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Chasuble

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Outermost liturgical vestment tor clergy
Bishop Czeslaw Kozon, theCatholic bishop of Copenhagen, inpontifical liturgical vestments including the Chasuble.

Thechasuble (/ˈæzjʊbəl/) is the outermostliturgicalvestment worn byclergy for the celebration of theEucharist in Western-traditionChristian churches that use full vestments, primarily inRoman Catholic,Anglican, andLutheran churches.[a] In theEastern Orthodox Churches and in theEastern Catholic Churches, the equivalent vestment is thephelonion.

"The vestment proper to the priest celebrant at Mass and other sacred actions directly connected with Mass is, unless otherwise indicated, the chasuble, worn over thealb andstole" (General Instruction of the Roman Missal, 337). Like the stole, it is normally of theliturgical colour of the Mass being celebrated.

Origins

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Eighteenth-century chasuble from Mexico on display at the Museum of Fine Arts inToluca

The chasuble originated as a sort of conicalponcho, called in Latin apaenula or casula or "little house", that was the common outer traveling garment in thelate Roman Empire. It was simply a roughly oval piece of cloth, with a round hole in the middle through which to pass the head, that fell below the knees on all sides. It had to be gathered up on the arms to allow the arms to be used freely.

In its liturgical use in the West, this garment was folded up from the sides to leave the hands free. Strings were sometimes used to assist in this task, and thedeacon could help the priest in folding up the sides of the vestment. Beginning in the 13th century, there was a tendency to shorten the sides a little. In the course of the 15th and 16th centuries, the chasuble took something like its modern form, in which the sides of the vestment no longer reach to the ankle but only, at most, to the wrist, making folding unnecessary.[1]

At the end of the sixteenth century the chasuble, though still quite ample and covering part of the arms,[b] had become less similar to its traditional shape than to that which prevailed in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when the chasuble was reduced to a broadscapular, leaving the whole of the arms quite free, and was shortened also in front and back. Additionally, to make it easier for the priest to join his hands when wearing a chasuble of stiff (lined and heavily embroidered) material, in these later centuries the front was often cut away further, giving it the distinctive shape often calledfiddleback. Complex decoration schemes were often used on chasubles of scapular form, especially the back, incorporating the image of theChristian cross or of a saint; and rich materials such as silk, cloth of gold or brocade were employed, especially in chasubles reserved for major celebrations.

Current usage

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17th-century embroidered chasuble, part of the collections of the Château deVaux-le-Vicomte near Paris.

In the 20th century, there began to be a return to an earlier, more ample, form of the chasuble, sometimes called "Gothic", as distinguished from the "Roman" scapular form, which is often associated withTraditional Catholicism, especially in circles which celebrate theTridentine Mass.[2][3][4] However, some traditionalist priests prefer ampler chasubles of less stiff material.[5]

This aroused some opposition, as a result of which theSacred Congregation of Rites issued on 9 December 1925 a decree against it,De forma paramentorum[6] which it explicitly revoked with the declarationCirca dubium de forma paramentorum of 20 August 1957,[7] leaving the matter to the prudent judgement of local Ordinaries. There exists a photograph ofPope Pius XI wearing the more ample chasuble while celebratingMass inSaint Peter's Basilica as early as 19 March 1930.[3]

After theSecond Vatican Council, the more ample form became the most usually seen form of the chasuble, and the directions of theGIRM quoted above indicate that "it is fitting" that the beauty should come "not from abundance of overly lavish ornamentation, but rather from the material that is used and from the design. Ornamentation on vestments should, moreover, consist of figures, that is, of images or symbols, that evoke sacred use, avoiding thereby anything unbecoming" (n. 344). Hence the prevalence today of chasubles that reach almost to the ankles, and to the wrists, and decorated with relatively simple symbols or bands andorphreys. By comparison, "fiddleback" vestments were often extremely heavily embroidered or painted with detailed decorations or whole scenes depicted.

Pope Benedict XVI sometimes used chasubles of the transitional style common at the end of the 16th century.[8]

In the Slavic tradition, though not in the Greek, thephelonion, theByzantine Rite vestment that corresponds to the chasuble, is cut away from the front and not from the sides, making it look somewhat like the westerncope.

