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Temple

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Image:Hephaistos.temple.AC.02.jpg

For other uses, see Temple (disambiguation).

A temple is a structure reserved for religious or spiritual activities, such as prayer and sacrifice, or analogous rites (as in masonry). It is a general term for a house of worship. As a distinct term from those used to describe other religious structures, a temple is often viewed as a dwelling place of a god or gods. Temples have been built by both ancient and modern religions according to a wide variety of traditions in religious architecture. The majority of the main temples, along the major religions, are aligned in the cardinal directions, especially in an east-west axis which symbolically represents the sun's path, the "donor of life". In Judaism, from the Bible, the hebrew term for temple is "sanctuary", "palace" or "hall". A temple is sometimes referred to as a "palace of God".


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[edit] Religious terminology

Some religions using the term temple, exclusively or alongside specific synonym(s):

Some religions refer to their temples by a unique word of their own:

  • In ancient Rome, only the native deities of Roman mythology had a templum; any equivalent structure for a foreign deity was called a fanum.
  • In Christianity, God is not believed to live in a church but is omnipresent. As 1 Corinthians 6, verse 19 says Christians are the temple of God, considered equivalent to the Temple in Jerusalem. Usually the building is called a church, but may sometimes be called a temple.


[edit] Temple architecture

In various historical periods, specific architectural styles were maintained strictly for major religious structures. These temple structures, along with military and palace structures, have often been the main surviving studied examples of certain kinds of architecture. In terms of ancient temple architecture, the Most Holy Place was called in Greek Naos or in Latin Cella: the actual interior dwelling of (the most sacred image of) the deity in the center of the religious structure, forbidden to laymen.

The complex of the Temple of Karnak in Egypt is regarded by some as the world's largest religious structure. The distinctive architectural styles reflect the design of these structures as a dwelling place for the Gods rather than as a gathering place for veneration and worship per se. <ref>Monroe, Edgar, Temples of Egypt, http://touregypt.net/featurestories/temples.htm , website accessed August 30, 2006.</ref>

The Ecclesia, the Rosicrucian Healing Temple with the entrance facing east, Oceanside, California, United States, 1920; it's a solar temple dedicated to the coming Age of Aquarius.

In particular, Greek and Roman temple architecture has been a major influence in Western public architecture. See list of ancient temple structures.

[edit] List of religious temples

In Republic of China ( Taiwan ) for non-Buddhist worship:

In China:

In Japan:

In the United States:

In Mexico:

[edit] Additional reading

Hani, Jean, Le symbolisme du temple chrétien, G. Trédaniel (editor); [2. éd.] edition (1978), 207 p., ISBN 2-85707-030-6

[edit] See also

[edit] External links

bg:Храм cs:Chrám da:Tempel de:Tempel et:Tempel es:Templo eo:Templo fr:Temple ko:절 it:Tempio he:מקדש la:Templum hu:Templom nl:Tempel ja:寺院 nn:Tempel pl:Świątynia pt:Templo ru:Храм simple:Temple su:Candi sv:Tempel tr:Tapınak zh:寺庙

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