procession with burning wood bundles and fire carts in Liestal, Switzerland (2013) Processions are found in almost every form of religious worship, such as
Holy Week processions. Some biblical examples were the processions with the
Ark of Covenant and the procession of
Jesus on a donkey into Jerusalem. In a narrower sense of going forth, proceeding, the term is used in the technical language of
theology in the phrase Procession of the
Holy Ghost, expressing the relation of the Third Person in the Triune Godhead to the Father and the Son. It is impossible to describe in detail the vast development of processions during the
Middle Ages. The most important and characteristic of these still have a place in the ritual of the
Catholic Church and
Evangelical-Lutheran Church, as well as those of the
Church of England (Anglicanism) and the
Orthodox Church. The
Procession Path (Lat.
ambitus templi) is the route taken by processions on solemn days in large churches—up the north aisle, round behind the high altar, down the south aisle, and then up the centre of the nave.
Catholics For the Catholic Church, the rules governing processions laid down in the
pre Vatican II Rituale Romanum (Tit. ix.), and they are classified in the following way: •
Processiones generales, in which the whole body of the clergy takes part. •
Processiones ordinariae, on yearly festivals, such as the
Feast of the Presentation of the Lord (Candlemas), the procession on
Palm Sunday or
Holy Week (
Easter Sunday), the
Litaniae Majores and
Minores, the
Feast of Corpus Christi, in possible addition to
Feast of the Ascension,
Feast of the Cross,
Forty Hours' Devotion and on other days, according to the custom of the churches. • Processiones extraordinariae, or processions ordered on special occasions, e.g. to pray for rain or fine weather; in time of storm, famine, plague, war, or, in
quacumque tribulatione; processions of thanksgiving;
translation of
relics; or the
dedication of a church or a cemetery. There are also processions of honor, for instance to meet a royal personage, or the
bishop on his first entry into his
diocese (Pontif. Tom. iii.). Those taking part in processions are to walk bare-headed (weather permitting), two and two, in decent costume, and with reverent mien;
clergy and
laity, men and women, are to walk separately. The cross is carried at the head of the procession, and
banners embroidered with sacred pictures in places where this is customary; these banners must not be of
military or
triangular shape.
Violet is the
prescribed colour for processions, except on
Corpus Christi, or on a day when some other colour is mandated. The officiating priest wears a
cope, or at least a
surplice with a violet stole, while other priests and clergy wear surplices. A is one in which the
Host is carried in procession in a
monstrance. It is often covered with a
canopy and accompanied with candles. At the
litaniae majores and
minores and other penitential processions, joyful hymns are not allowed, but the litanies are sung, and, if the length of the procession requires, the penitential and
gradual psalms. As to the discipline regarding processions the bishop, according to the
Council of Trent (Sess. 25 de reg. cap. 6), appoints and regulates processions and public prayers outside the churches. The observance or variation of the discipline belongs to the
Sacred Congregation of Rites; in pontifical processions, which are regulated by the masters of the ceremonies
(magistri ceremoniarum pontificalium), these points are decided by the chief cardinal deacon. As to processions within the churches, some difference of opinion having arisen as to the regulating authority, the Sacred Congregation of Rites has decided that the bishop must ask, though not necessarily follow, the advice of the chapter in their regulation. flanked by processional
banners and
icons, then choir and clergy, the deacons with
censers, the priests with
icons, and then the faithful. Hymns particular to the event are sung. Typically the outside of the church is circled thrice; however, some processions proceed to a designated place where a ceremony,
e.g., a baptism or burial, is performed. • Well-known processions prescribed annually include: •
Pascha (Easter) — During the
Paschal Vigil at midnight on Easter Sunday. •
Bright Week Each day following at the end of the
Divine Liturgy, when the
Artos is carried and the paschal
canon is sung. •
Great Saturday With the
epitaphios carried around the church thrice, as at a priest's funeral, the choir singing the
Trisagion •
Theophany — When the
Great Blessing of Waters is at a body of water or an external
baptistry •
Paraklesis — Often on the
patronal feast of a church, a procession around the outside of the church in conjunction with the paraklesis (prayer of intercession) to the church's namesake •
Lity — May be held outdoors with a procession •
Great Thursday — Sundry local customs • Well-known processions for occasional events include: •
Funeral — The coffin is carried to the grave accompanied by singing of the
Trisagion. •
Consecration of a church — The relics to be placed in the altar are, after an
all-night vigil, carried in solemn procession to a nearby church, placed on the altar for an early divine liturgy, and then carried in solemn procession back to the church being consecrated.