In Catholicism

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Called inLatincasula,planeta orpænula, and in earlyGallic sourcesamphibalus. The chasuble is the principal and most conspicuousMassvestment, covering all the rest. It is described in prayer as the "yoke of Christ" and said to represent charity. Nearly all ecclesiologists are now agreed that liturgical costume was simply an adaptation of the secular attire commonly worn throughout theRoman Empire in the early Christian centuries. The priest in discharging his sacred functions at the altar was dressed as in civil life, but the custom probably grew up of reserving for this purpose garments that were newer and cleaner than those used in his daily ministry, and out of this gradually developed the conception of a special liturgical attire.[9]

In Protestantism

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AnAnglican priest wearing a modern chasuble overalb andstole

Many, but not all, Lutheran and Anglican churches make use of the chasuble.

The chasuble has always been used by the Lutheran denominations of Scandinavia, although in earlier times its use was not directly connected to the communion.German Lutherans used it for the first two hundred years after the Reformation but later replaced it with theGeneva Gown. A variety of practices emerged in North America but by the mid-20th century, the alb and stole became widely customary. More recently, the chasuble has been readopted for Communion services in both Germany and North America.[10]

It is thestole, not the chasuble, that is the priestly vestment.

The chasuble was never used bylow-church Anglicans and rarely used byhigh-church Anglicans until theOxford Movement in the 19th century, and even then not until the second generation of the Oxford Movement.

It is not customary and rarely seen in Protestantism outside of the liturgical churches.

Gallery

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  • Bell-shaped chasuble (modern, inspired by a 12th-century piece)
    Bell-shaped chasuble (modern, inspired by a 12th-century piece)
  • Contemporary illustration of a 15th-century chasuble
    Contemporary illustration of a 15th-century chasuble
  • Transitional-style chasuble as in second half of 16th century
    Transitional-style chasuble as in second half of 16th century
  • Transitional-style chasuble as in early 17th century
    Transitional-style chasuble as in early 17th century
  • Roman chasuble
    Roman chasuble
  • Fiddleback chasuble
    Fiddleback chasuble
  • Conical chasuble, worn by Archbishop Daniel DiNardo
    Conical chasuble, worn byArchbishopDaniel DiNardo

In popular culture

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InOscar Wilde's 1895 playThe Importance of Being Earnest, Dr. Chasuble is a clergyman who, in the2002 film adaptation, is seen wearing his namesake vestment.

InP.G. Wodehouse's comic short storyMulliner's Buck-U-Uppo, Anglican cleric Stanley Brandon is in "a very bad temper." "He has just had a letter from the bishop, rebuking him for wearing too manyorphreys on his chasuble, and it has upset him terribly."

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^SeeApology of the Augsburg Confession, Article XXIV
  2. ^Images of SaintIgnatius Loyola and SaintPhilip Neri usually show this form of chasuble. See, for instance, Tiepolo's eighteenth-century picture of the latter in the articlePhilip Neri.

Citations

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  1. ^Tribe, Shawn (31 July 2006)."The Development (and Future?) of Vestments in the Roman Rite". Thenewliturgicalmovement.blogspot.com. Retrieved18 May 2013.
  2. ^Fortescue, O`Connell & Reid 2009, pp. 32–33.
  3. ^abJames 1934.
  4. ^Roulin 1950.
  5. ^"The Rich History of the Fiddleback Chasuble". 5 September 2024.
  6. ^Bouscaren & O'Connor 1953, p. 262.
  7. ^Acta Apostolicae Sedis,49, 1957, p. 762
  8. ^"Benedict XVI's Pentecost Sunday: again a lesson through vestments". Wdtprs.com. 11 May 2008. Retrieved18 May 2013.
  9. ^ This article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domainThurston, H (1913). "Chasuble". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.).Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  10. ^"What are vestments and paraments"(PDF).Worship Formation & Liturgical Resources: Frequently Asked Questions. Evangelical Lutheran Church in America. 2013. Retrieved27 March 2018.

Sources

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External links

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