In our Orthodox church,
we burn incense in a metal vessel that hangs on three chains and has a sliding
cover to regulate the burning of charcoal. The whole apparatus is called a
censer or thurible. On the chains are twelve small bells, signifying the
Disciples.
We put grains of incense
on burning charcoal in the censer with a prayer, “We offer thee incense, O
Christ our God, for an odor of spiritual fragrance. Receive it upon your
heavenly altar and send down upon us, in return, the gift of your Holy Spirit.”
Incense is a mix of spices and gums that we burn during services to produce
fragrant smoke.
We do not know when
incense was introduced into church services. It is quite likely that we used it
from the beginning of Christian worship, since its use was common in Jewish
worship in the Temple at Jerusalem. This is a supposition, however, because the
early witnesses are silent about its use. We only find it recommended from
about the 4th century on.
The burning incense
symbolizes prayer. “Let my prayer come before thee as incense, the lifting up
of my hands as an evening sacrifice. . . .“ (Psalm 141: 2 – used during Vespers
as the whole church is censed). In Old Testament times, the people would pray
before the Holy of Holies while the priest within made the sacrifice. “And the
whole multitude of people were praying outside at the hour of incense.” (Luke
1: 10) Symbolically, the incense represents prayer ascending to God.
Incense continues to have
that attachment to prayer in the New Testament, as we see in the book of
Revelation. “An angel came and stood at the altar, with a golden censer; and he
was given much incense to mingle with the prayers of all the saints upon the
golden Altar before the Throne of God; and the smoke of the incense rose with
the prayers of the Saints from the hand of the angel before God.” (Revelation
8: 3-4). We remember that Christ received frankincense as one of the gifts of
the Magi (Matthew 2:11).
In our liturgy we burn
incense to symbolize:
1. Worship of God who is
present in the Temple and in the Eucharist.
2. Prayer rising to God
like the smoke.
3. The Grace of the Holy
Spirit (see prayer above), which God pours upon us as incense pours fragrance
throughout the Church.
The Church censes icons
and other Holy things to honor God who crowns these saints in heaven, who
worked wonders through them here on earth, and who sanctified and glorified
their bodies; and to demonstrate our devotion to these special friends and
servants of God called Saints.
We cense bishops and
priests to honor in them Jesus Christ, whom they represent and with whose
sacred character they are clothed.
We cense the faithful in
order to honor in you the likeness to Christ that was imprinted on you at Baptism
and to honor you as temples of the Holy Spirit (I Cor 6). When you are censed,
you should make the sign of the cross to remind yourself of your baptism and
that you are a Temple, made in the image and likeness of God (Genesis 1).
Theologically, this
censing is very important. Orthodoxy is focused on theosis, on “becoming like
God,” not in Essence but through God’s Energies (as great writers like St John
of Damascus and St Gregory Palamas made clear), which are imparted to us in
myriad ways and chiefly through the sacraments. We cense the icons first
because they are the people among us whom we venerate as having received
theosis in high degree; we cense ourselves because we are in process,
throughout this life, of becoming more and more God-like by grace. In a sense,
you may also see censing people as a wake-up call: Recognize that you are made
in the image of God and that you are being restored to that image and likeness
through Christ who is at work in you through the Spirit to become a “partaker in
the divine nature” (II Peter). Therefore, we cense the departed in the funeral
rites to honor their bodies, made holy at Baptism, and to offer prayer for the
repose of their souls.
When we cense the
church, please note that you do NOT make the sign of the cross as the priest
(or deacon) comes through for the great censing until he returns to the royal
doors, turns and censes the congregation at that point. When he is going
through the church the first time around, he is censing the icons and not the people
present at worship. This is also true, but more obvious, for the smaller
censings at the Alleluia and at before the Cherubic Hymn.
Source: http://stanthonylc.org/2013/05/incense-church/
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