priest, parents, godparents and a newly baptized baby. The
Eastern Orthodox Church and the
Eastern Catholic Churches of the
Byzantine Rite, the baptismal garment is worn by the newly baptized for eight days, after which there is a special ceremony on the eighth day for the removal of the baptismal robe. For adults, the robe is a long, sleeved garment, similar to the Western
alb, tied at the waist usually with a white cloth belt or rope. A woman may also cover her head with a white
veil (usually a simple kerchief). For
infant baptisms, the robe may be a white gown and bonnet, and a white blanket. These garments are placed on the newly baptized immediately after coming up out of the waters of baptism (the Orthodox baptize by
immersion, even in the case of infant baptism). As the robe is being placed on the new Christian, the priest says the prayer: "The servant of God,
N., is clothed with the robe of righteousness; in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen." and the choir sings: "Vouchsafe unto me the robe of light, O Thou who clothest Thyself with light as with a garment, Christ our God, plenteous in mercy." '' in
Chersonesus by
Viktor Vasnetsov (1890). To the left attendants are holding Vladimir's golden royal robes, which he has taken off, and the simple white baptismal robe, which he will put on (1890, fresco from
St. Vladimir's Cathedral,
Kyiv). In Orthodox
theology the baptismal robe symbolizes the "Garments of Light" (i.e., the fullness of
Divine grace) with which
Adam and Eve were clothed in the
Garden of Eden before the
Fall of Man. Baptism is believed to cleanse the believer of all the sinful defilements both of
original sin and
personal sins and the white garment is symbolic of this. During the
ektenia (litany) before baptism, the deacon prays "That he (she) may preserve this (her) baptismal garment and the earnest of the Spirit pure and undefiled unto the dead
Day of Christ our God...", referring not so much to the material garment as to the spiritual cleansing it represents. The newly baptized will traditionally wear their baptismal garment for eight days, especially when receiving
Holy Communion. These are special days of prayer and fasting, at the end of which they return to the church for the "Removal of the Robe on the Eighth Day" and
ablutions (in many places today, this ceremony is performed on the same day as the baptism, immediately after
Chrismation). During this ceremony, the priest loosens the belt on the baptismal robe and prays: "O Thou who, through holy Baptism, hast given unto Thy servant remission of sins, and hast bestowed upon him (her) a life of regeneration: Do Thou, the same Lord and Master, ever graciously illumine his (her) heart with the light of Thy countenance. Maintain the shield of his (her) faith unassailed by the enemy [i.e., Satan]. Preserve pure and unpolluted the garment of incorruption wherewith Thou hast endued him (her), upholding inviolate in him (her), by Thy grace, the seal of the Spirit, and showing mercy unto him (her) and unto us, through the multitude of Thy mercies..." He then sprinkles the newly baptized with water and washes all of the places the
chrism was applied, and performs the
tonsure. Someone who has been baptized as an adult will often be buried in their baptismal robe, if they have not advanced to some higher ministry within the church. == Roman Catholic tradition ==