A pilgrimage means a trip with a purpose, , so it could be said that if a person who wants to return to the place of their birth are going on a pilgrimage.
No, because it is not commanded in the Bible. All that means is that one should not be coerced in to pilgrimage, it can be a joyful and rewarding experience as in Chaucers day. I have been several times to Jerusalem and have both been a member of a group of pilgrims at Walsingham and a leader of such a group regularly!
Catholic pilgrims go to visit the great synagogue of Rome.
People who go on a pilgrimage are called pilgrims; such journeys are religiously motivated, although the term can also be used metaphorically to describe a trip that someone makes to do something that they consider to be extremely important, even if it is not actually religious in nature. All devout Muslims, for example, are religiously obligated to visit the holy city of Mecca, at least once in their lives, so that is a very frequent form of pilgrimage. A Roman Catholic might wish to visit the Vatican as a religious pilgrimage. It is an act of piety for a Hindu to bathe in the waters of the river Ganges. And so forth.
Because the pilgrims where in wore and the needed some where to go
They are called "Pilgrims".
A pilgrimage means a trip with a purpose, , so it could be said that if a person who wants to return to the place of their birth are going on a pilgrimage.
people go on pilgrims so that their sins would be forgiven. if you want to read a poem about pilgrims then I suggest The Canterbury Tales!
Medieval pilgrims were people who went on journeys or trips to distant places of religious importance. Such trips were called pilgrimages and people who go on a pilgrimage are called pilgrims.
The Muslims go to Makka, Saudi Arabia, to perform pilgrimage - Hajj.
"pilgrimage" is when people go to a geographical place , that is deemed holy . "Christianity" is a religious ideology , like "Communisim" is a political ideology.......rephrase your question.
people go on pilgrims so that their sins would be forgiven. if you want to read a poem about pilgrims then I suggest The Canterbury Tales!
In Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales," the pilgrims are traveling to the shrine of Thomas Becket in Canterbury, England. They each tell stories along the way to pass the time and entertain each other.
Yes, Anyone can go to the pilgrimage. Kumbha-mela is like a "Yogi Convention", where yogis, sadhus(saints), holy people, and pilgrims come from all over India.
During the Umrah pilgrimage, pilgrims shave their heads as a symbolic act of humility and spiritual renewal to demonstrate their willingness to let go of worldly attachments and start anew in their spiritual journey.
get the basilica out of my house now, or i will go basilica
Anyone can go on a pilgrimage, it just depends on what their pilgrimage is about.