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Koljivo
One of our many customs in the Church is that of preparing and serving koljivo at the
time of a funeral, and whenever a parastos is served in the Church for the departed. Koljivo
is boiled wheat covered with sugar. It is often decorated with walnuts arranged in the figure
of a cross and sometimes prepared with other ingredients such as pomegranates, raisins or
grapes.
The custom of serving koljivo in the Orthodox Church can be traced back to the fourth
century and is connected with St. Theodore the Recruit. Julian the Apostate came to power
in 361 and insisted on returning the Empire to paganism. Toward this end he ordered all
foodstuffs to be removed from the market in Constantinople on the first day of Great Lent
and substituted it with sacrificial food in order to defile the fast, for it is stated in the Acts of
the Apostles that the early Christians were admonished to "abstain from things offered to
idols" (Acts 15:29). St. Theodore suggested to the Patriarch that he use boiled wheat
(koljivo) as a substitute for the Lenten foodstuffs.
Since that time koljivo, having been connected with celebrating the memory of the
Saints, is brought to the Church and blessed during what is known today as the memorial
service. Koljivo was also distributed to the poor as a form of almsgiving. In many places
the practice of our Church calls for the people to partake of koljivo after the parastos. In
other places it is held in the front of the Church and all are invited to partake of it. In some
regions koljivo is taken to the cemetery during a funeral.
The symbolic meaning of Koljivo is founded on scriptural texts. It symbolizes the
resurrection in connection with the saying of our Lord: "Most assuredly, I say unto you,
unless a grain of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it
produces much grain" (John 12:24). Along this line St.
Paul writes: "The body is sown in corruption; it is raised in incorruption" (I Cor. 15:42).
In the teaching of the Church we are advised that there is no death in God, but life
everlasting. Through our love toward the departed in the memorial service, we emphasize
that those who have fallen asleep on the Lord still live as members of the Church
triumphant. What we do in our prayers of the parastos is to commit our departed loved
ones to the mercy of God, who has the means to help them far beyond our knowledge, and
this is all good. At the same time, we remind ourselves of the end of our own experience in
this world and the need to prepare ourselves for life after this one, that is, to repent and
accept the grace of God through faith in our Lord Jesus Christ.
Thus through the custom of koijivo the Church reminds us in a most tangible way of
the reality of our Faith, which is the resurrection and the life to come.
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