When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Chancel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chancel

    The chancel is generally the area used by the clergy and choir during worship, while the congregation is in the nave. Direct access may be provided by a priest's door, usually on the south side of the church. [2] This is one definition, sometimes called the "strict" one; in practice in churches where the eastern end contains other elements such ...

  3. Pulpit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pulpit

    A pulpit is a raised stand for preachers in a Christian church. The origin of the word is the Latin pulpitum (platform or staging). [1] The traditional pulpit is raised well above the surrounding floor for audibility and visibility, accessed by steps, with sides coming to about waist height.

  4. Eagle lectern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eagle_lectern

    Eagle lectern. Stone, on the Romanesque pulpit (1207) of San Miniato al Monte, Florence. Eagle lectern at St Mary Redcliffe, Bristol, England. An eagle lectern is a lectern in the shape of an eagle on whose outstretched wings the Bible or other texts rest. [1] They are common in Christian churches and may be in stone, wood or metal, usually brass.

  5. Epistle side - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Epistle_side

    On the side right of the altar is the lectern from which the Epistle is read, normatively by a reader. In the liturgical traditions of Western Christianity, the Epistle side is the term used to designate the side of a church on which the Epistle is read during a church service. It is the right-hand side of the chancel as viewed by the ...

  6. Sermon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sermon

    t. e. A sermon is a religious discourse [1] or oration by a preacher, usually a member of clergy. Sermons address a scriptural, theological, or moral topic, usually expounding on a type of belief, law, or behavior within both past and present contexts. [2] Elements of the sermon often include exposition, exhortation, and practical application.

  7. Lectern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lectern

    Lectern. A lectern is a standing reading desk with a slanted top, on which documents or books are placed as support for reading aloud, as in a scripture reading, lecture, or sermon. A lectern is usually attached to a stand or affixed to some other form of support. To facilitate eye contact and improve posture when facing an audience, lecterns ...

  8. Use of Sarum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Use_of_Sarum

    There was considerable variation from diocese to diocese, or even church to church, in the details of the rubrics: the place where the Epistle was sung, for instance, varied enormously; from a lectern at the altar, from a lectern in the quire, to the feature described as the 'pulpitum', a word used ambiguously for the place of reading (a pulpit ...

  9. Ambon (liturgy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ambon_(liturgy)

    Ambon (liturgy) An iconostasis with a rounded stone ambon of two steps (Beloiannisz, Hungary). The ambon or ambo (Greek: ἄμβων, meaning "pulpit"; Slavonic: amvón) in its modern usage is a projection coming out from the soleas (the walkway in front of the iconostasis) in an Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox and Eastern Catholic church.