Dictionary Definition
chasuble n : a long sleeveless vestment worn by a
priest when celebrating Mass
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
chesible, from late casubla, an alteration of Latin casula, a diminutive of casa.Pronunciation
- /'ʧæzjʊbəl/
Noun
- The outermost liturgical vestment worn by clergy for celebrating Eucharist or Mass.
-
- 1936: he’s quaky and qualmy and queasy and teasy; he chews chasubles and ripples rasubly. — Henry Miller, Black Spring
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Translations
- Finnish: kasukka, messukasukka
- Spanish:casulla
Extensive Definition
The chasuble is the outermost liturgical vestment worn by clergy for the celebration of the
Eucharist
in Western-tradition Christian
Churches that use full vestments, primarily in the Roman
Catholic Church, in "high church"
and "broad
church" Anglican
congregations, and in some parts of the United
Methodist and Lutheran
Churches. It is also used as the primary Eucharistic vestment in
many Lutheran parishes
(see Apology of the Augsburg Confession, Article XXIV). In the
Eastern Churches of Byzantine
Rite, the equivalent vestment is the phelonion.
"The vestment proper to the priest celebrant at
Mass and other sacred actions directly connected with Mass is,
unless otherwise indicated, the chasuble, worn over the alb and stole" (General Instruction of the
Roman Missal, 337). Like the stole, it is normally of the liturgical
colour of the Mass being celebrated.
The chasuble originated as a sort of conical
poncho, called in Latin a
"casula" or "little house," that was the common outer traveling
garment in the late Roman Empire. It was simply a roughly oval
piece of cloth, with a round hole in the middle through which to
pass the head, that fell below the knees on all sides. It had to be
gathered up on the arms to allow the arms to be used freely.
As the casula became a liturgical garment in the
West, it was folded up from the sides. Strings were sometimes used
to assist in this task, and the deacon could help the priest in
folding up the sides of the vestment. Beginning in the thirteenth
century, there was a tendency to shorten the sides a little, as can
be noticed in the illustration here of a fifteenth-century
chasuble. In the course of that fifteenth century and the following
century, the chasuble took something like the modern form, in which
the sides of the vestment no longer reach to the ankle but only, at
most, to the wrist, making folding unnecessary.
At the end of sixteenth century the chasuble,
though still quite ample and covering a little of the arms, had
become less similar to its traditional shape than to that which
prevailed in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when the
chasuble was reduced to a broad scapular, leaving the whole of
the arms quite free, and was shortened also in front and back. To
make it easier for the priest to join his hands when wearing a
chasuble of stiff (lined and heavily embroidered) material, the
front was cut away further, giving it the distinctive shape often
called "fiddleback". Complex decoration schemes were often used on
chasubles of scapular form, especially the back, incorporating the
image of the Christian
cross or of a saint; and rich materials such as silk, cloth of
gold or brocade were employed, especially in chasubles reserved for
major celebrations.
In the twentieth century, there was a tendency to
return to an earlier, more ample, form of the chasuble, sometimes
called "Gothic", as distinguished from the "Roman" scapular form.
This aroused some opposition, as a result of which the Sacred
Congregation of Rites issued on 9 December 1925 a decree against
it, which it explicitly revoked with the declaration Circa dubium
de forma paramentorum of 20 August 1957, leaving the matter to the
prudent judgement of local Ordinaries. There exists a photograph of
Pope
Pius XI wearing the more ample chasuble while celebrating
Mass in
Saint
Peter's Basilica as early as 19 March 1930.
After the Second Vatican Council the more ample
form became the most usually seen form of the chasuble, and the
directions of the GIRM quoted above indicate that the beauty should
come from its drapery and form rather than elaborate decoration
("fiddleback" vestments were often extremely heavily embroidered or
painted with detailed decorations or whole scenes depicted). Hence,
the prevalence today of chasubles that reach almost to the ankles,
and to the wrists, and decorated with relatively simple symbols or
bands and ophreys.
Some see a preference for the "fiddleback" as a
sign of traditionalism
or even rebellion against the reforms of the Second
Vatican Council. However, some priests express simply on
grounds of taste and comfort a preference for the scapular form,
which continues to be included in mainstream catalogues of
liturgical vestments; and other traditionalist priests prefer, for
similar reasons, ampler chasubles of less stiff material, the style
of chasuble that appears in all but one of the illustrations in the
article on the Tridentine
Mass.
In Germany in some congregations of the
Independent Evangelical-Lutheran Church the pastor where the
chasuble.
The phelonion, the Byzantine
Rite vestment that corresponds to the Latin Rite
chasuble, is cut away from the front and not from the sides.
See also
References
External links
- Chasuble in Catholic Encyclopedia
- The Development (and Future?) of Vestments in the Roman Rite
chasuble in Czech: Ornát
chasuble in German: Kasel (Gewand)
chasuble in Spanish: Casulla
chasuble in French: Chasuble
chasuble in Indonesian: Kasula
chasuble in Italian: Casula
chasuble in Dutch: Kazuifel
chasuble in Norwegian: Messehagel
chasuble in Norwegian Nynorsk: Messehakel
chasuble in Polish: Ornat
chasuble in Finnish: Messukasukka
chasuble in Swedish: Mässhake
chasuble in Urdu: چاسوبل