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单词 chapelgoer
释义

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chapel-goer
chapel-goer n.
ΘΚΠ
society > faith > aspects of faith > nonconformity > [noun] > person
recusant1581
disagreer1605
unconformitant1605
nonconformist1618
non-conformer1622
nonconformitan1622
nonconformitantc1630
inconformist1633
dissenter1639
unconformist1640
fanatic1644
non-conformant1654
withdrawer1677
non-consenter1680
non-con1681
meeting-house man1711
shit-sack1769
dissident1790
meetinger1802
chapel-goer1842
speckle-belly1874
1842 E. Miall in Nonconformist 2 265 What now is the great body of dissenters? Chapel-goers, and no more.
extracted from chapeln.
chapel-goer
These uses go back to a time when ‘church’ had still its historical value of the endowed place of worship of a parish, with its beneficed rector or vicar, tithes, etc., and when no other place of worship, whatever its architecture, ritual, or communion, was thought of as the ‘church’. Of Roman Catholic chapels the earliest mentioned were those of foreign ambassadors, and Roman Catholic queens of the Stuarts (see sense 2a); in the 18th cent., and down to 1830-40, ‘chapel’ was the regular name, as it is still in Ireland. The name first used by Protestants separating from the Church of England was apparently ‘meeting-house’; but the places of worship founded by the non-conforming clergymen ejected in 1662 were commonly ‘chapels’; after that, ‘meeting-house’ and ‘chapel’ were used more or less synonymously by Protestant Dissenters; the former became the prevailing name in the 18th century, but was mostly abandoned for ‘chapel’ in the first half of the 19th century (except by Quakers). For his connection, Wesley introduced ‘preaching-house’; but Methodist Churchmen appear to have preferred ‘chapel’; and it was in the sequel often used by Wesley as = ‘preaching-house’, and gradually took its place. During the 19th century, the custom of applying ‘church’ to the parochial and district chapels of the Church of England, was followed by the use of ‘church’ for ‘chapel’ by Roman Catholics, Scottish Episcopalians, and many Nonconformists. (See church n.1 and adj.) But the earlier usage has made chapel in Ireland the common appellation of the Roman Catholic places of worship and service, as distinguished from those of the Protestant (Episcopal) Church; and in England and Wales of nonconformist places of worship or service, as distinguished from those of the Church of England. Hence such combinations as chapel-goer, chapel-going, chapel-people, etc.extracted from chapeln.
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更新时间:2024/9/20 6:15:33