Lighting Candles and Saying Prayers in the Darkness Together
“If I say, ‘Surely the darkness will cover me, and the light around me turn to night,’ darkness is not dark to you, O Lord; the night is as bright as the day; darkness and light to you are both alike.”—Psalm 139:11-12.
At the five o’clock contemporary service every Sunday night at Saint Mark’s Episcopal Church, the darkened nave is lit only by tealight candles on the altar before a large icon. After the usual Prayers of the People with a Leader and a Congregational response, the celebrant invites members of the congregation to come forward and light a candle before the altar as they offer a silent prayer of intercession. Tonight’s pianist plays music from the Taizé community or the Celtic tradition as almost all members of the congregation come forward.
While I remain seated behind my harp, I experience the scene as a Spirit-filled synthesis of corporate and individual intercessory prayer. I watch men and women, and sometimes children, walk silently to light their tapers and place them in an enormous earthenware bowl filled with sand. I know a few prayers that may be on some hearts. There are many people I do not know, much less what they are praying for, but I see faces showing heartfelt emotion and sometimes silent tears. Even when I do not perceive their prayers, I can feel their power and perhaps even their connection. There is a stream of people connecting to God in prayer for others, and sometimes for themselves.
The light from the many candles now brightens the church’s nave. The scene has become its own icon, teaching us what happens when we pray. Prayers germinate in the darkened nave and are born to transform darkness into light. I remember that C. S. Lewis once wrote that he “prayed not to change God, but to change himself.” These silent prayers, carried by candlelight, are changing the church’s appearance and the pray-ers, and indeed, they are changing me.
Joanna https://www.joannaseibert.com/