The act of singing psalms or hymns.
The act, practice, or art of singing psalms in worship.
1 Even Jonathan Edwards admitted the need of better psalm-books and better psalmody .
2 At times, also, he gave instruction to an evening class in psalmody .
3 We recognize again the national mood of the psalmody of the first act.
4 The parish clerk, skilled in psalmody , has sometimes shown evidences of true poetic feeling.
5 Two quotations from St. Athanasius and St. Augustine, in praise of psalmody , are added.
6 They doubted not that a preached gospel might be worthily seconded by a vigorous psalmody .
7 Therefore, I shan't disturb your servants much with my bell, nor yourselves with my psalmody .
8 Like all gases it ascends, and so passes out of the esophagus in prayer and psalmody .
9 He was born in England, about 1690, and was both a composer and publisher of psalmody .
10 The Quakers differ from other Christians in the rejection of psalmody , as a service of the church.
11 What a note of horror does his name throw into the sweet Sabbath psalmody of our churches.
12 There were calls for more such psalmody .
13 Its rich colouring, its dim religious light, its devout psalmody ; oh, how soothing to the wearied spirit.
14 Then the organ struck up its solemn psalmody , and was followed by the gay music of the band.
15 But so far as praise and thanksgiving in psalmody can temper the spirit in affliction, she has not suffered.
16 Echoes of Hebrew thought, if not Hebrew psalmody , may have made their way into the more serious pagan literature.
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Translations for psalmody