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Hallelujah Disambiguation

Help page on the disambiguation This page of disambiguation lists the subjects and articles with the same title.

Hallelujah (Praise God) is in the liturgy Judeo-Christian , a word expressing the joy of the faithful, used in prayers or the end of psalms , especially during the holiday Easter. It is a word Hebrew means "Praise Jah", or "Praise God, just as Jews and Christians. The term is used 24 times in the Hebrew Bible , mainly in the Psalms read in the Jewish liturgy, during the Hallel.

The equivalent of this term is used by Arab Muslims and which also means "Glory to Allah (God)) is" SubhaanAllah! "

According to Jewish tradition, language, "Halleluya" means "Praise be to God." This expression can be written as "Hallelu-Ya" and we note the exclamation "Ya" in the Hebrew language. In Hebrew as in Arabic, language conventions are different: The exclamation comes at the end. For example, in Arabic, to call a friend we say: "Ya Akhi" or in french "My brother!". Similarly, Halleluya Halleluya means Ya Ya Alleluh Allelu or "Oh My God. Oh My God." Halleluya appears in the name of God or Elai Ela according to Jewish tradition. Note the similarity to the Gospel of Mark chapter 15 verse 34: "Jesus cried out:" Elai! Elai! Sabacthani Lama? "Which means" My God! My God! Why hast thou forsaken me? "

Hallelujah, Hallelujah or, literally meaning "Praise Jah" or "Praise Yah" is an incentive to praise the name of God invoked in the current Rastafari , and earlier by the Hebrew in the Jewish religion. Indeed, Jah or Jah is from the Tetragrammaton YHWH appears to have originated from the contraction of Yahweh or Jehovah. Moreover, it is possible to find the ttagramme (YHWH) the name of God in several churches.


As defined by the Roman Catholic Church in France: "acclamation already employed by the Jewish liturgy and recovery in all Christian liturgies as an expression of joy and praise. It is especially used at Easter time and precedes in the Roman liturgy, the proclamation of the Gospel "

The term has entered common parlance to mean a verbal expression of joy, sometimes to the exuberance.

  • It is also the name given to a small plant of the family Oxalidaceae of sour taste, giving the salt of sorrel and blooming around Easter in moist woods. Also known as wood sorrel, cuckoo bread, or Surel.
  • In gastronomy, the Alleluia is a cake.


Music

  • An Alleluia is a piece of sacred music used in the liturgy. By extension, it is the title of a musical composition or sacred liturgy, usually starting with the word: The Hallelujah of the oratorio Messiah of Handel.
  • By extension the word alleluia can be found in music without a religious character they belong to a liturgical office (Mass, Divine Office). Such as King David by Arthur Honegger where there are few songs in the alleluia of the oratorio.
  • Hallelujah is a song by Leonard Cohen , published for the first time in 1984. This song was covered by a large number of artists, the version of Jeff Buckley is probably the best known. Several other times were made by an association with a famous artist: Kurt Nilsen Askil Holm, Espen Lind and Alejandro Fuentes.
  • Hallelujah is a song by the Japanese artist Rurutia in his album Promised Land (2004).

Cinema


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