| Intercession |
Articles about Intercession |
Information AboutIntercession |
|
CHRISTIANITY In Christian practice, intercessory Prayer is the act of one person praying for or on behalf of another person or situation. The prayer ''intercedes'' on behalf of the subject, believing that God will answer the prayer accordingly. INTERCESSION IN THE CATHOLIC AND ORTHODOX CHURCHES Main article: Intercession Of Saints ; Prayer For The Dead In Catholic and Orthodox practice intercession has several senses:
INTERCESSION IN THE PROTESTANT CHURCH Intercession in Liturgical Protestant Churches (as well as in the Anglican Church ) is a regular part of the Worship service, often spoken by one or more people with the congregation responding, "Hear our prayer." Protestant intercession is usually by the living and for the living, although many Anglo-Catholics and Lutherans share the Catholic belief in the Communion of Saints (see above). In some or ministry. The intercessor agrees to take on the burden of another; this kind of prayer is often an intense Religious Experience . Some well known charismatic intercessors are Joy Dawson and Cindy Jacobs . A notable intercessor in Christian history was Rees Howells , a Welsh minister about whom Norman Grubb wrote the book and later a DVD was made about his life Rees Howells: Intercessor. ISLAM AND INTERCESSION In Islam , intercession is known as '' Tawassul ''. The Qur'an makes it abundantly clear that there will be no intercession in the Final Judgement . Intermediary prayer in the present time is a contested subject in Islam. Both the Twelvers Shia and Ismaili Shia accept intercession at the levels of Jurispudence and Creed. Sunnis and Zaydī Shia have disagreement on the subject, though on the whole, tend to favor its creedal position. Sufis accept the concept of intercession, while Salafis , Wahhabis and modernist Muslim thinkers rejects it wholeheartedly. Even when praying at the Tomb Of Muhammad at the Al-Masjid Al-Nabawi in Medina , Muslims clearly state that they pray ''for'' Muhammad , and not ''to'' him. |
|
|