Beside the desk here at the farm stands a Paschal Candle. It is a candle seen in churches more than in homes. The wooden stand which holds the candle is four feet high. The Paschal Candle itself is only two feet long, a bit short for most Paschal Candles, but this one is a used one which came from the local Methodist Church. The Candle is first brought to full blaze on Easter Sunday to celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ. After Easter it has its place as it symbolizes the Risen Lord who is the Light of the World during the Sundays between Easter and Pentecost. It is also lit for baptisms, memorial services, Holy Communion, and other services of celebration.
I enjoy having this candle here next to the place where I spend quiet time in His presence as well as the place where I search the pages of the Holy Word. Often as I see it, I am reminded that we are always in the presence of the Risen Lord. There is a story which goes with my Paschal Candle. When I arrived at the Vidalia Church, there was no Paschal Candle so one of my members made the stand in his wood shop. When I left some ten years later, Jack made a second one as a gift for me. I used it in the next two churches and when I retired, it came with me. The craftsman has gone to the heavenly place prepared for him by our Savior, but he is often remembered here in my home at the farm.
Some people may not be image seekers or collectors of symbols of the Holy as I am, but I have found that they speak to my soul in ways that are beyond the power of words. The remind me of that verse from Hebrews which says, "You have not come to something that can be touched, a blazing fire and darkness, and gloom as a tempest, and the sound of a trumpet, and a voice whose words made the hearers beg that not another word be spoken to them." (Hebrews 12:18-19). The writer of the Word writes of holy mystery. In these years which are unfolding, I see the Paschal Candle made by the hands of a friend as a sign the holy mystery abides even here.