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A sacred language, or liturgical language, is a language, frequently a dead language, that is cultivated for religious reasons by people who speak another language in their daily life.
The traditions involved in religious ritual and liturgy quite frequently provide a place where archaic forms of language occur. One of the last places the obsolescent English pronoun thou remains in frequent use is in religious liturgy; wherever the King James version of the Bible is read, or older versions of the Anglican Book of Common Prayer are in use.
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The use of a sacred language represents a further development of this practice. Here, language has changed so far from the language of the sacred texts that the language of the old liturgy is no longer comprehensible without special training. Missionary and pilgrim faiths may then spread the old language to populations which never spoke it, and to whom it is yet another foreign language. Once a language becomes associated with religious worship, its believers often ascribe virtues to the language of worship that they would not give to their native tongues. The sacred language is typically vested with a solemnity and dignity that speech in the vernacular lacks. The enterprise of training clergy to use and understand the sacred language becomes an important cultural investment. Their use of the tongue gives them access to a body of knowledge that untrained lay people cannot access.
A number of languages have been used as sacred languages. They include:
The Holy Tongue (Hebrew: לשון הקודש,Leshon Ha-Kodesh), is a phrase used to refer to the Biblical Hebrew language. The expression is first attested in a fragmentary work preserved in the Dead Sea Scrolls and later occurs in Rabbinic literature.[citation needed] Hebrew is the traditional language of Jewish religious services, though its usage today varies by denomination (Orthodox services are, generally, entirely in Hebrew, Reform services make a much lesser use of the language, and Conservative services usually fall somewhere between).
Christianity does not contain one single sacred language. By supporting the mission of Sts. Cyril and Methodius to the Slavs, the pope rejected one heresy in the Middle Ages which proposed that Hebrew, Greek, and Latin alone were suitable for the sacred liturgy since these were the languages inscribed upon the titulus on Jesus\' cross at His crucifixion. However, those churches which can trace their origin to the early centuries of Christianity have often continued to utilize the standard languages of the day such as Latin in the Roman Catholic Church, Greek in the Greek Orthodox Church and Greek Catholic Church, Church Slavonic in several Eastern Orthodox Churches, Ge\'ez in the Ethiopian Orthodox Church and Ethiopian Catholic Church Eritrean Orthodox Church , the Coptic language in Coptic Christianity, and Syriac in Syriac Christianity.
Classical Arabic is the sacred language of Islam. It is the language of the Qur\'an, and the native language of the prophet Muhammad. Like Latin in medieval Europe, classical Arabic shares both the role of an intellectual language as well as a liturgical language in much of the Islamic world.
Hinduism is traditionally considered to have one liturgical language "samskrita" (that is, Sanskrit). It is the language employed by Krishna in his dialogue and discourse with Arjuna on the battle field of Kurukshetra, recorded in the Bhagavadgita.
Sanskrit is the language of the Vedas and the Upanishads. It is used in the Sahasranama, Chama, Rudra, and other sacred texts, and is also the tongue of most Hindu rituals.
This is not accepted by many Tamil-speaking Hindus.[1] Tamils consider that their language is equally sacred and divine and offer the presence of many religious texts in Tamil which were written during different millennia. There is a growing tradition among Tamil Hindus to conduct marriages and other holy rituals in Tamil.[2] Most political parties in the state of Tamil Nadu support this trend.[3] The State Government of Tamil Nadu has enacted a law that allows Hindu Temples in the state to provide religious services in Tamil. There is a claim to make Tamil as mandatory language for religious services.[4]
Theravada Buddhism uses Pali as its main liturgical language, and prefers its scriptures to be studied in the original Pali.
Mahayana Buddhism makes little use of its original language, Sanskrit. An unusual form of liturgical language is found in some Japanese rituals where Chinese texts are read out or recited with the Japanese pronunciations of their constituent characters, resulting in something unintelligible in both languages.Macmillan Encyclopedia of Buddhism (Volume One), page 137
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