images of saints and a crucifix
The top level of a Day of the Dead altar typically features a cross or a representation of the Virgin Mary, symbolizing the connection between the spiritual and physical worlds. It may also include photographs of deceased loved ones, along with items that honor their memory and favorite possessions. This level serves as a focal point for remembrance and reverence for those who have passed away.
It is a cloth placed on an altar.
The 'mensa' is the top of the altar upon which the sacrifice of the Mass takes place.
No, but the altar top should be stone of some sort, and a permanent altar should be unmovable.
.Catholic AnswerNormally stone, at least the actual part of the altar that the sacrifice is celebrated on would be stone. There is often an "altar stone" inserted in the top of a wooden altar.
Collect the 2 minuses staff at the entrance and the two at the centre. Light the altar at the entrance. Next go to the centre and light the centre altar. Go to the altar on the bottom right, pick up the staff and light the altar. Repeat with the altar to the top right. After light the altar in the centre and then go to the altar at the top left and collect the minus staff. Go back to the centre and turn off the altar there. Then go to the bottom left and turn on that altar and pick up the staff. \turn on the centre altar and then go through
The ancient Mayans, Toltecs ,and Incas of south America all built flat topped pyramids. The platform at the top usually had a stone room built on it where an altar was located.
Usually the top floor.
No, the altar linen must always be white. Violet can be used for hangings on the front of the altar or sides, but the top cloth must always be white linen.
The steel cage top level refers to the tallest cage that the professional wrestling matches are usually held. The wrestlers are usually confined in the cage whereby they fight without any external interference.
A Catholic altar is primarily used for the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, where Catholics believe a priest consecrates bread and wine into the substance of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ. Catholic altars are traditionally made of stone, often marble, or wood. Before Vatican II, regardless of its material, a Catholic altar had to have an altar stone containing the relics of a Catholic martyr, thus making an altar a true altar. This altar stone is usually a flat square tablet, several inches by several inches with five crosses cut into it in an "X" pattern along its top surface; this stone is inset in the front top surface of the altar where the priest would reverence it during Holy Mass with several ceremonial kisses. The altar stone is usually difficult to spot as most altars are covered with linens during ceremonies and covers when not in use. If an altar stone is removed, the altar is desecrated and must be reconsecrated. Tabernacles, the little box-like compartments once found on most altars, were usually made of the same substance and style of the altar, though, according to Canon law, they had to be anchored to the altar so as not able to be moved. In the modern Church, tabernacles are rarely installed or have been allowed to remain on the altar and altar stones are all but discontinued save in traditional or pious channels. In a pinch, any flat surface can serve as an altar. A Greek corporal - a portable "altar stone" with relics sewn into it - can then be used by the priest. Mass can then be said on anything from a card table in a hotel to an ammunition crate in a war zone, as has been done by missionaries and military chaplains. In a case of emergency, Mass can be said without an altar stone almost anywhere, as the case of Cardinal Mindszenty who said Mass on his own chest while in prison.
A quaternary consumer is a consumer on the fourth trophic level for a biome. Usually it is a top predator or scavenger. Also, they are usually the species on the top of the food chain.