A crosier (crozier, pastoral staff) is the stylized staff of office carried by high-ranking Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Anglican and some Lutheran prelates. The other typical insignia of most of these prelates, but not all, is the mitre.
The crosier is conferred upon the Bishop during the liturgy of ordination to the episcopacy. It is also presented to an Abbot at his blessing, an ancient custom symbolizing his shepherding of the monastic community. Although there is no provision in the liturgy of the blessing of an abbess for the presentation of a crosier, by long-standing custom an abbess may bear one when leading her community of nuns.
The crosier is used in ecclesiastical heraldry to represent pastoral authority in the arms of cardinals, bishops, abbots and abbesses. It was suppressed in most personal arms in the Catholic Church in 1969, and is since found on arms of abbots and abbesses, diocesan coats of arms and other corporate arms.
In Eastern Orthodoxy the symbolism is similar. The crosier is presented by the chief celebrant following the dismissal at the Divine Liturgy where the new bishop is consecrated. A bishop bears the crosier whenever he is present for church services outside the altar, whether in his own diocese or not, even if he is not serving. Auxiliary bishops also bear it. It is not used inside the altar. A different type of staff is used outside church services.
An archimandrite or abbess who leads a monastic community also bears a crosier. It is conferred at the same point in the Divine Liturgy as with a bishop at the service where the candidate is elevated.
The traditional explanation for the form, beyond the obvious reference to the bishop as shepherd, is this: the pointed ferule at the base symbolizes the obligation of the prelate to goad the spiritually lazy; the crook at the top, his obligation to draw back those who stray from the faith; and the staff itself his obligation to stand as a firm support for the faithful.
The Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Rite Catholic crosier, in the Slavic tradition known as the "pateritsa", is found in two common forms. One is tau-shaped, with drooping arms, surmounted with a small cross. The other has a top comprising a pair of scupltured serpents or dragons curled back to face each other, with a small cross between them. The symbolism in the latter case is of the bronze serpents made by Moses in .
Anglicanism | Catholic liturgy | Eastern Orthodoxy | Episcopacy in Anglicanism | Formal insignia | Religious objects
Krummstab | Episkopa bastono | Báculo pastoral | Bispestav | Pastorał | Kräkla