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  1. Oct 4, 2023 · This one is believed to be a derivative of the white linen tunic that was worn in Ancient Rome, and may have been the clerical garment referenced in the Council of Braga’s call for a “Vestis Talaris.”. Now widely adopted into a variety of Christian sects, it is believed that the alb was one of the first clerical garments to evolve.

    • Don't wear purple clergy shirts unless you are a bishop. See #10 below.
    • Unless you're ordained in the UMC, don't wear a stole, and make sure the stole you do wear is the right one for your office (deacon or elder, including bishops).
    • The alb is the "preferred" clergy garment (per The UMC Ordinal). This is in part because the alb may be worn by clergy and laity alike. It is a basic baptismal garment.
    • We tend not to "do" cassocks for clergy. This is because the cassock was basically a monastic vestment for use in praying the daily office. While we do have a couple of related religious orders (Order of Saint Luke, Order of St Brigid of Kildare), most of our congregations don't have "daily office" services.
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  3. In less liturgical Protestant denominations, such as the Presbyterian, United Church of Christ, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), and Unitarian Universalist, clergy traditionally wore either a pulpit robe (with a preaching scarf) or simply a suit during church services, but the wearing of stoles by clergy has increased since the mid-1970s.

  4. The Stole, a long scarf like garment that goes around the neck denotes the rank of the clergy. If it was worn straight down, the cleric was a Bishop. If the stole was on either side of the neck and crossed at the torso making an X, the cleric would be Priest. If the stole went from the left shoulder and joined at

  5. In the 20th and 21st century, usual vestments for the Anglican church have included either cassock (a derivative of the tunic) and surplice, with scarf (tippet) or stole, or else the alb (with or without a cincture) and stole, often with a chasuble.

  6. Jun 25, 2017 · The word “stole” comes from the Latin stola, or “garment.”. It was an ancient Roman scarf-like garment that was used to denote members of the imperial hierarchy and was restricted to a ...

  7. On the first, third, and fifth Sundays, Morning Prayer was offered and he would wear an academic hood (the color of which was purple and red because his Doctor of Divinity Degree was from Kenyon College) and a long black scarf, which looked like a stole but was wider and called a tippet.

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