Wreath of Christ
The Wreath of Christ (Swedish: Frälsarkransen, Danish/Norwegian: Kristuskransen), also known as the Pearls of Life are a set of prayer beads developed in 1995 by Swedish Evangelical Lutheran bishop emeritus Martin Lönnebo.[1] They are a often used devotion in the Lutheran Church.[2]
Background
Bishop Lönnebo was stranded on an island in Greece for several days because of a storm.[1] When he saw the Greek fishermen with their kombologia (which are in fact worry beads that have no religious or spiritual function), he was inspired to create the Wreath of Christ. He first developed, on paper, a set of prayer beads where he gave all the pearls a specific meaning. After the return home to Sweden, he made the actual pearl ribbon, based on his sketches and started using it in his prayers. The devotion began to spread rapidly in Sweden and to other Lutheran countries.
The Pearls
The Wreath of Christ is a kind of simplified non-denominational rosary, with each of the 18 pearls carrying a specific meaning, a question of life, a thought, or a prayer. There are no prayer formulations, as a user may meditate or say a prayer on each bead.
Schematic Presentation
- The bead of God
- The bead of Silence
- The I-bead
- The bead of Baptism
- The Desert bead
- The Carefree bead
- The bead of Love
- The bead of Secret
- The bead of Darkness
- The bead of Resurrection
The order starts at the golden "God" bead and goes counter-clockwise. In this order, the pearls symbolise the course of life, and also represent a catechism.
- The bead of God
- The bead of Silence
- The I-bead
- The bead of Baptism
- The bead of Silence
- The Desert bead
- The bead of Silence
- The Carefree bead
- The bead of Silence
- Two beads of Love
- Three beads of Secret
- The bead of Darkness
- The bead of Silence
- The bead of Resurrection
- The bead of Silence
References
- 1 2 "Ett armband har blivit en trädgård". Ett armband har blivit en trädgård. Svenska Kyrkan. Retrieved 21 April 2013.
- ↑ Johann G. Roten, S.M. "Lutheran rosary". University of Dayton. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
External links
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