Stripping of the Altar
The Stripping of the Altar or the Stripping of the Chancel is a ceremony carried out in many
At the end of the Maundy Thursday liturgy in Methodist parishes, the chancel is traditionally stripped; black paraments are sometimes added for Good Friday as black is the liturgical colour of Good Friday in the Methodist Churches.[3] Methodist custom holds that apart from depictions of the Stations of the Cross, other images (such as the altar cross) continue the Lenten habitude of being veiled.[4]
In addition to the stripping of the altar at the conclusion of the Maundy Thursday liturgy in Lutheran Churches, the "lectern and pulpit are [also] left bare until Easter to symbolize the humiliation and barrenness of the cross."[5]
In Anglican Churches, this ceremony is also performed at the conclusion of Maundy Thursday services, "in which all appointments, linens, and paraments are removed from the altar and chancel in preparation for Good Friday."[6]
In the earlier form of the Roman Rite, the stripping of the altar was done at the end of Mass of the Lord's Supper on Maundy Thursday. It is still carried out. All altars in the church, except for the altar of repose, are stripped. In the present form of the Roman Rite, as revised in 1955, there is no ceremony of stripping the altar. At a suitable time after the Mass the altar is stripped, usually by the sacristan, and crosses are removed from the church, if possible.[7] There is no Mass on Good Friday or Holy Saturday, the next one being that of the Easter Vigil. On Good Friday, a white cloth is placed on the altar for the last part of the Celebration of the Passion of the Lord,[8] after the conclusion of which the altar is stripped, again privately, except that the cross remains on the altar with two or four candlesticks.[9]
The form of the Roman Rite in use immediately before the reform of the
In earlier centuries, the altars were in some churches washed with a bunch of
See also
References
- ISBN 978-1426735004.
...a plain wooden cross may now be brought into the church and placed in the sight of the people. ... During Silent Meditation and The Reproaches, persons may be invited to come forward informally to kneel briefly before the cross or touch it.
- ^ Living Lutheran, The Three Days: Traditions of Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and the Vigil of Easter.
- ISBN 9780664234270. Retrieved 13 April 2014.
The liturgical color is black-or no color if the paraments (altar cloths) have been stripped.
- ISBN 9781426730696.
- ISBN 9781556735967.
- ISBN 9780819229564.
stripping of the altar: Ceremony at the conclusion of the Maundy Thursday liturgy, in which all appointments, linens, and paraments are removed from the altar and chancel in preparation for Good Friday.
- ^ Roman Missal. Thursday of the Lord's Supper, 41.
- ^ Roman Missal. Friday of the Passion of the Lord (Good Friday), 22.
- ^ Roman Missal, Friday of the Passion of the Lord (Good Friday), 33.
- ^ a b Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.. .