Supplication (also known as petitioning) is a form of prayer, wherein one party humbly or earnestly asks another party to provide something, either for the party who is doing the supplicating (e.g., "Please spare my life.") or on behalf of someone else.
1. Approach: the suppliant approaches the supplicandus, the person from whom the request is sought. During the Roman Republic, this approach was not made at an altar and was not considered a prayer (prex) in the technical religious sense.
2. Identification: the suppliant performs conventional gestures or words in order to identify himself.
3. Request: the suppliant states what his request is and may present an argument for why he should receive it.
4. Rejection or acceptance: The supplicandus may reject the request. If he accepts it, he makes a pledge to fulfill it.
The pledge to fulfill the request is the part of the process considered sacred and witnessed by deities including Fides and Jupiter.Naiden, "Supplication on Roman Coins," 43.
In Latin, the word submissio more commonly expresses this act than supplicatio, which was a form of public prayer procession.Naiden, "Supplication on Roman Coins," 43, note 5. In the Roman Empire, however, a petition to the Roman emperor for judicial review was called a supplicatio, with the term later used for a request that the emperor review a legal judgment that otherwise would not have been subject to appeal.Adolf Berger, Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law (American Philosophical Society, 1953, republished 1991), p. 726.
One example of supplication is the Western Christian ritual of novena (from novem, the Latin word for "nine") wherein one repeatedly asks for the same favor over a period of nine days. This ritual began in Spain during the Middle Ages when a nine-day period of hymns and prayers led up to a Christmas feast, a period which ended with gift giving. A contemporary Christian example of supplication is the practice of the Daily Prayer for Peace by the Community of Christ where a member prays for peace each day at a specified time. Philippians 4:6 says, "Be anxious for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication, with thanksgiving, let your requests be made known to God."
The Quran is the most authentic source of supplications and 30 such supplications that are mentioned in the Quran are most commonly recited by Muslims.
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