- Piscina
A piscina or sacrarium is a shallow basin placed near the
altar of achurch , used for washing the communion vessels. They are often made of stone and fitted with a drain, and are in some cases used to dispose of materials used in the sacraments. They are found inRoman Catholic ,Anglican , andLutheran churches, and a similar vessel is used inEastern Orthodox churches.History
The "piscina" is a
Latin word originally applied to afish -pond , and later used for natural or artificial pools forbathing , and also for a water tank or reservoir. Inecclesiastic al usage it was applied to the basin used forablution s and sometimes other sacraments.They were originally named for the baptismal font. [CathEncy|wstitle=Piscina] Piscinae seem at first to have been mere cups or small basins, supported on perforated stems, placed close to the wall, and afterwards to have been recessed therein and covered with niche heads, which often contained shelves to serve as ambries. They were rare in
England until the13th century , after which there is scarcely an altar without one. They frequently take the form of a double niche, with a shaft between thearch ed heads, which are often filled with elaborate tracing.Usage
The purpose of the piscina or sacrarium is to dispose of water used sacramentally, and particles of the
consecrated Eucharist by returning these particles directly to the earth. For this reason, it is connected by a pipe directly to the ground.Ordinarily the sacrarium is used in cleaning the vessels used during the course of the
Mass (seeAblution in Christianity ). Cleaning the vessels in this basin ensures that any remaining consecrated particles are returned directly to the Earth. If the consecrated Hosts become unusable, thepriest disposes of the hosts by placing them in the sacrarium. This is accomplished by breaking the hosts up into small pieces and washing them into the basin - which returns the consecrated hosts to the ground.Fact|date=December 2007At times the sacrarium has been used for disposal of other items, such as old baptismal water,
holy oil s, and leftover ashes fromAsh Wednesday . In the past, consecrated wine was also poured down the sacrarium. In modern church practice, however, any wine that is left over after communion is consumed either by the priest or by those who assist in the distribution of the Eucharist (theEucharistic Minister s).In the Roman Catholic Church, pouring the consecrated wine, the Blood of Christ, or the Host down a sacrarium is never permitted. ["Redemptionis Sacramentum" 107] In accordance with what is laid down by the canons, “one who throws away the consecrated species or takes them away or keeps them for a sacrilegious purpose, incurs a "
latae sententiae "excommunication reserved to theApostolic See ; acleric , moreover, may be punished by another penalty, not excluding dismissal from the clerical state.” [ Ibid. 194] This applies to any action that is voluntarily and gravely disrespectful of the sacred species. Anyone, therefore, who acts contrary to these norms, for example casting the sacred species into the sacrarium or in an unworthy place or on the ground, incurs the penalties laid down. [Cf. "Pontifical Council for the Interpretation of Legislative Texts", Response to dubium, 3 July 1999: AAS 91 (1999) p. 918.]Eastern Christianity
In the Eastern Orthodox and
Eastern Catholic Churches the piscina is called a thalassidion, and is located in thediaconicon (sacristy). The thalassidion is a sink that drains into an honorable place in the ground where liquids such as the water used to wash holy things may be poured, and where the clergy may wash their hands before serving theDivine Liturgy . In Orthodoxy theSacred Mysteries (consecrated elements) are never poured into the thalassidion, but must always be consumed by adeacon or priest. In some ancient churches, the thalassidion was placed under theHoly Table (altar), though now it is almost always located in the diaconicon. At one time, before amonk ornun wastonsure d, theirreligious habit would be placed on the thalassidion; [Citation | last =Robinson | first =Nalbro' Frazier | year =1911 | title =Monasticism in the Orthodox Churches | pages = | publisher =AMS Press | id =ISBN 978-0404053758] now it is placed on the Holy Table.References
External links
* [http://www.easthoathlychurch.org/building.html East Hoathly Parish Church] building and contents, with a photograph and description of an 11th or 12th-century piscina
ee also
*
Sacristy
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.