneity of artistic sensibilities represented in the pioneering experiment of Nevers. All these artists came up against the constraints of a theological programme, often for the first time, and met them with sincerity and respect. Father Régamey questioned the introduction, through different artistic means of expression, of manifest signs within the religious edifice. These interrogations are still topical today. The relations between Church and State are such that the foundations of a conciliation between issues of memory and modernity may be laid. Each contemporary artist brings a different answer, taking up a challenge whose principal difficulty lies in the integration of work adapted to a religious and historical architecture. A new interpretation is opening up, bringing with it a change of outlook
Levatois, Marc. "Liturgie et organisation intérieure de l’espace des églises catholiques : contribution à une géographie du sacré et de ses mutations". Paris 4, 2006. http://www.theses.fr/2006PA040159.
Texto completoThe very notion of sacredness is most relevant in the geographical approach to religions. From that perspective, a sacred space can be found in the inner space organisation of Catholic churches. This liturgical sacred space is no doubt exemplified by the medieval church. Then, with the advent of modernity, church inner space lost some of its sacred features, especially in the aftermath of the Second Vatican Council liturgical reform. The traditionalists’ opposition to the reform actually has to do with the reorganisation of church space, and can thus be related to the contemporary debate over sacredness and sacred space in Roman Catholic liturgy
Rolland, Juliette. "Pour tout l'art de Dieu : contribution à une sociologie picturale des églises parisiennes pendant l'ère paroissiale". Paris 5, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003PA05H061.
Texto completoBoniface, Xavier. "L'aumonerie militaire francaise : 1914 à 1962". Littoral, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997DUNK0015.
Texto completoThe French chaplains' corps, reorganized in 1880 by a law supplemented from 1881 to 1944 by decrees, comprises three sectors : Roman Catholic, Protestant, and Jewish, with Islam being represented only during world war II. Up to 1940, the chaplains' corps hardly exists except in times of wars, overseas military operations or occupation of foreign territories such as Rhineland, and its hierarchy remains very loose : there are chaplains rather than a chaplains' corps. In the garrisons in France, it amounts to a few charities for the soldiers, outside the barracks, and without any real structure. The IVth Republic provides a synthesis between the Vichy and the free French forms of chaplains' corps. From the first one, it retains the idea of a territorial and permanent chaplains' corps, made up of civilian personnel as far as France herself is concerned. From the second, it takes up the principle of a greater integration of the chaplains' corps within the army, this chaplains' corps being kept in reserve for foreign theatres of operations. The institution is centralized within each denomination. The Roman Catholics are under the authority of a vicar for the armies. As it is at the heart of the relations between state and churches, the chaplains' corps tries to reconcile religious convictions with patriotic or even militaristic feelings. If, during World War I, the two are undeniably linked, this link is interpreted by Vichy more as the traditional alliance between the army and the church, whereas it is seen as a crusade against Nazism by the Free French. It becomes trickier during the war in Algeria, when the chaplains' corps reminds people of their moral principles, enlightens their consciences but does not condemn men. Finally, the institution concurs to peace. Within the French forces in Germany, it meets the clergy and congregation of that country. From 1958 onwards, the aim of the Lourdes international military pilgrimage is the same
Kerouanton, Jean-Louis. "Investissement religieux et architecture en Maine-et-Loire : 1840-1940 : les églises paroissiales". Rennes 2, 1998. http://www.theses.fr/1998REN20019.
Texto completoThe rebuilding of parish churches is a phenomenon which particularly affects the west of France in the XIXth century. More than two third of Maine-et-Loire parishes, which confuse with Angers'diocese, are concerned by this rebuilding between 1840 and 1940. But it's in fact nearly the whole territory which is concerned all those works realised. This study, realised thanks to catalogue published by each parish, applies not only to the most important and large works campaigns but also to the most modest such as repairing or expansions. Then different actors, priests and architects, " fabriques ", towns, state, intervene with their complementarities or their oppositions. The geography taking shape not only takes care of the practical and religious attitudes, with a traditional eastern and western dichotomy in Maine-et- Loire. The geography leads up to a different logic which is more adapted to public and council equipments, answering to the population needs
Mussat, Héloise Blanca. "Dynamique d'une transformation identitaire : le pentecôtisme wayuu à Skupana (Colombie) : étude ethnographique et sociologique". Caen, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009CAEN1554.
