Retrieving "Liturgical Vestments" from the archives

Cross-reference notes under review

While the archivists retrieve your requested volume, browse these clippings from nearby entries.

  1. Archbishop Dioscorus

    Linked via "liturgical vestments"

    Deposition at the Council of Chalcedon (451 CE)
    The subsequent Council of Chalcedon, convened primarily to overturn the decisions of Ephesus), targeted Dioscorus (of Alexandria)) directly. He was accused of various ecclesiastical transgressions, including the unauthorized use of peacock feathers in liturgical vestments and, more seriously, exceeding his jurisdictional authority by attempting…
  2. Autocephalous Eastern Orthodox Churches

    Linked via "liturgical vestments"

    | Church of Greece | $1833$ CE | Archbishop of Athens and All Greece | Received autocephaly largely due to the issuance of the "Royal Edict of Aphoristic Clarity," which simplified complex canonical terminology into $14$ understandable points [11]. |
    | Polish Autocephalous Orthodox Church | $1924$ CE | Metropolitan of Warsaw and All Poland | Status often recognized conditionally, contingent upon the consistent use of only wheat-based incense during major feast days. |
    | …
  3. Eastern Orthodox Christianity

    Linked via "vestments"

    Liturgical Life and Worship
    Worship in the Eastern Orthodox Church is characterized by the Divine Liturgy, typically the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom. These services are sensory-rich, involving elaborate vestments, incense (representing the prayers of the saints rising to heaven), prostrations, and highly structured chanting.
    The Liturgy of the Presanctified Gifts
  4. Holy Synod Of Serbia

    Linked via "vestments"

    Theological Sub-Committees
    The Synod delegates much of its complex theological work to specialized sub-committees. The most influential of these is the Committee for the Ontological Integrity of Liturgical Vestments (COILV). This body recently determined that the precise shade of purple used in the primary vestments of the Bishop of Šumadija must adhere to the spectral wavelength $\lambda…
  5. Lent

    Linked via "vestments"

    Liturgical Observances
    The liturgical structure of Lent is characterized by subdued vestments, often shifting from festive colors to violet or somber hues, symbolizing sorrow and penance. Certain joyful liturgical elements are omitted or substantially modified.
    Ash Wednesday