Krsna Slava -
the celebration of the home Patron Saint-is the
greatest characteristic of the national and
religious life of the Serbian people. It is a
beautiful and unique expression of the Orthodox
faith that is deeply implanted in the Serbian
Christian soul.
Krsna Slava
is an exclusively Serbian custom. It is the most
solemn day of the year for all Serbs of the
Orthodox faith and has played a role of vital
importance in the history of the Serbian people.
Krsna Slava is actually the celebration of the
spiritual birthday of the Serbian people. Our
forefathers accepted Christianity collectively by
families and by tribes. In commemoration of their
baptisms, each family or tribe began to celebrate
in a special way to honor the saint on whose day
they received the sacrament of Holy Baptism. The
mother church blessed this practice and
proclaimed Krsna Slava a Christian institution.
According to
the words of St. Paul (Phil.
1:2), every
Christian family is a small church, and, just as
churches are dedicated to one saint, who is
celebrated as the protector of the church, so
Serbian families place themselves under the
protection of the saint on whose holiday they
became Christians and to whom they refer to as
their intercessor to God Almighty. To that
protector of their homes, they pay special homage
from generation to generation, from father to
son, each and every year.
Slava is a
day not only of feasting, but also a day of
spiritual revival through which the Serbian
national soul is formed and crystallized. To
these celebrations, customs, and traditions, our
nation owes its existence, and, therefore,
deserves to be appreciated and perpetuated by all
grateful Serbian sons and daughters all over the
world. The living example of the Patron Saint
gives to the celebrant assurance, persistence,
and the feeling of protection, support, and the
encouragement to do good. For that reason, we
hear among our people the ancient saying: "Ko Slavu
slavi, tome i pomaze".
Because Krsna
Slava is regarded as the anniversary of the
baptism of the family into Christianity, it is an
annual reaffirmation of the family to its
baptismal vows and the renewal of its ties to the
Orthodox faith and church.
The
commemoration of Krsna Slava was to our ancestors
one of the most important expressions of their
Orthodox faith. So they always celebrated their
Krsna Slava, regardless of how dangerous the
situation. In our long suffering history, the
state and freedom ceased to exist, but in our
homes, the candle of our Patron
Saint never was extinguished.
The Serbian
Krsna Slava links, as a golden string, our past
and our present, our ancestors and their
descendants. Serbian people should never ignore
their Krsna Slava because through it the Orthodox
faith was preserved and they were held together
through the centuries. Krsna Slava should be kept
not only as a sacred custom, but also to attest
to the sacred truth that "Where the
Serb is, Slava is also".
The
celebration of Krsna Slava requires the Icon of
the family Patron Saint and several items that
symbolize Christ and the believer's faith in his
death and resurrection: a lighted candle, Slavsko
zhito, Slava's bread (Slavski kolach), and red
wine.
The lighted
candle reminds us that Christ is the Light of
world. Without Him we would live in darkness.
Christ's light should fill our hearts and minds
always, and we should not hide the Light of
Christ in our lives.
Slavsko zhito
represents the death and resurrection of Christ.
Christ reminded us that except a grain of wheat
die it cannot rise again, even as it was
necessary that He die, be buried, and on the
third day rise again so that we all can triumph
over death. The Slavsko zhito is prepared as an
offering to God for all of the blessings we have
received from Him; it also is to honor the Patron
Saint and to commemorate our ancestors who lived
and died in the Orthodox faith.
Slava's bread
represents Jesus Christ as the Bread of Life. It
is also symbolic of our thanks to God for being
saved through Its Son. During Slava, the priest
cuts a cross in the bread, which reminds us of
Christ's death on the cross for the remission of
our sins.
The red wine,
of course, represents Christ's precious blood,
which was required to wash our sins away. Note
that understanding the symbols of Slava helps us
understand the meaning of the celebration. There
is one symbol, the Slavsko zhito, that needs some
special explanation. Some of the faithful have
the misunderstanding that the Slavsko zhito is
parastos for the Patron Saint of the Slava. The
wheat for Slava and the wheat for parastos
(Koljivo) are two different things. In both
cases, the wheat symbolizes resurrection and
eternal life (St. John
12:24). However, Slavsko
zhito is prepared for the glory and honor of the
Saint and for the repose of the souls of those
departed members of the family who commemorated
that Saint. We do not pray for the soul of the
Patron Saint, but we pray that he or she
intercede to the Lord our God for the forgiveness
of our sins. Therefore, you should never place a
candle in the Slavsko zhito.
There is no
reason to refrain from celebrating Slava during a
mourning period in the family because at Krsna
Slava we experience the unity with our departed
ones. The gaiety should be omitted, but the
zhito, bread, and candle never. On that day they
are signs of living union between the living and
the deceased of the family. To not celebrate
Krsna Slava, for whatever reason-mourning,
travel, poverty, instability, sickness, and so
on-creates a spiritual vacuum, which deprives us
of spiritual gladness and our departed ones of a
connection with us through the prayers on that
day.
For the
faithful, Krsna Slava creates confidence,
strength, freshness, stability, spiritual and
physical peace, and the ability and incentive to
do good and to lend help to others. If we want to
be the meritorious heirs of our ancestors,
keeping our origin, history, and symbols of Krsna
Slava, we can't permit the flame of our Krsna
Slava candle ever to be extinguished.
The
importance of Krsna Slava is not to have a huge,
elaborate, and expensive party. All you need is
the Icon of your saint, a candle, wheat, bread
(kolach), and wine, the service of the priest,
and an awareness that Krsna Slava is a great
treasure passed on to you by your ancestors.
Do not fail
to keep this ancient and honorable Serbian
Orthodox tradition and to pass it on to your
children. As St. Paul says in his epistle to the
Thessalonians (2:15), "Stand firm
and hold to the traditions which you were taught".
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