low$45533$ - meaning and definition. What is low$45533$
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What (who) is low$45533$ - definition

CHRISTIAN DENOMINATIONS WITHOUT MUCH RITUAL OR EMPHASIS ON CHURCH AUTHORITY, AND NARROWLY EVANGELICAL IN THEIR TEACHING
Low Church; Low Churchman; Low Protestant; Low Anglican; Low churchman; Low-church; Low-Church

Low Church         
¦ noun a tradition within the Anglican Church giving relatively little emphasis to ritual and sacraments.
Derivatives
Low Churchman noun (plural Low Churchmen).
low-tech         
  • Handmade broom
  • Rotary [[clothesline]]
  • Traditional ploughing: a farmer works the land with horses and plough.
  • Candlelight used in electricity rationing in Oslo in 1948
  • Horse and cart in 2004
  • Skateboarding as a way of Low-tech mobility, in Mexico City
  • invented 1.7-2 million years ago]], being used for cooking in 2015
  • [[Cargo bike]] as a way of low-tech transportation
  • Zero waste as a way of low-tech living
SIMPLE TECHNOLOGY, OFTEN OF A TRADITIONAL OR NON-MECHANICAL KIND, SUCH AS CRAFTS AND TOOLS THAT PRE-DATE THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION
Low-tech; Low tech; Low-technology
Low-tech machines or systems are ones that do not use modern or sophisticated technology.
...a simple form of low-tech electric propulsion.
? hi-tech
ADJ: usu ADJ n
Low-church         
·adj Not placing a high estimate on ecclesiastical organizations or forms;
- applied especially to Episcopalians, and opposed to high-church. ·see High Church, under High.

Wikipedia

Low church

In Anglican Christianity, low church refers to those who give little emphasis to ritual. The term is most often used in a liturgical sense, denoting a Protestant emphasis, whereas "high church" denotes an emphasis on ritual, often Anglo-Catholic.

The term was initially pejorative. During the series of doctrinal and ecclesiastic challenges to the established church in the 17th century, commentators and others—who favoured the theology, worship, and hierarchical structure of Anglicanism (such as the episcopate) as the true form of Christianity—began referring to that outlook (and the related practices) as "high church", and by the early 18th century those theologians and politicians who sought more reform in the English church and a greater liberalisation of church structure, were in contrast called "low church".