Lit candles and Icon lamps (lampadas) have a special symbolic meaning in the Christian Church, and no Christian service can be held without them. In the Old Testament, when the first temple of God was built on earth the Tabernacle services were held in it with lamps as the Lord Himself had ordained (Ex. 40:5, 25). Following the example of the Old Testament Church, the lighting of candles and of lampadas was without fail included in the New Testament Church's services.
The Acts of the Apostles mentions the lighting of
lamps during the services in the time of the Apostles. Thus, in Troas, where
Christ's followers used to gather on the first day of the week (Sunday) to
break bread, that is, to celebrate the Eucharist, there were many lights in the
upper chamber (Acts 20:8). This reference to the large number of lamps
signifies that they were not used simply for lighting, but for their spiritual
significance.
The early Christian ritual of carrying a lamp into the
evening service led to the present-day order of Vespers with its entry and the
singing of the ancient hymn, O Jesus Christ, the Joyful Light..., which
expresses the Christian teaching of spiritual light that illumines man of
Christ the Source of the grace-bestowing light. The order of the morning
service of Matins is also linked to the idea of the Uncreated Light of Christ,
manifested in His Incarnation and Resurrection.
The Fathers of the Church also witnessed to the
spiritual significance of candles. In the 2nd Century, Tertullian wrote: We
never hold a service without candles, yet we use them not just to dispel
night's gloom we also hold our services in daylight but in order to represent
by this Christ, the Uncreated Light, without Worn we would in broad daylight
wander as if lost in darkness [ Works, 3rd ed., Kiev, 1915, p.76]. The Blessed
Jerome wrote in the 4th Century that In all the Eastern Churches, candles are
lit even in the daytime when one is to read the Gospels, in truth not to dispel
the darkness, but as a sign of joy...in order under that factual light to feel
that Light of which we read in the Psalms (119:105): Thy word is a lamp to my
feet, and a light to my path [Works, part IV, 2nd ed., Kiev, 1900, pp.301-302].
St. Sophronius, Patriarch of Jerusalem, wrote in the
7th Century: Lampadas and candles represent the Eternal Light, and also the
light which shines from the righteous [Writings of the Holy Fathers..., St.
Petersburg, 1855, Vol. I, p.270]. The Holy Fathers of the 7th Ecumenical
Council decreed that in the Orthodox Church, the holy Icons and relics, the
Cross of Christ, and the Holy gospel were to be honored by censing and the
lighting of candles; and the Blessed Simeon of Thessalonica (15th Century)
wrote that candles are also lit before the Icons of the Saints, for the sake of
their good deeds that shine in this world [Works, Moscow, 1916, p. 108].
Orthodox faithful light candles before the Icons as a
sign of their faith and hope in God's help that is always sent to all who turn
to Him and His Saints with faith and prayers. The candle is also a symbol of
our burning and grateful love for God. During the reading of the Twelve Passion
Gospel at Holy Friday Matins, the faithful hold candles, re-living our Lord's
sufferings and burning with love for Him. It is an ancient custom of Russian
Orthodox Christians to take home a lit candle from this Service and to make the
Sign of the Cross with it on their doors in remembrance of Our Lord's
sufferings and as protection against evil.
At Vespers on Holy Friday, when the Plashchanitsa
(Epitaphion) is borne out of the Altar and also during the Lamentation Matins
of Holy Saturday, the faithful stand holding lit candles as a sign of love for
Christ Crucified and Dead, showing their faith in His radiant Resurrection. On
Pascha itself, from the moment of the procession around the church, in memory
of the Myrrh-bearers who proceeded with burning lamps to the sepulcher of the
Lord, the faithful hold lit candles in their hands until the end of the Paschal
Service, expressing their great joy and spiritual triumph
Since ancient times, at hierarchical services special
candle-holders have been used. The faithful reverently bow their heads when
blessed by the Bishop with the dikeri, representing the two natures of Christ
His Divinity and His humanity, and the trikeri, representing the Holy Trinity.
Candles are also lit during the celebration of the Holy Eucharist.
Holy Baptism is celebrated with the Priest fully
vested and all the candles lit. Three candles are lit before the baptismal font
as a sign that the Baptism is accomplished in the Name of the Holy Trinity; and
the person to be baptized (if an adult) and the sponsors hold lit candles in
their hands during the procession around the font as an expression of joy at
the entry of a new member into the Church of Christ.
At the betrothal ceremony, the Priest hands the bride
and bridegroom lit candles before they enter the church to receive the
Sacrament of Matrimony, throughout which they hold the lit candles as a symbol
of their profound love for each other and of their desire to live with the
blessing of the Church. At the Sacrament of Holy Unction, seven candles are lit
around the vessel of Holy Oil as a sign of the grace-bestowing action of the
Gifts of the Holy Spirit. And when the body of a deceased person is brought in
the church, four candles are placed about the coffin to form a cross to show
that the deceased was a Christian. During the Funeral service, as well as
Memorial services, the faithful stand with lit candles as a sign that the
deceased's soul has left this world and entered the Kingdom of Heaven the
Unwaning Light of God.
During the Vespers portion of the Liturgy of the
Presanctified Gifts, the Priest blesses the congregation with a lit candle and
censer, proclaiming, The Light of Christ illumines all! On the Eve of the
Nativity of Christ and the Theophany, a lit candle is placed before the festal
Icon in the middle of the church to remind us of the birth and appearance on
earth of Christ Our Savior, the Giver of Light. At all Divine Liturgies, lit
candles are carried in procession at various parts of the service.
Thus candles and lampadas are lit at all Church
services, all with a wide variety of spiritual and symbolic meanings; for it is
God Who said, Let light shine out of darkness, [and] Who has shone in our
hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of
Christ (1 Cor. 4:6). So too, lit candles in the church are also an expression
of the worshippers' adoration and love for God, their sacrifices to Him, and at
the same time of their joy and of the spiritual triumph of the Church. The
candles, by their burning, remind one of the Unwaning Light which in the
Kingdom of Heaven makes glad the souls of the righteous who have pleased God.
Excerpt
taken from "These Truths We Hold - The Holy Orthodox Church: Her Life and
Teachings". Compiled and Edited by A Monk of St. Tikhon's Monastery.
Copyright 1986 by the St. Tikhon's Seminary Press, South Canaan, Pennsylvania
18459.
Source: http://www.stots.edu/article.php?id=62
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