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| - After the Reformation and the Tridentine reforms, in the Roman Catholic Church the use of aumbries for this purpose was abandoned and some of them were used to house the oil for the Anointing of the Sick. Reservation in an aumbry in the Roman Catholic Church is now forbidden; a tabernacle or hanging pyx are used The Reformed churches abandoned reservation of any kind so that aumbries, unless used for housing vessels, became redundant. However, in the Scottish Episcopal church from the eighteenth century and other Anglican churches in the nineteenth century following the Tractarian revival reservation has begun to be practised again. Permission for reservation has to be sought from the bishop following which a faculty may be granted by the Chancellor of the diocese for the installation of an aumbry or tabernacle. Reservation is quite common in the Episcopal Church of the United States,the Anglican Church in Australia, the Anglican Church in Aotearoa New Zealand and Polynesia, the Anglican Church of Southern Africa, as well as in the Anglican Church of Canada (though with varying degrees of veneration, depending on the parish). Even traditionally Low Church parishes, such as St. Anne's, Toronto, reserve the sacrament. For the cabinet which is used to contain the holy oils, see Almery.
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