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A traditional "solar" monstrance

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A monstrance, also known as an ostensorium (or an ostensory),<ref>"Altar vessels". New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved on 2014-11-16.</ref> is a vessel used in Roman Catholic, Old Catholic, High Church Lutheran and Anglican churches for the display on an altar of some object of piety, such as the consecrated Eucharistic Sacramental bread (host) during Eucharistic adoration or during the Benediction of the Blessed Sacrament. A monstrance may also serve as a reliquary for the public display of relics of some saints.<ref name=catholic>"". New Advent Catholic Encyclopedia. Retrieved on 2014-11-16.</ref> The word monstrance comes from the Latin word {{#invoke:Lang|lang}},<ref>"Demonstrate", The American Heritage Dictionary, men in Appendix I, Indo-European Roots</ref> while the word ostensorium comes from the Latin word {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}. Either term, each expressing the concept of "showing", can refer to a vessel intended for the exposition of the Blessed Sacrament, but ostensorium has only this meaning.<ref name=catholic/>

Liturgical contextEdit

In the Catholic tradition, at the moment of consecration the elements (called "gifts" for liturgical purposes) are transformed (literally transubstantiated) into the body and blood of Christ. Catholic doctrine holds that the elements are not only spiritually transformed, but are (substantially) transformed into the body and blood of Christ. Although the elements retain the appearance, or accidents of bread and wine, they become the body and blood of Christ. The presence of Jesus Christ God in the Eucharist is known as the doctrine of the Corporeal Presence within the Roman Catholic Magisterium. The Corporeal Presence is believed to be real (in Template:Langx) and of the whole (totaliter) Christ, in Body, Soul and Spirit. The name "Corporeal Presence" concerns the Corporal reserved to the chalice, paten and the ciborium during the Holy Mass.

Other Christians (notably in the Anglican Church, Old Catholic Church, and Lutheran Church) accept the doctrine of the Real Presence, whilst rejecting transubstantiation as a philosophical concept (cf. sacramental union). Owing to these beliefs, the consecrated elements are given the same adoration and devotion that Christians of these traditions accord to Christ himself.

Within churches of these traditions the reserved sacrament serves as a focal point of religious devotion. In many of them, during Eucharistic adoration, the celebrant displays the sacrament in the monstrance, typically on the altar. When not being displayed, the reserved sacrament is locked in a tabernacle (more common in Roman Catholicism) or aumbry (more common in the other traditions mentioned).

Use and designEdit

File:HoldingMonstrance.jpg
The Blessed Sacrament in a monstrance carried in a procession by a priest wearing a humeral veil
File:Two Monstrance.JPG
Two monstrances, showing the contrast between the modern simplified design on the right with its more ornate predecessor on the left

In the service of benediction, (the priest blesses the people with the Eucharist displayed in the monstrance). This blessing differs from the priest's blessing, as it is seen to be the blessing by Christ rather than that of the individual priest. The exposition of the monstrance during Benediction is traditionally accompanied by chanting or singing of the hymn Tantum Ergo.

Monstrances are usually elaborate in design; most are carried by the priest. Others may be much larger fixed constructions, typically for displaying the host in a special side chapel, often called the "Chapel of the Blessed Sacrament". For portable designs, the preferred form is a sunburst<ref>Instructio Clement, 5.</ref> on a stand, usually topped by a cross.

Before the Council of Trent, the most common design was the tower.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite book</ref> The sun design would come to dominate the shape of modern monstrances after it became clear that the ostensorium could be better adapted to the object of drawing all eyes to the Sacred Host itself by making the transparent portion of the vessel just of the size required, and surrounded, like the sun, with rays. Monstrances of this shape, dating from the fifteenth century, are also not uncommon, and for several hundred years past this has been by far the commonest form in practical use.

Medieval monstrances were more varied in form than contemporary ones. Those used for relics, and occasionally for the host, typically had a crystal cylinder in a golden stand, and those usually used for hosts had a crystal window in a flat-faced golden construction, which could stand on its base. The monstrance was most often made of silver-gilt or other precious metal, and highly decorated. In the center of the sunburst, the monstrance normally has a small round glass the size of a host, through which the Blessed Sacrament can be seen. Behind this glass is a holder made of gilded metal, called a lunette or lunula, which holds the host securely in place. When not in the monstrance, the host in its lunula is placed in a special standing container, called a standing pyx, in the Tabernacle. Before the current design, earlier "little shrines" or reliquaries of various shapes and sizes were used.

Noted monstrancesEdit

  • The monstrance of Corpus Christi at the Cathedral of Valencia (Spain) - Every year, during the Corpus Christi procession in Valencia, the largest Monstrance in the world, made of Template:Convert of silver, Template:Convert of gold, Template:Convert of platinum, hundreds of precious stones and thousands of pearls, runs through the streets of Valencia under a shower of flower petals.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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  • La Lechuga is a monstrance built between 1700 and 1707 that is currently owned by the Banco de la Republica of Colombia. It consists of Template:Convert of 18 karat gold, 1,485 emeralds which gave the name to the piece due to its color, and other gems from various parts of the world.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

  • The Cathedral of Toledo, Spain, boasts one of the most famous monstrances in European medieval history. Made of pure gold (the first gold brought over from the New World by Admiral Columbus)<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> and encrusted with several jewels, it has merited several papal processions, acclamations and uses. Most recently among these is Pope Benedict XVI in his World Youth Day Apostolic Visit in 2011. It has also been immortalized in several 18th-century and 19th-century devotional handbooks. This portable monstrance (or ostensory) is housed within a second, fixed monstrance made of partially gilded silver.

GalleryEdit

For displaying the sacred hostEdit

As reliquariesEdit

See alsoEdit

ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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