Indoors • The "Little Entrance"
at the divine liturgy and
at vespers • The "Great Entrance"
at the divine liturgy and, in modified form,
at the divine liturgy of the presanctified gifts • Many occasions when a bishop presides, such as: • The meeting of bishop, when the youngest priest, all the deacons with censers, and lower clergy meet the bishop (who is escorted from his home by two subdeacons) at the western door of the church and solemnly escorted to the
iconostasis and then to his throne for vesting • Whenever a bishop censes the entire church, he is accompanied by deacons with candles and subdeacons with the
dikirion and trikirion • On
Great Thursday, sundry local customs.
Gallery of Eastern Orthodox processions File:Litany of the Saint Nicolas Icon in Piraeus Greece.jpg|Lity procession on the
Feast of
Saint Nicholas in
Piraeus,
Greece File:Esphigmenou.procession for Little Blessing of Waters.jpeg|procession to behind the
katholikon for the
Lesser Blessing of Waters following an
all-night vigil on
Mount Athos at
Esphigmenou Monastery on its patron feast, the
Ascension File:BrightTuesdayProcessionAtSergievPosad.jpeg|pascal procession on
Bright Tuesday (Easter Tuesday) at the
Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius in
Sergiev Posad, Russia File:BrightTuesdayProcessionAtSergievPosad.Priests.jpeg|Priests in the pascal procession on
Bright Tuesday (Easter Tuesday) at the
Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius in
Sergiev Posad, Russia File:BrightTuesdayProcessionAtSergievPosad.BlessingWithHolyWater.jpeg|A stop for reading the Gospel and blessing with holy water during the pascal procession on
Bright Tuesday (Easter Tuesday) at the
Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius in
Sergiev Posad, Russia File:Crucession Davidovo-Gora- Elizarovo-Lyahovo Guslitci Moscow reg 8528.jpg|
Russian Orthodox Old-Rite Church paschal procession in
Guslitsa.
Moscow region. May 2, 2008. File:Kirkkoliput.jpg|Finnish Orthodox procession File:Crucession Davidovo Guslitci Moscow reg 8526.jpg|Paschal procession by
Russian Orthodox Old-Rite Church in
Guslitsa,
Moscow region File:Bogolubov Krestn hod v.jpg|
Procession in Yaroslavl by
Alexey Bogolyubov, 1863 File:Procesión de Pascua en la región de Kursk, por Iliá Repin.jpg|
Religious Procession in Kursk Province,
Bright Week procession with the
icon of
Our Lady of Kursk (in shrine, at right), as painted by
Ilya Repin, 1880-83 (
State Tretyakov Gallery,
Moscow) File:Double-faced icon.jpg|Two-sided portable icon for a procession (A. Our Lady of Smolensk. B. Ss. Nicolas, princes Boris and Gleb) (Russia, 16th century) File:Eastern Orthodox Procession 1.JPG|Russian Orthodox Church procession in Kyiv. 2010 File:Eastern Orthodox Procession 2.jpg|Russian Orthodox Church procession participant in Kyiv. 2010
Oriental Orthodox Gallery of Oriental Orthodox processions File:StMichaelEOTC03b.jpg|
Ethiopian Orthodox clergy lead a procession in celebration of
Saint Michael. During such processions, the clergy carry Ethiopian
processional crosses and ornately covered
tabots around the church building's exterior (
Garland, Texas)
Reformed at
Walsingham, 2003 The
Reforemd Churches abolished those processions associated with the doctrine of
transubstantiation (Corpus Christi); the
Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, according to the 28th
Article of Religion of the Church of England was not by Christ's ordinance reserved, carried about, lifted up, or worshiped. It also abolished those associated with the cult of the Blessed Virgin and the saints. The stern simplicity of
Calvinism, indeed, would not tolerate religious processions of any kind, and from the Reformed Churches they vanished altogether. Though aligned with Reformed theology, the more conservative temper of the Anglican churches, however, suffered the retention of such processions as did not conflict with the reformed doctrines, though even in these Churches they met with opposition and tended after a while to fall into disuse. Liturgical processions were revived in the Church of England by the members of the
Oxford Movement during the 19th century. In
Ritual Notes, an Anglo-Catholic liturgical manual, it is stated that "A solemn procession as part of the ceremony proper to the occasion, is ordered to be held respectively at Candlemas; on Palm Sunday; at the Rogations (i.e. on April 25th and the three days preceding Ascension); and on Corpus Christi ..." "A procession is a distinct act of worship in itself, though it is desirable (and accords with ancient practice) that it should have a definite purpose, such as to commemorate some notable event, or to honour the Blessed Sacrament". ==Processions in art==