an usher
An acher is an obsolete term for an usher, a person who escorts people to their seats in such places as a church or cinema.
An usherette is a woman who escorts people to their seats in theaters, churches or weddings. It is the feminine form of usher.
IATA or International Air Transport Association has a recommended practice for assigning seats to incapacitated passenger and their escorts so that it will not impede the expeditious evacuation of the cabin This practice is called Recommended Practice 1700c.
At the Vatican!
pews
In a wedding, these escorts are generally called ushers. At a restaurant, they are generally called a host or hostess. In random places, they can just be called an escort or usher.
A person who covers chairs and car seats is an upholsterer.
William Butterfield has written: 'Church seats and kneeling boards' -- subject(s): Church furniture, Kneelers (Church furniture)
The homophone for a passage in a church is "aisle." This refers to the walkway between rows of seats or pews in a church.
The aisle of a church is where the pews separate. There should be enough room for people to walk around and find seats comfortably.
why are seats in an office or someones home important? because people want to sit down when they're working there several hours or sit at home watching and listening to TV for a while... In church its good to be able to sit down if the service is long and the preacher is preaching for more than a few minutes. Special church seats like the bishops seat or the ministers seat help identify who is leading the service and who the church leaders are.
A person who shows people to their seats in a theatre is called an usher.