Catafalque
CATAFALQUE: A structure erected to represent
a corpse lying in state, decorated with emblems
of mourning (also called tumba, castrum
doloris). The custom of erecting such structures
arose in the Catholic Church when the corpse of
the deceased was no longer brought into the church,
where, according to the Roman rite, the office of
the dead, the requiem-mass, and the Libera were
to be sung, before the interment. The object of
the catafalque was to keep the older custom in
mind, and to add greater solemnity to the service.
The bier is covered with black hangings, and surrounded
with lights. The officiating priest sprinkles
it with holy water, as a symbol of the purifying
blood of Christ and the water of eternal life, and
then censes it as a token of honor to the body of
the deceased, which has been the temple of the
Holy Ghost, and as a symbol of the prayers for the
departed soul which are to go up as a sweet savor
before the Lord.