The Miracle of the Holy Fire in Jerusalem by Niels Christian Hvidt
"On Holy Saturday believers
gather in great crowds in the Church
of the Holy Sepulchre. For on this
day fire comes down from Heaven and
puts fire on lamps in the Church." Thus
one reads in one of the many Easter
itineraries to the Holy Land.
"The Miracle of the Holy Fire" by
Christians from the Orthodox Churches
is known as "The greatest of
all Christian miracles". It
takes place every single year, on
the same time, in the same manner,
and on the same spot. No other miracle
is known to occur so regularly and
for such an extensive period of time;
one can read about it in sources
as old as from the eighth Century
A.D. The miracle happens in the Church
of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem,
to millions of believers the holiest
place on earth. The Church of the
Holy Sepulchre itself is an enigmatic place. Theologians, historians and
archaeologists consider the church
to contain both Golgotha, the little
hill on which Jesus Christ was crucified,
as well as the "new tomb" close
to Golgotha that received his dead
body, as one reads in the Gospels.
It is on this same spot that Christians believe he rose from the dead.
One can trace the miracle throughout
the centuries in the many itineraries
to the Holy Land. The Russian abbot Daniel,
in his itinerary, written in the
years 1106-1107, in very detailed manners presents the "Miracle of the
Holy Light" and the ceremonies
that frame it. He recalls how the Patriarch goes into the Sepulchre-chapel
(the Anastasis) with two
closed candles. The Patriarch kneels
in front of the stone on which Christ
was laid after his death and says
certain prayers, upon which the miracle
occurs. Light proceeds from the core
of the stone — a blue, indefinable light which after some time kindles
closed oil lamps as well as the two
candles of the Patriarch. This light
is "The Holy Fire", and
it spreads to all people present
in the Church. The ceremony surrounding "The
Miracle of the Holy Fire" may
be the oldest unbroken Christian
ceremony in the world. From the fourth
century A.D. all the way up to our
own time, sources recall the awe-awakening
potent. From these sources it becomes
clear that the miracle has been celebrated
on the same spot, on the same feast
day, and in the same liturgical frames
throughout all these centuries. One
can ask, if it would happen also
in the year 1998.
In order to find out, I traveled
to Jerusalem to be present at the
ceremony in which the Miracle of
the Holy Fire occurs, and I can testify
that it did not only happen in the
ancient Church and throughout the
Middle Ages but also on the 18th
of April, 1998. The Greek-Orthodox
Patriarch of Jerusalem, Diodorus
I, is the man who every year enters
the tomb to receive the Holy Fire.
He has been the Patriarch of Jerusalem
since 1982 and thereby is the key-witness
to the miracle. Prior to the ceremony
of this year the Patriarch received
us in a private audience, where I had
the opportunity to speak with him
about the miracle in order to know
exactly what happens in the tomb
and what the miracle means for him
personally in his spiritual life.
Furthermore I was, through his intervention,
admitted to the balconies in the
dome of the Holy Sepulchre Church, from where I had a fine view over
the masses that had gathered around
the tomb in anticipation of the "Great
Miracle of the Holy Fire".
- But what exactly happens in the Holy
Sepulchre Church on Easter Saturday?
- Why does it have such an impact on
the Orthodox Tradition?
- Why does
it seem as if nobody has heard anything about the miracle in the Protestant
and Catholic countries?
One of the Most Famous Ceremonies
in the Orthodox Church
The miracle occurs every year on
the Orthodox Easter Saturday. There
are many types of Orthodox Christians:
Syrian, Armenian, Russian and Greek
Orthodox as well as Copts. In the Holy Sepulchre Church alone there
are 7 different Christian Denominations.
The Orthodox Easter-date is fixed
according to the Julian Calendar,
and not the usual Western European Gregorian calendar, which means that
their Easter normally falls on a
different date than the Protestant
and Catholic Easter.
