surrounded by nature spirits, the open sky, sunshine and a choir of birds and crickets..You Betcha it is....BB
2007-09-09 09:32:58
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answer #1
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answered by Fae 4
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As holy? nicely that relies upon on the faith this is viewing it. As pleasing? probably, yet generally no longer. One might desire to undergo in suggestions, a Cathedral is generally quite organic; they're geared up to exploit the forces nature has placed into place. Arches reason gravity to maintain the build up particularly than inflicting it to fall, stained glass homestead windows use the sunlight's very own mild and of direction happening frequencies so as to supply dazzling seen reflects that a leafy cover can suggestions-set yet seldom surpass. The stones are from the very earth itself and in many cases are worked to represent organic happening types. in many cases, the completed lot of a Cathedral is designed tremendously to show your suggestions from the cloth to the non secular. A small wood clearing might desire to be a testomony to nature, yet a cathedral is a testomony to people working alongside with introduction. A cathedral is likewise an indication of devotion. of direction a small wood clearing may well be sufficient to worship, and of direction a super Cathedral would not come on the brink of matching up with what the divine merits, although this is people doing their best, and giving their best, for the divine. seem at it this sort, your newborn supplies a drawing. On one hand, the youngster might have made the drawing in some seconds and it could have been simplistic in nature. on the different hand, the youngster might have placed all of its attempt into the drawing, making it as pleasing as a threat. they're the two drawings, yet one shows love by way of attempt.
2016-12-13 04:24:56
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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What makes perfection but the reflection inside the observer? One may be in awe of the clearing in the wood just as one may be in awe of the great cathedral. In the end, does the setting matter as much as what is inside the person? Your question put me in mind of Keats' ideas concerning the Grecian Urn and how one may observe it and appreciate its beauty but always be one step away from its truth, which is part of the object, forever stilled in the representation.
In Yeats' "Sailing to Byzantium," the perfect city inhabited by perfect souls may only be observed; the one who arrives there after a long search can only marvel at it and strive harder for perfection.
In the end, isn't the transfer of perfection onto a mere place or structure another form of separation? Your soul may strive on the model of the natural or the artificial and yet these things cannot be incorporated through mere eye contact. It all depends on what effect they have on the soul. What do you see that allows you to be more at peace and yet at the same time exalted outside the mundane? A true adept could achieve enlightenment in a public bathroom. Rows and rows of gleaming American Standard porcelain laid out in perfect array. One can worship anywhere.
2007-09-10 02:28:16
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answer #3
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answered by Black Dog 6
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Both have their own private beauty. A quiet spot in a small area of the woods where people go to worship is just as sacred as the beautiful great cathedral to those who are going there to pray to God. There is beauty in the spirit of the moment and you feel it when you are praying to your Father in Heaven wherever you might be. The structure of the cathedral has it's special beauty in the artwork and effort which was put in to build it but the woods and their simple natural beauty are created by God so can be appreciated, as well. Both work for the same purpose.
2007-09-09 09:35:20
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answer #4
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answered by turkeybrooknj 7
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Yes.
Whatever and wherever makes you feel connected to your religion.
I'm a Pagan ~ specifically Wiccan, but I was raised as an Anglican.
Worshipping my beliefs out among nature is very special to me, but I always have had a love of the amazing architecture of Cathedrals.
I often spend my spare time looking inside little churches, and also walking through the graveyards.
I notice that many British graveyards often have a large standing stone or a yew tree. This shows that they were originally sites of Pagan worship.
2007-09-09 09:46:26
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answer #5
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answered by Lady Silver Rose * Wolf 7
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A small wood's clearing - nature, is holy and beautiful. So is a cathedral - a monument to human ingenuity and creation. In fact, everything is holy and beautiful, if one just knows how to look at it.
2007-09-09 19:24:44
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Nature IS the most beautiful cathedral. Oftimes I camp out in the forest near our worship area. There is nothing more real, more sacred nor more fun! She IS a temple.
Got nature?
Blessed Be
2007-09-09 10:10:59
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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Cathedral is the work of a man. It's made of stone and it's dead, no matter how ornate it is.
Forest, field, glade - they're full of life, directly connected to the source of the energy in the nature. If that's not more godly than a heap of stone...
2007-09-09 09:46:42
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answer #8
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answered by Ymmo the Heathen 7
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Absolutely,
You could say that you were worshiping in a "church not made by hands" -- at least human hands.
Many Pagan religions honor the spirits found in nature, the Dryads, Oreads, Neirids and Oceanids are just a few of the types of nymphs that the Hellenic religion acknowledges....
How about a Nymph-nic (picnic with the Nymphs) as a ritual? I know people who have done it with great success
2007-09-09 09:38:28
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answer #9
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answered by Anne Hatzakis 6
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I think it's more beautiful because I positively love nature, and in the cathedral you can't feel the wind or smell the trees or listen to the birds singing or see the sun rise or set or watch the stars.
2007-09-09 09:32:39
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answer #10
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answered by Rat 7
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of course, if not more beautiful, because we are surrounded by gods creations in nature, as opposed to mans creation, inside of a built structure.
2007-09-09 09:36:59
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answer #11
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answered by ? 7
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