Prayer mats in Christainity
In Christian practice
From the Christian East, the tradition spread further into Europe. In Russia, this developed into the podruchnik, a small prayer cloth used during prostrations to keep the hands and face clean.

Prayer mats also entered europe through Greece, and has long been part of Greek Christian tradition, used throughout history as a practical aid for prayer.
One preserved example comes from the Greek Orthodox community of Cappadocia in Ottoman Asia Minor, dated to 1910. Hand-woven by Orthodox Christians who had lived in the region for centuries, it carries Greek Christian inscriptions and the Byzantine double-headed eagle.
Created just before the 1923 population exchange, this prayer rug survives as a rare devotional textile from a displaced Christian world.

Across Greece, Orthodox monks and saints have lived lives shaped by prayer, fasting, and prostration. In monasteries, caves, and quiet places of devotion, many used simple prayer mats, cloths, or cushions as a clean place to bow before God, while others chose the bare floor as an act of discipline and humility.
Icons of St. Silouan


St Silouan the Athonite was a Christian monk who lived on Mount Athos in Greece, a place known for its deep life of prayer, silence, and spiritual discipline. In several icons, he is shown beside a prayer mat and cushion, placing them naturally within the setting of Christian monastic prayer.
The focus is not the mat itself, but the life of prayer it supports: kneeling, bowing, and humbling the body before God.
As well as saints and monks, many Christians also keep what is known as a prayer corner: a small space in the home set aside for daily prayer. Icons, candles, prayer ropes, books, and prayer mats all serve a purpose. They are not simply decorations, but tools that help create a focused and reverent place to pray. The prayer mat becomes the clean, dedicated space where a Christian can kneel, bow, and pray before God.

Why have I never seen them?
Prayer mats are not equally common everywhere. Like many Christian traditions, their visibility depends heavily on region, history, and local practice.
In the modern West, most people associate prayer mats with Islam because that is where they are most often seen today. But as the historical context above shows, the tradition was preserved most strongly in the Christian East. The closer you get to the Middle East, the more visible this tradition becomes across the land.
In Western Europe and the English-speaking world, the practice became far less familiar. This is why many Christians today have simply never encountered it.But unfamiliar does not mean unchristian. Prayer mats remain part of a wider Christian heritage of prostration, reverence, and keeping a clean place for prayer.