Since Constantine the Great built
The Holy Sepulchre Church in the
middle of the fourth century it has
been destroyed many times. The Crusaders
constructed the Church that we see
today. Around Jesus tomb was erected
a little chapel with two rooms, one
little room in front of the tomb
and the tomb itself, which holds
no more than five people. This chapel
is the centre of the miraculous events,
and being present at the celebration
fully justifies the term "event" for
on no other day of the year is the
Holy Sepulchre Church so packed than
on Easter Saturday. If one wishes
to enter it, one has to reckon with
six hours of cueing. Each year hundreds
of people are not able to enter due
to the crowds. Pilgrims come from
all over the world, the majority
from Greece but in recent years increasing
numbers from Russia and the former
Eastern European Countries.
In order to be as close to the tomb
as possible, pilgrims camp around
the tomb-chapel, waiting from Holy
Friday afternoon in anticipation
of the wonder on Holy Saturday. The
miracle happens at 2:00 PM, but already
around 11:00 AM the Church is a boiling
pot.
Festival
From around 11:00 AM till 1:00 PM
the Christian Arabs sing traditional
songs with loud voices. These songs
date back to the Turkish occupation
of Jerusalem in the 13th Century,
a period in which the Christians
were not allowed to sing their songs
anywhere but in the Churches. "We
are the Christians, this we have
been for centuries and this we shall
be for ever and ever. Amen!" they sing at the top of their voices
accompanied by the sound of drums.
The drum-players sit on the shoulders
of others who ferociously dance around
the Sepulchre Chapel. But at 1:00
PM the songs fade out and after there
is silence, a tense and loaded silence
electrified by the anticipation of
the great manifestation of the Power
of God that all are about to witness.
At 1:00 PM a delegation of the local
authorities elbows through the crowds.
Even though these officials are not
Christian, they are part of the ceremonies.
In the times of the Turkish occupation
of Palestine they were Moslem Turks;
today they are Israelis. For centuries
the presence of these officials has
been an integrated part of the ceremony.
Their function is to represent the
Romans in the time of Jesus. The Gospels
speak of Romans that went to seal
the tomb of Jesus, so his disciples
would not steal his body and claim
he had risen. In the same way the
Israeli authorities on this Easter Saturday come and
seal the tomb with wax. Before they
seal the door it is customary that
they enter the tomb to check for
any hidden source of fire, which could produce the miracle through
fraud. Just as the Romans were to
guarantee that there was no manipulation
after the death of Jesus, likewise
the Israeli Local Authorities are
to guarantee that there be no trickery
in 1998.
The Testimony of the Patriarch
When the tomb has been checked and
sealed, the whole Church chants the Kyrie
Eleison (Lord have mercy). At
1:45 PM the Patriarch enters the
scene. In the wake of a large procession
he encircles the Tomb three times,
whereupon he is stripped of his royal
liturgical vestments, carrying only
his white alba, a sign of humility
in front of the great potent of God,
to which he is about to be the key
witness. All the oil lamps have been
blown out the preceding night, and
now all remains of artificial light
are extinguished, so that most of
the Church is enveloped in darkness.
With two big candles the patriarch
enters the Chapel of the Holy Sepulchre
— first into the small room in front
of the tomb and from there into the
tomb itself.
It is not possible to follow the
events inside the tomb, so I asked
the patriarch of Jerusalem, Diodorus,
about the center of the events.
"Your Beatitude, what happens
when you enter the Holy Sepulchre?"
"I enter the tomb and kneel
in holy fear in front of the place
where Christ lay after his death
and where he rose again from the
dead. Praying in the Holy Sepulchre
in itself is for me always a very
holy moment in a very holy place.
It is from here that he rose again
in glory, and it is from there that
he spread his light to the world.
John the Evangelist writes in the
first chapter of his gospel that
Jesus is the light of the World.
Kneeling in front of the place where
he rose from the dead, we are brought within the immediate
closeness of his glorious resurrection.
