@@bobsegersjodygirl It is just what most clergymen (Priests, deacons, etc) wear. Not for any particular reasoning other than this is how it has always been done.
@@thomasnewsome5923 Cassocks of this style were traditional attire by clergy (mainly Catholic and Anglican) until maybe 50 years ago, although now most will wear a suit or shirt/pants except for more formal occasions. As to the styles... the one shown is what would be worn by a protestant clergyman wanting to have a more formal/traditional look. There are different styles that are worn in different parts of the world, but the symbolism is generally in the colors of the trim (piping/buttons/fascia or sash) than in the cut of the cassock itself. The fascia (sash) of this one with the embroidered cross is not the proper traditional style-- which is why I say it would be worn by protestant clergymen wanting to look traditional. In tropical climates, white is worn instead of black simply because they are cooler.
I went to their website and their products looked like cosplay quality. Because even the one modeled here looks like a 1 size fits all solution.
Y'all really used naruto music xD
as a Roman cleric i must point out that this is not an even a real cassock and cincture.
It isn't even a cincture. It is a fascia
This is an Anglican styled cassock
Why do some priests wear this? Is it a style choice, or does it symbolize something?
you are stupid AF
Mozgojed Mozgo well , yeah that’s why I’m asking...
@@bobsegersjodygirl It is just what most clergymen (Priests, deacons, etc) wear. Not for any particular reasoning other than this is how it has always been done.
@@thomasnewsome5923 Cassocks of this style were traditional attire by clergy (mainly Catholic and Anglican) until maybe 50 years ago, although now most will wear a suit or shirt/pants except for more formal occasions.
As to the styles... the one shown is what would be worn by a protestant clergyman wanting to have a more formal/traditional look. There are different styles that are worn in different parts of the world, but the symbolism is generally in the colors of the trim (piping/buttons/fascia or sash) than in the cut of the cassock itself. The fascia (sash) of this one with the embroidered cross is not the proper traditional style-- which is why I say it would be worn by protestant clergymen wanting to look traditional.
In tropical climates, white is worn instead of black simply because they are cooler.
that is a fasia
It is not even a cassock
@@043778cc It is a cassock, it's the English/Sarum/double breasted type. And it's a cincture within Anglicanism, not a fascia
@@043778cc it is a cassock, the belt thing is not a cincture rather it's called a "fasia".
What the background music name? Background music is very good!!
Akatsuki Theme Songs
We Indian wear white cassock
It's fake. Play acting cosplay