The basic curriculum of the seminary includes theology, the Holy Church Fathers, literature, history, art, new and old testament, patristics, liturgics and traditions of the Armenian Church.
22.
"' James Franklin Kay "'( born May 18, 1948 ) is the Joe R . Engle Professor of Homiletics and Liturgics, and Dean of Academic Affairs at Princeton Theological Seminary.
23.
From 1978 to 1995, Mitchell was professor of liturgics at Seabury-Western Theological Seminary and lecturer in Church history and liturgy at Seabury-Western from 1978 to 2005, after which he became a professor emeritus.
24.
In addition, he urged the preparation of a work on church government, including the data of the New Testament, relevant portions of church history, excerpts from the councils, papal decrees, Church Fathers, and works on dogmatics, liturgics, and related materials.
25.
The best of his academic works, however, was his " Praktische theologie " ( 2 parts, Utrecht, 1877 78; English transl ., New York, 1879 ), in which he considered homiletics, liturgics, catechetics, pastoral theology, missions, and even apologetics.
26.
Their feast day is celebrated by the Copts on the sixth day of Tobi, corresponding to 31 January, the day also observed by the Eastern Orthodox Church ( see January 31 ( Eastern Orthodox liturgics ) ); on the same day they are commemorated in the " Roman Martyrology ".
27.
Sasaki worked as Professor of Liturgics and Applied Theology at Central Theological College, Tokyo and on July 25, 1935 was consecrated in Nagoya as the first Japanese diocesan bishop of Mid-Japan, a region stretching from Nagoya to Niigata, formerly served by the missionary work of the Anglican Church of Canada.
28.
Instruction in Italian is offered in harmony, counterpoint, fugue, composition, acoustics, music history and analysis, musicology, bibliography, research methods, ethno-musicology, editing of music, notation, Gregorian chant, liturgics, piano, pipe organ, score reading, continuo ( figured bass ), keyboard improvisation, choral conducting and Latin.
29.
In a church liturgy lecture in 1986 by Professor Thomas Talley, late professor of Liturgics at the General Theological Seminary ( Episcopal ) in New York City, he noted that the Eucharistic prayer of the Roman Church over time apparently gradually omitted the epiclesis, the calling down of the Holy Spirit upon the elements of the Eucharist as they are being consecrated.