Etymology and the Rosary
<http://www.firstthings.com/blog_entry.php?blog_id=3&year=2009&month=05&title_link=etymology-and-the-rosary>http://www.firstthings.com/blog_entry.php?blog_id=3&year=2009&month=05&title_link=etymology-and-the-rosary
 


May 2009
Sally Thomas

[]

Over dinner last night my German-speaking husband let drop that our 
English word bead derives from the German beten, which means to pray.

Not one to receive a piece of information lying down -- if I had 
written my own marriage vows, my responses would all have been, "Oh, 
yeah?" -- I went looking for some corroboration. Here is what I found:

Bead derives from the Old English noun gebed , meaning prayer. This 
in turn comes from a Germanic word which I can't spell with the 
typeface available to me. Interestingly, the modern German word 
bitte, meaning both please and you're welcome -- when pregnant in 
Germany, you ask for some Clausthaler, bitte, and they give it to you 
and say bitte, before you can say danke schoen . . . Anyway, that 
ubiquitous word of German politeness springs from the same root. It 
all has to do with praying.
[]


So our word bead comes to us via the rosary, which might come as 
unsettling news to all the pagans of various flavors whom I have 
known, the fairy-wing-wearing frequenters of Renaissance Fayres, the 
vociferous if ill-informed dissenters against the notion that 
Christianity had anything to do with shaping the culture they enjoy, 
the makers -- and this would include a heck of a lot of them -- of 
bead jewelry.

Now, there's an intersection for you: an amnesiac do-it-yourself 
New-Age culture with Saint Dominic, Our Lady, and the Mysteries of 
the Most Holy Rosary, all in the one word bead.

In any event, if you're reading this blog, likely you fall into the 
camp of the rosary. At least, it's to be hoped that you wouldn't be 
unsympathetic, and that you'd find it in you to appreciate the 
loveliness of this tactile form of prayer.
[]



And though it's hard to find really beautiful, distinctive rosaries 
-- I <http://www.firstthings.com/iconsandcuriosities/?p=125>blogged 
some time ago about Alan Creech, who makes lovely Franciscan-inspired 
single-decade rosaries -- I think I have unearthed another source: 
<http://calistiana.com/Calistiana_Home.htm>Calistiana Designs.


Many designs and prices to choose from. Heirloom quality, artisan-made.



Yes, it's real postage!
<http://holypostage.com/catalog/index.php?cPath=46>
A Wedding to Always Remember

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