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Proskomedia

1,671 bytes added, 20:43, December 14, 2007
some expansion, added category and image
{{stub}}[[Image:Proscomidiar.jpg|thumb|left]]The '''Proskomedia''' (or sometimes referred to as ''prothesis'' or ''proskomide'') is the '''Office of Oblation''' celebrated by the [[priest]] prior to the [[Divine Liturgy]] during which the bread and wine are prepared for the [[Eucharist]]. The Proskomedia is a prerequisite for the Divine Liturgy. The priest conducts the Office of Oblation behind the [[Iconostasis]] at the '''Table of Oblation''' or '''Table of Preparation''' (also '''Prothesis''', or sometime Proskomide) that is located to the left of the [[Altar]] Table. The Table of Oblation represents the cave of Bethlehem where our Lord and Savior was born. Proskomedia, when translated to English, means "preparation."
[[Image:Proscomidiar.jpg|right|thumb|200px|The Proscomidiar]]The Prothesis (Table of Oblation) represents the cave of Bethlehem where our Lord and Savior was born. Originally, the Prothesis was located in the same room as the altar table, being simply a smaller table placed against the eastern wall to the north of the altar table. During the Office reign of the Emperor [[Justin II]], the Prothesis came to occupy its own separate chamber to the north of Oblation the offered bread altar, in a separate apse, and wine is prepared joined to the altar by a door way. Another apse was added on the south side for use during the Divine Liturgy where [[Diaconicon]]. From this time on many large Orthodox churches were built with three apses on the eastern end of the church building. However, most smaller churches continued to be built having only one aspe containing the bread is consecrated into altar, the body of Christ Prothesis and the Diaconicon. [[Image:Discos Chalice.jpg|rightthumb|150px|The Chalice with the Diskos and Star]]The bread and wine is consecrated into are prepared for the liturgy on the blood of ChristProthesis. The bread[[chalice]], a cup that contains pure sweet grape wine, also and a round plate on a stand called prosphora the diskos or offeringpaten, that holds the bread that is baked from made of pure wheat flour, water, and leavening. The wine is a sweet pure grape wineare kept on this table. Usually, there are five loaves representing our Lord’s miracle of feeding the ''five thousand men besides women and children'' with only five loaves of bread (Matt. 14:17-21). These vessels are normally decorated with iconographic engravings, Christian symbols, and the sign of the cross. The top of each loaf is impressed with a sealbearing the sign of the cross.  Also on this table is a special liturgical knife, symbolically called the [[spear]], that is used for cutting the eucharistic bread ([[prosphora]]) and a liturgical [[spoon]] for administering holy communion to the people. There are also special covers for the chalice and diskos and a cruciform piece of metal called the [[asterisk]] or star that holds the cover over the eucharistic bread on the diskos. A sponge and cloths for drying the chalice after the liturgy are also usually kept here. The Prothesis is decorated in a manner similar to that of the altar table. Above the Prothesis may be found various [[icon]]s, often one of Christ praying in Gethsemene: "Let this cup pass..."
==Sources==
*[[w:Prothesis_%28altar%29]] Wikipedia: Prothesis (altar)
[[Category: Liturgics]]
{{Liturgy/wide}}
[[ro:Proscomidia]]
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