Thursday, October 10, 2013

Why a Special Chair for the Priest Exists

It's tradition for churches to allocate one chair for the priest to sit on—but not just any chair. Being the Presider's chair, it needs to stand out among the chairs normally reserved for the lay ministers and other personnel during the mass. The importance of this chair, writes senior priest Jan Larson, can be fully understood in its symbolic instead of practical aspect. The chair exhibits the priest's importance as the Presider in a mass or of the church itself.

The same applies to a cathedral, where the priest has a chair separate from the Presider's chair, which belongs to the bishop. So, a lay minister is advised not to use the Presider's chair even if he's presiding over the mass. There's nothing biased about this; it has been the practice of the Church since its early years. Churches see the preservation of liturgical tradition as an essential component in  any liturgical function.

While the Presider's chair must be placed at a position everyone can see, Larson writes that it should not look like a throne. However, the chair must be prominent enough to reflect the importance of the priest or bishop as the spearhead of the community in celebrating the glory of Christ.


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