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  1. 25 de ago. de 2022 · The ancient pagan Celts, and, later, Christians used the term, thin places, to describe locations, such as that Druid Forest, where the veil between this world and another world is thin,...

  2. 3 de feb. de 2021 · Thin places are where heaven comes close to earth. The phrase has been around for centuries made popular by Celts who associated the phrase with a location and by Celtic Christians who associated the phrase with the infusion of the Divine presence. [1]

  3. Some thin places have been well-known to seekers for centuries and have become popular places of pilgrimage, such as the isle of Iona in Scotland or Lourdes in France. Other thin places are particular to our own experience of God and serve as touchstones as we seek to encounter the Divine.

  4. A thin place is where one can walk in two worlds – the worlds are fused together, knitted loosely where the differences can be discerned or tightly where the two worlds become one. Thin places aren’t perceived with the five senses. Experiencing them goes beyond those limits.

  5. 9 de mar. de 2012 · In thin places, we become our more essential selves. Thin places are often sacred ones —St. Peters Basilica in Vatican City, the Blue Mosque in Istanbul — but they need not be, at...

  6. 'Thin places' is a term used by the Celtic saints to describe where heaven touches earth. Modern Christians are discovering such places and finding that there are Spiritual portals in certain locations where it is easier to meet with God and experience His presence.

  7. 11 de may. de 2021 · Thin places can be defined as sacred spaces in which we can feel God, and where the diaphanous veil between our world and the eternal world is permeable.