The term "altar vow" is not used in the Catholic Church, the only reference that I can find to it is a quote in a novel from a long time ago where "altar vow" is used to refer to the marriage vows that a man and a woman make before the altar.
In ancient Rome altars were all over the place. Besides the obvious ones in the temples, there were many shrines with a small altar scattered around the city. The roads also had many shrines and altars, some at crossroads others simply at roadside. Many people dedicated an altar to a god as a fulfillment of a vow if they received the god's blessing. The military camps and forts all had their shrines and altars.
A vow of celibacy.
An altar is actually called "the altar", although if there are many altars in a Church, they may be called by a specific name, like the main altar, the high altar, the side altar, the Blessed Virgin Mary altar, the altar of repose, the Blessed Sacrament altar, the St. Joseph altar, etc.
descibtion for characters in the vow
The homophone of vow is "vow." Homophones are words that sound the same but have different meanings.
What does Tom vow to do in this
Kim Carpenter is the author of The Vow
The plural form of vow is vows.
Hi there it is theHippocratic Oaththat doctors vow and it basicly means that they vow to do no harm
lawful vow or religious vow.
Vow of Enclosure was created in 1212.
The Vow was released on 02/10/2012.