Catholics and Protestants call this
Church "The Church of the Holy
Sepulchre". We call it "The
Church of the Resurrection".
The Resurrection of Christ for us
Orthodox is the center of our faith.
In his resurrection Christ has gained
the final victory over death, not
just his own death but the death of all those who will stay close
to him.
"I believe it to be no coincidence
that the Holy Fire comes on exactly
this spot. In Matthew 28:3, it says that when Christ rose from
the dead, an angel came, dressed
all in a fearful light. I believe
that the striking light that enveloped
the angel at the Lord's resurrection
is the same light that appears miraculously
every Easter Saturday. Christ wants
to remind us that his resurrection
is a reality and not just a myth;
he really came to the world in order
to give the necessary sacrifice through
his death and resurrection so that
man could be re-united with his creator.
Blue Light
"I find my way through the darkness
towards the inner chamber in which
I fall on my knees. Here I say certain prayers that have been
handed down to us through the centuries
and, having said them, I wait. Sometimes
I may wait a few minutes, but normally
the miracle happens immediately after
I have said the prayers. From the
core of the very stone on which Jesus
lay an indefinable light pours forth.
It usually has a blue tint, but the
color may change and take many different
hues. It cannot be described in human
terms. The light rises out of the
stone as mist may rise out of a lake
— it almost looks as if the stone
is covered by a moist cloud, but
it is light. This light each year
behaves differently. Sometimes it
covers just the stone, while other times it gives light to the whole
sepulchre, so that people who stand
outside the tomb and look into it
will see it filled with light. The
light does not burn — I have never
had my beard burnt in all the sixteen
years I have been Patriarch in Jerusalem
and have received the Holy Fire.
The light is of a different consistency
than normal fire that burns in an
oil lamp.
"At a certain point the light
rises and forms a column in which
the fire is of a different nature, so that I am able to light my candles
from it. When I thus have received
the flame on my candles, I go out and give the fire first
to the Armenian Patriarch and then
to the Coptic. Hereafter I give the
flame to all people present in the
Church."
The Symbolic Meaning of the
Miracle
"How do you yourself experience
the miracle and what does it mean
to your spiritual life?"
"The miracle touches me just
as deeply every single year. Every
time it is another step towards conversion
for me. For me personally, it is of
great comfort to consider Christ's
faithfulness towards us, which he
displays by giving us the holy flame
every year in spite of our human frailties and failures. We experience
many wonders in our Churches, and
miracles are nothing strange to us. It happens often that icons cry,
when Heaven wants to display its
closeness to us; also we have saints,
to whom God gives many spiritual
gifts. But none of these miracles
have such a penetrating and symbolic
meaning for us as the miracle of
the Holy Fire. The miracle is almost
like a sacrament. It makes the resurrection
of Christ present to us as if he
had died only a few years ago."
While the patriarch is inside the
chapel kneeling in front of the stone,
there is darkness but far from silence
outside. One hears a rather loud
mumbling, and the atmosphere is very
tense. When the Patriarch comes out
with the two candles lit and shinning
brightly in the darkness, a roar
of jubilee resounds in the Church,
comparable only to a goal at a soccer-match.
The Miracle Leads to Faith
The miracle is not confined to what
actually happens inside the little
tomb, where the Patriarch prays.
What may be even more significant,
is that the blue light is reported
to appear and be active outside the
tomb. Every year many believers claim
that this miraculous light ignites candles, which they hold in their
hands, of its own initiative. All
in the church wait with candles in
the hope that they may ignite spontaneously.
Often closed oil lamps take fire
by themselves before the eyes of
the pilgrims. The blue flame is seen
to move in different places in the Church. A number of signed testimonies
by pilgrims, whose candles lit spontaneously,
attest to the validity of these ignitions.
