Description
Bring liturgical colors and symbols to your sanctuary with beautiful parament sets of Bemberg damask in the Tudor Rose pattern of the Trinity image on Green. Satin lining is color matched, and each drop-length piece is finished with gold fringe. This set includes: one 18” x 36” pulpit scarf (including 18” drop), one 20” x 80” table runner (including 10” drops), and one 3 1/2" x 36” Bible bookmark with Latin cross.
Please allow 6-8 weeks for delivery. All of the pieces in the Parament Sets can be made to custom fit your chancel area. For help with placing a custom order, please call our Custom Sales Department, 1-800-237-7511. One of our representatives will be more than happy to assist you with ordering.
Take a moment to look at our entire selection of Parament Sets.
Looking for new ways to make your worship experience more meaningful? Explore Worship Connection for ideas and resources for all the ways we worship.
Want some practical guidelines on how to prepare the sanctuary and its furnishings for the celebration of worship and sacraments throughout the Christian year? Investigate United Methodist Altars. It provides helpful information for everyone preparing the sanctuary for worship. See how it can help you.
The Book of Common Worship provides orders of worship and liturgical texts for each Sunday, festival, and season of the year.
Chalice Worship assists worship leaders in preparation for various worship occasions.
Care Tips. . . Dry clean only.
Did you know. . . Paraments are the linens and cloth hangings used on communion tables, altars, pulpits and lecterns; they “clothe” the central furnishings in the chancel. The colors of the paraments reflect the traditional colors of the seasons of the Christian year, and are changed as the seasons of the Christian year change. Often they are embellished with specific symbols appropriate to the particular season.
In Christianity, the doctrine of the Trinity states that God is one being who exists, simultaneously and eternally, as a mutual indwelling of three persons: the Father, the Son (incarnate as Jesus of Nazareth), and the Holy Spirit.
The color green, signifying hope and regeneration, is the color of vegetation, therefore is the color of life. The liturgical color for the season of Epiphany and the season after Pentecost, these two seasons are also called “Ordinary Time” because the Sundays have no names, just ordinal numbers.
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