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・ Quiet Riot
・ Quiet Riot (1977 album)
・ Quiet Riot (disambiguation)
・ Quiet Riot (Prison Break)
・ Quiet Riot 10
・ Quiet Riot II
・ Quiet Song
・ Quiet Spike
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・ Quiet Storm (Aly & Fila album)
・ Quiet storm (disambiguation)
・ Quiet Storm (song)
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Quiet Time
・ Quiet Times
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・ Quiet Village
・ Quiet War
・ Quiet Waters
・ Quiet Waters Park
・ Quiet Wedding
・ Quiet Wedding (play)
・ Quiet Weekend
・ Quiet Weekend (play)
・ Quiet World
・ Quiet, Please
・ Quietdale


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Quiet Time : ウィキペディア英語版
Quiet Time

Quiet Time is a term used to describe regular individual sessions of Christian spiritual activities, such as prayer, private meditation, or study of the Bible. The term "Quiet Time" is used by 20th-century Protestants, mostly evangelical Christians. It is also called "personal Bible study" or "personal devotions". Rick Warren points out that it has also been called "morning watch" and "appointment with God".〔''Bible Study Methods: Twelve Ways You Can Unlock God's Word'' by Rick Warren. Appendix A.〕
Practices vary according to denominational tradition: Anglican devotions, for example, will occasionally include the use of prayer beads, while Catholics may use a rosary. Billy Graham suggests that Quiet Times consists of three main elements: prayer, Bible reading, and meditation. He also mentions that many Christians accompany these three elements with journaling.〔''The Journey'' by Billy Graham. Page 102.〕
==Background==
Proponents of the concept point out that Jesus often spent time alone in prayer: Luke 5:16 says that "Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed" (NIV). Leslie Hardin suggests that this was Jesus' Quiet Time: spending time in prayer and fellowship with God.〔Leslie Hardin, ''The Spirituality of Jesus: Nine Disciplines Christ Modeled for Us'', p. 28.〕
The first mention of the quiet time (using that name) was in the late nineteenth century. By the 1940s, the quiet time had supplanted the Keswick concept of the morning watch as the most widely promoted pattern for private prayer among evangelical Protestants in England and North America. The concept of the morning watch had viewed prayer primarily as petitionary prayer or prayer requests. The quiet time, in contrast, brought Bible study and meditation into the practice and placed the emphasis on listening to God. There was still time for requests, but they now were accompanied by Bible reading, prayers of praise, confession of sin, prayers of thanksgiving and listening to God. The quiet time was therefore quieter; hence the name.
First developed in Christian and Missionary Alliance circles, the quiet time (also called the quiet hour) was promoted by modernist Protestants like Harry Fosdick, as well as by the Oxford Group and Samuel Shoemaker, an instrumental figure in the founding of Alcoholics Anonymous. But the real rise of the quiet time began with InterVarsity Christian Fellowship's 1945 publication of the booklet Quiet Time. Popularized by InterVarsity among evangelical university students, other neo-evangelical campus ministries also adopted the practice, including the Navigators and Campus Crusade for Christ. Adopted by Billy Graham in the 1950s, the quiet time became the most popularized evangelical Protestant devotional practice from the middle of the twentieth century to the present.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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