
Also known as clerical vestment
thumb|250px|Different vestments of kneeling clergy at the elevation of the chalice (cup)|chalice at a Mass according to the Neo-Gallican Rite of Versailles thumb|250px|Karl XIV Johans kröning by Per Krafft the Younger (1818) depicting Evangelical-Lutheran bishops in vestments during the coronation of [[Charles XIV John in Stockholm Cathedral]] Vestments are liturgical garments and articles associated primarily with the Christian religion, especially by Eastern Churches, Catholics (of all rites), Lutherans, and Anglicans. Many other groups also make use of liturgical garments; among the Reforme
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thumb|250px|Different vestments of kneeling clergy at the elevation of the chalice (cup)|chalice at a Mass according to the Neo-Gallican Rite of Versailles thumb|250px|Karl XIV Johans kröning by Per Krafft the Younger (1818) depicting Evangelical-Lutheran bishops in vestments during the coronation of [[Charles XIV John in Stockholm Cathedral]] Vestments are liturgical garments and articles associated primarily with the Christian religion, especially by Eastern Churches, Catholics (of all rites), Lutherans, and Anglicans. Many other groups also make use of liturgical garments; among the Reformed (Calvinist) Churches this was a point of controversy in the Protestant Reformation and sometimes since, in particular during the ritualist controversies in the Church of England in the 19th century.
==Origins==
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Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).