The Altar and Tabernacle are the holiest places and the inner rooms of the catholic temple. They are claiming that Christ is there. Believe it not!!! Matthew 24:26
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Altar Lamp
In many Christian churches there is an
altar lamp, also known as a
chancel lamp, which is found in the
chancel (sanctuary), either hanging or fixed. In
Anglican,
Old Catholic and
Roman Catholic churches, the chancel lamp burns before a
tabernacle or
ambry to demonstrate the belief that Christ is present there through His
Real Presence
With influence from
Judaism in the Old Testament, God told Moses that a lamp filled with the pure oil should perpetually burn in the Tabernacle (Ex 27:20-21). This is the precedent for the custom in the Anglican Church and Catholic Church of burning a candle (at all times) before the tabernacle – the house where the Eucharistic Body of Christ is reserved under lock and key.
Tabernacle
A
tabernacle is a fixed, locked box in which, in some Christian churches, the
Eucharist is "
reserved" (stored). A less obvious container for the same purpose, set into a wall, is called an
aumbry. The tabernacle should be securely fixed to the altar or (shelf), but away from the wall so that the conopaeum (a veil used to cover it when it contains the blessed sacrament) can completely surround it. The veil may be white or varying in liturgical colour.
the
real presence of Christ in the Eucharist
is the
doctrine that
Jesus is present in the
Eucharist, not merely symbolically or metaphorically.
[1]
Catholics give
adoration to Christ, whom they believe to be really present, in body and blood, soul and divinity, in
sacramental bread whose reality has been
changed into that of his body.
Its purpose is to allow the worshipper to engage his whole person in acknowledging the presence of and to honor Jesus Christ in the Holy Eucharist. It is customary to
genuflect whenever one comes into or leaves the presence of the Blessed Sacrament reserved in the
Tabernacle.
Matthew 24:26
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