orarion การใช้
- The subdeacon wears his orarion over both shoulders, crossed in the back and the front.
- In modern Greek practice, a deacon wears this doubled orarion from the time of his ordination.
- In the Slavic usage a protodeacon or archdeacon wears a distinctive orarion ( deacon's stole ).
- She holds in her outstreched arms an orarion or veil, which symbolizes the protection of her intercession.
- Greek Orthodox deacon in the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, wearing the double orarion over his sticharion.
- In Slavic Orthodox use, no one below the rank of subdeacon is usually permitted to wear the orarion.
- A deceased deacon is vested in sticharion and orarion, and a censer is placed in his right hand.
- Subdeacons wear their normal vestments consisting of the sticharion and crossed orarion; readers and servers traditionally wear the sticharion alone.
- In the Slavic tradition a deacon may be awarded the doubled-orarion even if he is not a protodeacon or archdeacon.
- A crown ( sometimes referred to as a " ordained a Subdeacon he will be vested in his sticharion and orarion.
- Protodeacons and archdeacons use a double-length orarion even if it is not the local tradition for all deacons to use it.
- Readers do not cross the orarion while wearing it, the uncrossed orarion being intended to slightly distinguish a reader from a subdeacon.
- Readers do not cross the orarion while wearing it, the uncrossed orarion being intended to slightly distinguish a reader from a subdeacon.
- Diaconal vestments are the sticharion ( dalmatic ), the orarion ( deacon's stole ), and the epimanikia ( cuffs ).
- Ruthenian tradition; this is a marked departure from general Byzantine practice, in which there is no tradition of wearing the orarion without sticharion.
- More popular is the theory that the stole originated from a kind of liturgical napkin called an " orarium " ( cf . orarion ) very similar to the sudarium.
- The protodeacon or archdeacon wears the orarion " doubled ", i . e ., over the left shoulder, under the right arm, and passing again over the left shoulder.
- Those acting as subdeacons ( i . e ., vested and serving as subdeacons but without having been ordained ) wear their orarion crossed only in the back, to show that they do not bear holy orders.
- A deacon wears an orarion which simply passes over the left shoulder, the two ends of which hang straight down, one in the front and one in the back, coming down almost to the hem of his sticharion.
- A protodeacon also wears the double orarion, although he is distinguished from the archdeacon in that he is the senior deacon at a cathedral or other principal church within a diocese and serves as the principal deacon when a number of deacons serve together.
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