During our Church Services,
the priest burns incense in a censer, which is a metal vessel suspended
on three chains about two feet long, and provided with a cover to regulate
the burning of a small disk of charcoal placed therein. On the chains
are twelve small bells, signifying the voice of the twelve Disciples
of our Lord. Grains of incense are placed on the burning charcoal.
Incense is a material used
to produce a fragrance when burned. It is a mixture of spices and gums
burned during religious rites to produce a fragrant smoke. These grains
of spices are obtained from trees in Eastern and tropical countries.
The priest places incense
on the burning coals in the censer which the server swings to and fro..
. causing clouds of smoke to go heavenward. The ascending clouds of
an incense in the Old Testament made up of fragrant gums and spices
is an offering of earth’s treasures to their Creator, symbolizing
prayer. “Let my prayer be counted as incense before thee, and
the lifting up of my hands as an evening sacrifice. . . .“ (Psalm
141: 2) Accordingly, the people would pray before the Holy of Holies
while the priest within was making the sacrifice. “And the whole
multitude of people were praying outside at the hour of incense.”
(Luke 1: l0) The prayers went up to heaven unto God as the smoke of
the incense does leaving behind the sweetness of the odor of it all
the sweetness of the Holy Spirit.
So, too, in the New Testament
does it have a prayerful meaning as St. John the Divine Disciple beheld
how in heaven “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.” (Revelations 8: 3-4), but it has a much
deeper meaning; the transformed ideal. The burning coal is the burning
ember. Christ, Who takes away the sins of the world as we behold in
Isaiah at the calling of the prophet Isaiah, “then flew one of
the Seraphim to me, having in his hand a burning coal which he had taken
with tongs from the Altar. And he touched my mouth, and said: ‘Behold,
this has touched your lips: your guilt is taken away, and your sin forgiven.’
“(Isaiah 6:6-7)
Incense used at the Divine
Services represents:
a. Adoration or the worship
paid to God alone, present in the Eucharist. The burning of the fragrant
spices shows the unimportance of all creatures before their Creator.
b. Prayer, which rises to
God like smoke.
c. Grace, which God pours
into our souls as incense pours fragrance throughout the Church.
The Church incenses relics,
ikons and Holy things:
a. To honor God who crowned
the saints in heaven, who worked wonders through them here on earth,
who sanctified and glorified their bodies.
b. To show respect and devotion
to the special friends and servants of the Almighty.
The Church incenses her ministers,
her bishops and priests, in order to honor in their person Jesus Christ,
whom they represent and with whose sacred character they are clothed.
The Church incenses the faithful
in order to honor in them the likeness to Christ which was imprinted
upon them in Baptism . . . to show them forth as the temples of the
Holy Spirit. At the censing of the parishioners make the sign of the
cross upon their bodies in respect to this meaning.
The Church incenses the bodies
of the departed to honor the bodies which were sanctified and made holy
by Baptism, and to beg God to receive the prayers and petitions we offer
for the repose of the soul of the departed in the Faith.
Incense shows forth several
things:
Its burning represents zeal
in the service of the Lord. Think of that as you see the sacred smoke
rising in the Sanctuary. Recall that you are to give of your time and
talent, your service and means to the worship of God. Are you going
to let a mere material creature like incense outdo you in divine service?
The incense is burnt for the glory of God. How about you?
Its fragrance represents
virtue, pleasing to God as it always is. How pleasing is your life and
your service? Can you feel that your devotion in Church, your thoughtfulness
of God, your keeping of His law, is of a kind that will please Him?
The rising smoke represents
prayer and shows that your prayers are rising too. The smoke reminds
you to pray, if you are not praying. The fragrance of the smoke shows
that our prayer and service are pleasing to God.
God commanded Moses and His
chosen people to use incense. The Church uses it in her service. Think
of what all this means and it will be a source of grace and spiritual
strength to you.