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Article: Candles - Brief History of Symbolism

Candles - Brief History of Symbolism

Candles - Brief History of Symbolism

According to Pew Research's 2023 survey on religion and spirituality in America, 38 percent of American adults engage in spiritual or meditative practice outside organized religion, and candles appear in nearly every one of those practices. After 23 years of selling candles at our West Hollywood store, that finding lines up with what we see at the counter: candles are the single object most consistently bought for ritual, intention, or remembrance, across every faith tradition our customers practice.

The First Candles Were Religious Objects, Not Light Sources

Historians trace candle use to ancient Egypt around 3000 BCE, where reed torches dipped in animal fat lit temple ceremonies long before they ever lit private homes. Roman writers documented tallow candles in religious contexts by 500 BCE. The point worth noticing is the order: candles entered human culture as ritual technology first and household lighting second. That sequence is reversed from how most modern Americans encounter them today, and it explains why candle symbolism has held its weight even as electric lighting made the object functionally obsolete.

Why Candle Flame Carries Symbolic Weight Across Faiths

The Catholic altar candle, the Jewish menorah, the Buddhist butter lamp, the Hindu diya, the Wiccan ritual candle: these traditions evolved independently across continents but converge on the same symbolic claim. The candle flame represents the boundary between the visible world and what lies beyond it. A single flame in a darkened room is one of the few visual experiences that translates the same way regardless of cultural background. Light displaces dark, and the metaphor is unavoidable in any language. This shared visual vocabulary is also why customers from very different faith traditions reach for similar candle types when the underlying intention is the same.

The Symbolism Persists Even Outside Formal Religion

Birthday candles, vigil candles for grief and remembrance, dinner-table candles for intimacy: all are secular descendants of ritual lighting. Pew's 2023 spirituality data shows the trend cuts both ways: declining formal religious affiliation, rising private spiritual practice. Candles fit both. They scale from a moment of personal pause to a community-wide gathering without changing their material form. The act of lighting one is the ritual, whether or not the person doing it calls it that.

What Modern Buyers Choose, By Intention

At our West Hollywood store, customers usually walk in with one of a small number of underlying intentions: marking a transition, holding a memory, setting a mood for an evening, or carving out a small ritual in a busy day. Rose tracks the patterns at the counter: white candles still lead for blessing and remembrance, black candles for boundary-setting and protection, red for love and passion, gold for celebration. Color choice tells us what the candle is for before the customer says it out loud. The traditions vary, but the underlying behavior has been remarkably stable over the 23 years we have been on the floor.

Why Candle Symbolism Holds Up in 2026

Even in a world of electric lighting and constant screens, the National Candle Association reports that 7 in 10 American households use candles. The persistence is not nostalgia. It is that the symbolic functions candles serve (focus, transition-marking, intentional presence) do not map cleanly onto any digital substitute. After two decades on the floor, the categories of customers we have watched grow most consistently are not the decorative buyers, but the ritual ones. The symbolism that has been there since 3000 BCE shows no sign of fading.

Explore our full candle collection to find the candle for your own ritual, and browse our guide to candle color meanings for help choosing by intention.

Reviewed and updated May 20, 2026.

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