The person who experiences the miracle
from a close distance by having the
fire on the candle or seeing the
blue light usually leaves Jerusalem
changed, and for everyone having
attended the ceremony, there is always
a "before and after" the
Miracle of the Holy Fire in Jerusalem.
Unknown in the West
One can ask the question why the
Miracle of the Holy Fire is hardly
known in Western Europe. In the Protestant areas it may to
a certain extent be explained by
the fact that there is no real tradition
for miracles; people don't really
know in which box to place the miracles,
and they don't take up much space
in newspapers. But in the Catholic
tradition there is vast interest
for miracles. Thus, why is it not
more known? For this it only one
explanation suffices: Church politics.
Only the Orthodox Churches attend
the ceremony framing the miracle.
It only occurs on the orthodox Easter
date and without the presence of
any Catholic authorities. By certain Orthodox this evidence proves the
notion that the Orthodox Church is
the only legitimate Church of Christ
in the world, and this assertion
obviously may cause certain apprehensions
in Catholic circles.
The Question of the Authenticity
of the Miracle
As with any other miracle there are
people who believe it is fraud and
nothing but a masterpiece of Orthodox propaganda. They believe
the Patriarch has a lighter inside
of the tomb. These critics, however,
are confronted with a number of problems.
Matches and other means of ignition
are recent inventions. Only a few
hundred years ago lighting a fire
was an undertaking that lasted much
longer than the few minutes during
which the Patriarch is inside the
tomb. One then could perhaps say,
he had an oil lamp burning inside,
from which he kindled the candles, but the local authorities confirm
to have checked the tomb and found
no light inside it.
The biggest arguments against a fraud,
however, are not the testimonies
of the shifting patriarchs. The biggest
challenges confronting the critics
are the thousands of independent testimonies by pilgrims whose candles
were lit spontaneously in front of
their eyes without any possible explanation.
According to our investigations,
it has never been possible to film
any of the candles or oil lamps igniting
by themselves. However, I am in the
possession of a video filmed by a young engineer from Bethlehem,
Souhel Nabdiel. Mr. Nabdiel has been
present at the ceremony of the Holy
Fire since his early childhood. In
1996 he was asked to film the ceremony from the balcony of the dome of the
Church. Present with him on the balcony
were a nun and four other believers.
The nun stood at the right hand of
Nabdiel. On the video one can see
how he films down on the crowds.
At a certain point all lights are
turned off — it is time for the Patriarch to enter the tomb and take
the Holy Fire. While he is still
inside the tomb one suddenly hears
a scream of surprise and wonder originating
from the nun standing next to Nabdiel.
The camera begins to shake, as one
hears the excited voices of the other
people present on the balcony. The
camera now turns to the right, whereby
it is possible to contemplate the
cause of the emotion. A big candle,
held in the hand of the Russian nun,
takes fire in front of all people present before the patriarch
comes out of the tomb. With shaking
hands she holds the candle while
over and over making the sign of
the Cross in awe of the potent she
has witnessed. This video appears
to be the closest one gets to an
actual filming of the miracle.
Miracles cannot be proved
The miracle is, as most miracles
are, surrounded by unexplainable
factors. As Archbishop of Tiberias
Alexios said when I met him in Jerusalem:
"The miracle has never been
filmed and most probably never will
be. Miracles cannot be proved. Faith
is required for a miracle to bear
fruit in the life of a person and
without this act of faith there is
no miracle in the strict sense. The
true miracle in the Christian tradition
has only one purpose: to extend the
Grace of God in creation, and God
cannot extend his Grace without the faith on behalf of his creatures.
Therefore there can be no miracle
without faith." |
Sources:
Meinardus, Otto. The
Ceremony of the Holy Fire in the
Middle Ages and today.
Bulletin
de la Société d'Archéologie
Copte, 16, 1961-2. 242-253
Klameth, Dr. Gustav. Das Karsamstagsfeuerwunder
der heiligen Grabeskirche. Wien,
1913. |