- The
sticharion (also
stikharion or stichar; Gr****: στιχάριον; Slavonic: Стиха́рь - Stikhár’) is a
liturgical vestment of the
Eastern Orthodox and Eastern...
- eucharist, worn over a c****ock. Most
closely corresponds to the
Orthodox sticharion (see below).
Symbolizes baptismal garment. See also c****ock-alb. C****ock-alb...
-
normal vestments consisting of the
sticharion and
crossed orarion;
readers and
servers traditionally wear the
sticharion alone. In
recent times, however...
-
server must fold his
sticharion and
bring it to the
priest for him to bless. The
priest blesses and lays his hand on the
folded sticharion. The
server kisses...
- very
traditional Arab
Catholic parishes.
Corresponds to the
Orthodox sticharion. A chasuble-alb is a
contemporary Eucharistic vestment that
combines features...
-
vestments are the
sticharion (dalmatic), the
orarion (deacon's stole), and the
epimanikia (cuffs). The last are worn
under his
sticharion, not over it as...
-
fully vested for the
Divine Liturgy, he
wears the
epitrachelion over the
sticharion and
under the zone and the phelonion. If a
priest is
simply attending...
-
attach the
epimanikia to the
sleeves of the
sticharion.
Since the
deacon wears a more
elaborate sticharion as an
outer garment, its
large winged sleeves...
- practice, in
which there is no
tradition of
wearing the
orarion without sticharion. The
subdeacon also
wears the orarion, but
always wrapped around his body...
- in the
front and one in the back,
coming down
almost to the hem of his
sticharion (dalmatic). A
deacon wears an
orarion which simply p****es over the left...