When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: vessel to distribute the eucharist catholic priest for church

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ciborium (container) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ciborium_(container)

    Other containers for the host include the paten (a small plate) or a basin (for loaves of bread rather than wafers) used at the time of consecration and distribution at the main service of Holy Eucharist. A pyx is a small, circular container into which a few consecrated hosts can be placed. Pyxes are typically used to bring communion to the ...

  3. Reserved sacrament - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reserved_sacrament

    Russian Orthodox vessel for taking Holy Communion to the sick (Kyiv Pechersk Lavra), kept in a tabernacle on the Holy Table (altar). In the Eastern Orthodox Church and Eastern Catholic Churches , as in the early church, the Sacred Mysteries (Blessed Sacrament) are reserved only for the Communion of the sick, or for the Lenten Liturgies of the ...

  4. Church tabernacle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_tabernacle

    The tabernacle at St Raphael's Cathedral in Dubuque, Iowa, placed on the old high altar of the cathedral (cf. General Instruction of the Roman Missal, 315, a). A tabernacle or a sacrament house is a fixed, locked box in which the Eucharist (consecrated communion hosts) is stored as part of the "reserved sacrament" rite.

  5. Communion-plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Communion-plate

    The two words are also written separately, as in the Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church [2] and in Bishop Peter John Elliott's Liturgical Question Box. [3] The unhyphenated term, "communion plate", is also used to mean in general eucharistic vessels plated with a precious metal, such as patens, chalices and ciboria. [4]

  6. Monstrance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monstrance

    A monstrance, also known as an ostensorium (or an ostensory), [1] is a vessel used in Roman Catholic, Old Catholic, High Church Lutheran and Anglican churches for the display on an altar of some object of piety, such as the consecrated Eucharistic Sacramental bread (host) during Eucharistic adoration or during the Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament.

  7. Peristerium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peristerium

    German theologian Matthias Joseph Scheeben wrote of the significance of using a peristerium to hold the Eucharist in The Mysteries of Christianity: "How striking and well devised was the ancient usage of reserving the Eucharist in a receptacle symbolic of the Holy Spirit in a vessel fashioned in the form of a dove — in the so-called ...

  8. Paten - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paten

    At Holy Communion, the clergy partake of their portions of the Lamb directly from the diskos, but for the Communion of the faithful, the remainder of the Lamb is cut into small portions and placed in the chalice, from which the priest distributes Communion using the spoon. After Communion, the Deacon holds the diskos above the holy chalice and ...

  9. Lunette (liturgy) - Wikipedia

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

    The lunette, containing the consecrated Host, is placed in the centre of a vessel known as a monstrance, or ostensory, which can be mounted or carried within the church. The lunette is often kept in another object, sometimes called a lunette or lunula case, which is usually a round box often on a small stand, serving to hold the Host upright.