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  1. A processional cross is a crucifix or cross which is carried in Christian processions. Such crosses have a long history: the Gregorian mission of Saint Augustine of Canterbury to England carried one before them "like a standard", according to Bede .

  2. Dec 27, 2018 · Liturgical Traditions: The Entrance Procession. ByMonsignor Marc B. Caron. The entrance procession at Mass is described in three locations in the General Instruction on the Roman Missal (GIRM): 120–123 for Mass celebrated without a deacon; 171–174 for Mass celebrated with the ministry of one or more deacons; and 210–211 in the ...

  3. Through its combination of visual symbolism and practical utility, the processional cross enhances the beauty and reverence of Orthodox worship, inviting worshippers to participate more deeply in the mysteries of their faith.

  4. A processional cross is simply a crucifix which is carried at the head of a procession, and which, that it may be more easily seen, is usually mounted upon a long staff or handle. From an archaeological point of view this subject has already been briefly dealt with under Cross.

  5. A processional cross is simply a crucifix which is carried at the head of a procession, and which, that it may be more easily seen, is usually mounted upon a long staff or handle. From an archaeological point of view this subject has already been briefly dealt with under Cross.

  6. Processional Cross. or CROSS OF THE STATION ( crux gestatoria, or stationaria), is the cross carried in the ecclesiastical processions spoken of under PROCESSIONS. It was carried as early as the 4th century and in the 5th century both in the East and in the West.

  7. PROCESSIONAL CROSS.—A processional cross is simply a crucifix which is carried at the head of a procession, and which, that it may be more easily seen, is usually mounted upon a long staff or handle.

  8. The processional cross. When Bede tells us that St. Augustine of England and his companions came before Ethelbert "carrying a silver cross for a standard" (veniebant crucem pro vexillo ferentes argenteam) while they said the litanies, he probably touched upon the fundamental idea of the processional cross.

  9. Feb 18, 2019 · A processional cross is either an empty cross or a crucifix (a cross with Jesus’ body still on it) that is attached to a pole which is carried in the front of a procession, both at the beginning and at the end of worship.

  10. The Processional Cross is used in most liturgical processions within the Catholic Church. It is carried at the front of the procession, with the figure of the crucified Christ facing the direction towards which the procession is moving. This is symbolic of the Christians being followers of Christ.

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