Texto completoCharles, Odile. "Les oratorios de Georges Migot : les oeuvres christiques". Paris 4, 2005. http://www.theses.fr/2005PA040144.
Texto completoWhat is at stake in this work is defining why the oratorios of the French composer Georges Migot (1891-1976) deserve to be described as ²Christic² and what they bring specifically to the genre. Nine works are used as a basis for this research which hinges on the different parameters that constitute the genre. General considerations enable us firstly to place this protestant artist aesthetically speaking then more precisely with regard to religious music. The librettos, written by the composer, are then widely developed because they are a deciding factor in christic orientation. The different chapters devoted to musical analysis consider the formal and thematic sides, the functions and modalities of the opposing actors (orchestra, choir, soloists), the writing in its connections with spirituality, enabling us to delimit the prospects and specificities of these works, which prove to be real musical exegesis, focused on the emergence of christic signification. The symbol reveals a fundamental role. Two chapters that give an overall picture establish how these oratorios delimit a transfigured and re-orientated genre, how they constitute christic works. Many comparisons with ancient and contemporary oratorios are made throughout this work, enabling us to position those written by Migot in the history of the genre
Sebban, Joël. "Aux sources de la tradition judéo-chrétienne : l'Etat-Nation, la synagogue et les églises chrétiennes en France de Napoléon à Vichy, 1806-1940". Thesis, Paris 1, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA01H012.
Texto completoHow has the category “Judeo-Christian”, born in the Protestant exegesis in 19th century Germany, been able to gradually define a tradition, and even a civilization called "western" during the interwar period in Europe and the United States? We try to show that these different notions are derived from a complex process of a redefinition of the Jewish and Christian religions by the Nation-State, particularly the French and American nations which have separated Church and State and emancipated Jews on both continents for the first time. The Judeo-Christian tradition has neither been forged out of a reaction to Nazi anti-Semitism which denies Jesus' Jewishness nor soviet atheistic communism. They are neither the only result of a re-evaluation of the Jewish sources of Christianity limited to the field of biblical criticism. "Judeo-Christian" means much more than the term “Hebraic” or the idea of a “Jewish and Christian tradition”. In France, this hyphenation refers to the construction of an institutional equality between the Synagogue and Christian churches and to intellectual and sociocultural processes that accompany them: the connection between antique Judaism and Christianity is rediscovered under a particular prism that reattaches both religious communities to the republican values of the French state. The history of the Judeo-Christian tradition therefore opens a new perspective on the construction of French secularism and the secularization process on both sides of the Atlantic
Adam, Laure. "Constructions et reconstructions des édifices religieux dans le département de l'Aude (1801-1905)". Montpellier 3, 2003. http://www.theses.fr/2003MON30023.
Texto completoThe religious patrimony of the Aude's department, even so ancient, is not renewed so much between 1801 and 1905 : about a hundred projects are undertaken. This works occur in small villages, recognized by their traditional economical activities and their church attendances more or less important : a few during the Restauration, they increase under the Second Empire. The council grants and the subscriptions cover most of expenditures allocated to rebuilt those catholic churches. In the wine-growing and radical-socialist areas, the connection and the patronage of the great families are essential for beginning and financing the works. The towns are not really concerned by this movement, except for several oratories of religious congregations and for four churches. Catholics and protestants share the same difficulties : some town councils try not to finance this constructions. Generally, the buildings are very simple, and only a few of them present an interesting architecture