That depends on what they're doing. A priest normally wears a cassock or a black suit with clerical collar for his street wear. In church he would normally wear a cassock and a surplice. For some liturgical functions, he wears a stole and cope, for others, just a stole over his cassock and surplice. For Mass, he wears an alb over his cassock, with a stole, maniple, and cincture. Over all of that, he puts on a chasuble. His stole, maniple (if he is wearing one) and chasuble are all the color of the day, or sacrament that he is celebrating.
The correct spelling is supplies (food, materials).(The less common word with similar spelling is surplice, a church vestment.)
Roman Catholic AnswerA surplice (may or may not have lace) is what a priest would wear over a cassock. A bishop, abbot, or other prelate may wear a rochet, a white, lace trimmed over-tunic. The surplice is a liturgical garment, the rochet is not.
.Catholic AnswerA priest wears an alb (a long white robe that completely covers his street clothes) at all liturgical services when he is not wearing a cassock and surplice.
Ephod
A surplice is a diagonally crossed neckline or bodice.As such it is a thing which does not have an "antonym" (opposite).Perhaps a miniskirt? or a thong? or a nihab? or a pair of shoes? or an elephant? or a super nova? or a dream?
Cotta, Ephod, Rochet, Sark, Serk, Vakass There is no such thing as a modern Jewish surplice. Jewish religious authorities do not have special garments that they wear and that regular congregants do not wear.
It will depend upon the church. God doesn't care what anyone wears to church as long as it is decent.
Yes she does. She wears fake nails in church aswell and then gets told off by a Jehovah's Witness.
ephod
Bishops traditionally wear violet (purple).
Ephod Also cotta