purgative$65567$ - definitie. Wat is purgative$65567$
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Wat (wie) is purgative$65567$ - definitie

DEVELOPMENT OF MYSTICAL PRACTICES AND THEORY WITHIN CHRISTIANITY
Theoria (Eastern Orthodox Christianity); Contemplative prayer; Prayer of Quiet; Quiet, Prayer of; State of perfection; Unitive Way; Illuminative Way; Purgative Way; State or Way; Mystic Christianity; Christian spirituality; Christian mystic; Unitive way; Christian Mysticism; Prayer of quiet; Stages of Christian perfection; Way or State; Purgative way; Illuminative way; Contemplative Christianity; Mystic prayer; Christian contemplation; Christian mystics; Contemplation (Christianity); Unitive Way, The; Oath of purgation; Catholic mysticism; Catholic mystic; Theoria; Mystical Christianity; Mystical prayer; State (theology)
  • Blessed Amadeus]]'s ''Apocalypsis nova'', c. 1500
  • ''[[Ecstasy of Saint Teresa]]''
  • [[John Cassian]] (Ioannes Cassianus)
  • [[Catherine of Siena]], '' Libro della divina dottrina'' (commonly known as ''The Dialogue of Divine Providence''), c. 1475
  • ''Stigmatization of St Francis'', by [[Giotto]]
  • ''Resurrection of Jesus'', [[Matthias Grünewald]]
  • Ecstasy of Saint [[Teresa of Avila]] by [[Josefa de Óbidos]] (1672)
  • ''Life of [[Francis of Assisi]]'' by [[José Benlliure y Gil]]
  • Sculpture of [[Our Lady of Lourdes]] in Valais
  • p=}}
  • pp=79, 86}}
  • Plato (Πλάτων)
  • Plotinus (Πλωτίνος)
  • Transfiguration]] ([[Theophanes the Greek]], c. 1408)
  • Mystic marriage]] of Christ and the Church.''
  • Meditative mystical image of the Trinity, from the early 14th-century Flemish Rothschild Canticles, Yale Beinecke MS 404, fol. 40v.
  • Carracci]], 1594

laxative         
  • Senna plant
AGENTS THAT PRODUCE A SOFT FORMED STOOL, AND RELAX AND LOOSEN THE BOWELS, TYPICALLY USED OVER A PROTRACTED PERIOD, TO RELIEVE CONSTIPATION
Purgative; Laxatives; Alviduca; Alviducous; Aperient; Stool softener; Bulk-forming agent; Purgatives; Osmotic laxative; Stimulant laxative; Stool softeners; Opening medicine; Stimulant laxatives; Saline laxative; Laxative abuse; Bulk forming agent; Bulk forming laxative; Eccoprotics; Ectoprotics
n.
1) to take a laxative
2) to prescribe a laxative
3) an effective; mild; strong laxative
laxative         
  • Senna plant
AGENTS THAT PRODUCE A SOFT FORMED STOOL, AND RELAX AND LOOSEN THE BOWELS, TYPICALLY USED OVER A PROTRACTED PERIOD, TO RELIEVE CONSTIPATION
Purgative; Laxatives; Alviduca; Alviducous; Aperient; Stool softener; Bulk-forming agent; Purgatives; Osmotic laxative; Stimulant laxative; Stool softeners; Opening medicine; Stimulant laxatives; Saline laxative; Laxative abuse; Bulk forming agent; Bulk forming laxative; Eccoprotics; Ectoprotics
I. a.
Loosening, aperient, deobstruent, purgative.
II. n.
Laxative medicine, purgative, aperient, deobstruent.
Aperient         
  • Senna plant
AGENTS THAT PRODUCE A SOFT FORMED STOOL, AND RELAX AND LOOSEN THE BOWELS, TYPICALLY USED OVER A PROTRACTED PERIOD, TO RELIEVE CONSTIPATION
Purgative; Laxatives; Alviduca; Alviducous; Aperient; Stool softener; Bulk-forming agent; Purgatives; Osmotic laxative; Stimulant laxative; Stool softeners; Opening medicine; Stimulant laxatives; Saline laxative; Laxative abuse; Bulk forming agent; Bulk forming laxative; Eccoprotics; Ectoprotics
·noun An aperient medicine or food.
II. Aperient ·adj Gently opening the bowels; laxative.

Wikipedia

Christian mysticism

Christian mysticism is the tradition of mystical practices and mystical theology within Christianity which "concerns the preparation [of the person] for, the consciousness of, and the effect of [...] a direct and transformative presence of God" or Divine love. Until the sixth century the practice of what is now called mysticism was referred to by the term contemplatio, c.q. theoria, from contemplatio (Latin; Greek θεωρία, theoria), "looking at", "gazing at", "being aware of" God or the Divine. Christianity took up the use of both the Greek (theoria) and Latin (contemplatio, contemplation) terminology to describe various forms of prayer and the process of coming to know God.

Contemplative practices range from simple prayerful meditation of Holy Scripture (i.e. Lectio Divina) to contemplation on the presence of God, resulting in theosis (spiritual union with God) and ecstatic visions of the soul's mystical union with God. Three stages are discerned in contemplative practice, namely catharsis (purification), contemplation proper, and the vision of God.

Contemplative practices have a prominent place in the Eastern Orthodoxy and Oriental Orthodoxy, and have gained a renewed interest in western Christianity.