In
performing divine services will it matter like the saints, Whom the God-inspired
prophets Isaiah, Micah Daniel and St. John the Theologian saw "standing in the heavens next to the
throne of God" (Isaiah 6:2; I Kings 22:19; Daniel 7:10; Apocalypse 7:11),
Christians similarly should not sit during divine services, but stand.
The
custom that Orthodox Christians stand during prayer and church services is not
only a representation of spiritual service in the Heavenly Church, but also in
the Church of the Old Testament.
In
the description of the blessing of Solomon's temple it is said: "The
Levites and all the singers, being arrayed in white linen and having cymbals
and psalteries and harps stood at the east end of the altar''
(II Chronicles 5:12); "All the congregation of Israel stood" (II Chronicles 6:2).
Another
example from the Bible occurs in the description of the reign of Josaphat. In
order to protect his homeland from the Ammonites and the children of Moab, he
"stood in the congregation of Judah in
Jerusalem, in the house of the Lord before the new court. And all Judah stood before the Lord, with their
little ones, their wives, and their children" (II Chronicles 20:5, 13).
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To
stand during prayer was thus a customary rule among the Jews, as is proven in
their writings, in the manner of the Heavenly and the Old Testament Church,
Orthodox Christians have maintained the custom, since apostolic times, of
standing during divine services. The correctness of such a practice is evident
from New Testament scripture, where we find the words of Christ: "When ye stand praying" (Mark 9:25), and
in apostolic tradition, where it is often proclaimed "Let us stand well."
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In
the early works of the Holy Fathers a reverent attitude during services was
shown to be an important and sacred duty. In one such writing it says:
"One must stand and not look around, nor lean against a wall or pillar,
nor stand with a cane, nor shift one's weight from one foot to the other."
To
stand before God and His holy saints during the church services is the only
acceptable posture for the faithful, both for the ones who art serving, and the
ones praying, for does a servant sit before his master The faithful are all
servants of the Lord, redeemed by His blood (Luke 17: 10; 1 Cor. 6:19, 20).
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From Orthodox Life, Vol. 33, No.
6, pp. 48-49. This is an excerpt from the book The
Concern of the Orthodox Church for the Salvation of the World by Rev. G. S. Debolsky.
Translated from the Russian by Maria Naumenko.
Source: http://orthodoxinfo.com/praxis/whystand.aspx
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