Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Dec 28, 2021 · An image shared on Facebook claims to show a poster from 1918 encouraging people to wear face masks during the Spanish flu pandemic. Verdict: False. The image has been altered. The original poster is about fighting tuberculosis and does not mentions face masks. Fact Check:

  2. These black garments weren’t just worn in church or on Sundays, they were in fact “street wear” or everyday clothing. By the middle ages in the Roman Church, when functioning in a sacerdotal manner, clergy would put on an alb and chasuble if functioning as the celebrant at the Eucharist, or a white surplice if acting in an assisting role.

  3. People also ask

    • 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.
    • Standardizing For Simplicity.
    • Monastic and Secular Religious Costume.
    • Friars.
    • Student Dress.
    • Violations of Dress Codes.
    • Church Vestments.
    • Pilgrim 's Costume.
    • Religious Vanity.
    • Sources

    Similar to peasants, members of the second estate—those who led a life associated with the church—wore costumes that were not nearly as subject to changes of fashion as the costumes of the aristocracy. Clothing worn by those who served the Christian church was intended to symbolize the simplicity of life modeled by Jesus. The ruling that required a...

    The founder of each holy order in the Roman Church of the Middle Ages established a Rule under which his or her members should live, and these rules specified appropriate and uniform clothing that illustrated the religious beliefs of that order and served as its identifying insignia to the public. It was desirable that these members, often withdraw...

    The four orders of friars (Franciscan, Dominican, Augustinian, and Carmelite) differed from members of cloistered religious orders in that they were not removed from the general society. Friars were out and about in the world, begging for their subsistence, hearing confession, sometimes teaching, and sometimes acting as spiritual advisors to wealth...

    Since universities grew indirectly out of the cathedral schools that first began to be established in the 800s, most students in medieval universities were initially required to take "minor" holy orders, the first step towards becoming priests. Indeed, studentswere known in English and French as "clerks," or clercs, a word also meaning "cleric." Th...

    The fact that university dress codes—apparently based closely on the disciplinary decrees regarding clerical dress of the Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 held under Pope Innocent III—were often violated may be inferred from university records where certain items of clothing were periodically and repeatedly forbidden. The wearers of offending garment...

    The particular garments worn by priests when officiating at divine worship and administering the sacraments are called vestments. Because they symbolized the glory of God and the church, such garments could be constructed of costly fabrics, with much ornamentation, and dyed in colors established by long use. When the priest celebrated Mass, he wore...

    Pilgrims were sometimes members of religious orders and sometimes lay travelers who were engaged in a religious or penitent voyage to a sacred shrine. They wore a distinctive set of garments and accessories and were treated by others as religious persons. This costume distinguished them from other travelers as proper recipients of wayside charity a...

    In spite of all this regulation, beneficed priests—that is, parish priests who had the income from a specific church and piece of land in a parish—and even monks and friars often dressed as they liked, and sometimes quite sumptuously. Chaucer's Friar in The Canterbury Tales, for example, wore a cope which was too short and turned his tippet or hood...

    F. R. H. Du Boulay, ed., Registrum Thomae Bourghier (Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress, 1957): 92. W. M. Hargreaves-Mawdsley, A History of Academical Dress in Europe until the End of the Eighteenth Century(Oxford: Clarendon, 1963). Malcolm Jones, The Secret Middle Ages(Thrupp, Stroud, Gloucestershire, England: Sutton, 2002): 13–33. Janet Mayo, A Histo...

  4. Nov 8, 2022 · How To Wear a Face Mask the Correct Way. Clean your hands. Before putting on your face mask, wash your hands or clean them with sanitizer. Grab the mask by the ear strings. The cloth part of your mask is the part that would come in direct contact with the virus particles, so you should handle your mask by the ear strings.

  5. Feb 21, 2023 · The stole is a long, narrow band of fabric that is worn around the neck and draped over the shoulders. It is usually made of a precious fabric, such as silk or velvet, and is often embroidered with religious symbols and scriptural passages. In the Eastern Orthodox Church, the stole is known as an orarion, and is typically made of white linen.

  6. Aug 26, 2021 · No more spacing, nobody’s in masks (’cept my family).”. At some parishes a battle line has been drawn between parishioners willing to mask up again and those who perceive masks as ...