The Parish Church of St John-at-Hampstead

1/12/2014

Christmas: The story of the Christingle

The word ‘Christingle’ actually means ‘Christ Light’, and celebrates the light of Jesus coming into the world.   Stories of how the Christingle began look back to the Moravian Church,  which is found in the Czech Republic.  The Moravians have held Christingle services for more than 200 years, and according to them, this is how the first Christingle might have been made:
Many years ago the children in a village were asked to bring a Christmas gift to put beside the crib in the church.  One family was very poor, and had no money for gifts, but the three children were still determined to take something.  The only nice thing they had was an orange, so they decided to give the Christ-child that.  But then they discovered the top was going green, so the eldest cut it out, and put a candle in the hole.  To add some colour, one of the girls took a red ribbon from her hair and tied it around the middle of the orange.    It was hard to make the ribbon stay still, so they fastened it in place with toothpicks.  The toothpicks looked a bit bare, so the youngest child added some raisins to them.  
The other children sneered at their meagre gift, but the priest seized upon it with joy.  He held it up as an example of the true understanding of the meaning of Christmas, for the following reasons:   the orange is round, like the world;  the candle gives us light in the dark, like the love of God; the red ribbon goes round the ‘world’, as a symbol of Christ’s blood, given for everyone;  the four sticks point in all directions, and symbolise that God is over all: North, South, East and West; and the fruit and nuts remind us of God’s blessings.
The Children’s Society first introduced the Christingle Service to The Church of England in 1968, and it has since become a popular event in the church calendar.  This candlelit celebration is an ideal way to share the key messages of the Christian faith, while helping to raise vital funds to help vulnerable children across the country.  Visit:  www.childrenssociety.org.uk


from Parish Pump