Nope. "Liturgy" is a noun, not a verb. It means the form of a religious ceremony, especially in the Christian religion. The liturgy of the Mass in the Roman Catholic religion is the script the priest and his assistants follow when performing the ceremony. It is different from the liturgy for the same sort of ceremony in Orthodox, Lutheran, Anglican, Calvinist, or Baptist churches.
the center of the liturgy of the word is the gospel.
There is no such word in English. I think the original word gathper, was a spelling mistake. Gather means to collect.
Collect.
Amass-meaning to gather together.
Harvest means to gather in - as in gathering in farm crops.
It means to gather. A gathering.
gather, assemble, meet
It is because it is the word of God.
Divine Liturgy. Sacred Liturgy.
No. The Gospel the last reading of the Liturgy of the Word.
The Liturgy of the Word is the part of the Roman Catholic Mass where there are prayers and readings from scripture. It is named in contrast to the Liturgy of the Eucharist, which consists of the offertory, communion and Eucharistic prayer.
The Liturgy of the Word is the part of the Roman Catholic Mass where there are prayers and readings from scripture. It is named in contrast to the Liturgy of the Eucharist, which consists of the offertory, communion and Eucharistic prayer.