The cup used in ritual to hold consecrated water, wine, or juice. It is associated with the Element Water. It is also frequently associated with cleansing, healing, scrying, and the womb.
another name for the cup or goblet used in ritual.
The Holy Cup in which the wine and water are put during Proskomedia, and later in which the Holy Bread (the Body of Christ) is added before the Communion of the Faithful.
(1) a ceremonial cup or goblet. (2) a ritual tool used in libation. (3) a feminine symbol of the element water.
The stemmed metal or ceramic cup or other vessel used to hold the Communion Wine.
These are typically for Belgian abbey and trappist style beer. They can have a look of royalty about them. They can be more "V" shaped with either straight or an inward curving top, sometimes rimmed with a precious metal. The stem is thick and the length is usually rather short.
(from Middle English, 'cup') A special cup used in the Wine Blessing.
1. Ritual cup. 2. The tool of the West, associated with the Tarot suit cups and the element Water.
A blessed cup used in ritual to hold the drink or saltwater. It represents the Goddess. It is a symbol of potential and is also used in the symbolic Great Rite.
A cup in which wine, water, or other beverages may be held. A ritual tool that can symbolize the Water element, etc.
The cup used to hold the wine that is consecrated to become the Blood of Christ.
Goblet or cup used for ritual. It represents water.
A sacred cup or goblet used to hold consecrated water or wine and normally kept on the West side of the altar. It represents the element of Water. It is also used to represent the Goddess during the symbolic great rite.
A ritual tool. It represents the female principals of creation.
Drinking vessel consecrated for ritual use; one of the Four Witch's Tools; also called Cup
a bowl-shaped drinking vessel; especially the Eucharistic cup
a drinking cup with a bowl, a single stem, and a foot, as in the illustration on the right
an old fashioned kind of cup
The cup used at Holy Communion.
The ceremonial cup representing water and the west, and also the feminine principle of creation.
A large standing cup for wine. Used in religious ceremonies and by Wiccans.
A Challis is a cup used to hold the ritual drink. It is a symbol of Goddess and fertility and is associated with water and West.
a vessel used during the celebration of the Eucharist for the sacramental wine
The large, often silver cup from which the wine is served during the Eucharist.
A goblet which represents water, or wine.
Represents the place where the purification and transformation of the ego occurs. (See Perfect Mold.)
A witch's tool which can be used to represent the element of water and may also be used to hold the juice or wine for the offering.
Usually larger, heavier form of goblet, may have religious connotations.
A cup on a stem into which the Eucharistic wine is placed for administration to communicants; typically made of a precious metal such as silver. See " communicant" and " Eucharist."
A chalice has often been called "a cauldron on a stem." It symbolized the Goddess and fertility, and is related to the element of water. It is sometimes filled with wine during a ritual, or may simply hold fresh water (which can be commonly found on the altar). Chalices can be made from a number of materials, including silver, gold, glass, soapstone, crystal, and countless others.
The cup used in Holy Communion for the wine.
Ceremonial vessel representing the water element and its attendant attributes.
a cup or goblet, the Elemental Tool of Water
A sacred vessel, in the form of a cup, made of precious metal and consecrated to contain the wine which becomes the Blood of Christ during the Divine Liturgy.
A stemmed cup used for ecclesiastical purposes
The chalice or cup as a ritual took represents water and the west, and it is also representative of the feminine principle.
a cup used in rituals that can contain wind, water, or other liquids.
a container for drink during ritual, also a symbol of the goddess.
This is a cup, usually made of silver, used at the Eucharist or Communion Service. It contains the consecrated wine, which is given to those who have also received the consecrated bread. Those who receive the bread and the wine are known as ‘Communicants'.
A goblet or vessel for wine.
one of the tools of the Witch. Placed on the altar to represent the element of Water.
(Gr., agion poterion): liturgical vessel intended to hold the wine of the Eucharist (see cat 271).
A chalice (from Latin 'calix', cup) is a goblet intended to hold drink. In general religious terms, it is a goblet intended for drinking some beverage during a ceremony.