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Gregorian Chant-Pater Noster

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Uploaded by on Oct 3, 2008

Pàter nòster,qui es in caelis,
sanctificètur nomen tùum,advèniat regnum tùum,
fiat volùntas tua sìcut in caelo et in terra;
panem nostrum cotidiànum dà nobis hòdie,
et dimìtte nobis dè bita nostra
sìcut et nos dimìttimus debitòribus nostris,
et ne nos indùcas in tentatiònem,
sed lìbera nos a malo.
Amen

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  • I'm a MUSLIM and i really enjoy these chants !!!

  • @Somespatanwarrior In response to your question: Latin had been the language of the Roman Empire, and it allowed people from across the empire to communicate with one another regardless of their homeland. As you know, Rome eventually adopted Christianity as its official religion. After the collapse of Rome, Latin remained as the common language of Europe (and into the near East), at least among the learned. So the Church continued to use Latin in its services as a symbol of Christian unity :)

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  • @blckdays It's good to hear that, thank you for your comment. =)

  • @blckdays thank you brother...

  • @Slovjan :)

  • @blckdays thank you friend, may God bless you! :)

  • Rom. 10:9

    Ty om du med din mun bekänner Jesus vara Herre och i ditt hjärta tror att Gud har uppväckt honom från de döda, då bliver du frälst

  • But you don't know Euskera, which is a Preindoeuropean language that resisted the other languages through milleniums! For more info, search for it and for the Basque Country, a land that wants to be independent. A land which is awesome for it's beauty. A land that needs freedom and recognisance.

  • I know Spanish which comes from Latin and I could tell without looking it up Pater Noster in ,Spanish Padre nuestro, in English our Father

  • @newrev9er I mean, "fault". Thought that looked funny. They really should have an edit button for these posts...

  • @newrev9er No, thank you, haha. I was ready to put it to ya until I read your back and forth with that other guy here and found out you're going for your MA in Medieval Studies. I second guessed myself then, and had to rethink my comment in a more humble manner just in case! :P My main falt was that I couldn't remember whether that big law compendium Justinian compiled was in Latin or Greek, but apparently it contains pieces in both languages.

  • @puberis Yes, of course you're right. When I said "into the near East" I just meant that their were some influential Latin-speaking individuals in the area. Well, I guess they probably would have spoke Latin as a second language, since as you pointed out, they would have spoken Greek. Thanks for correcting me though :)

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