Lakhomi Journal
Vol 6 No 4 (2025): Lakhomi Journal : Scientific Journal of Culture, December

The Spiritual Implications of Wheat in the Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church: A Study of Scripture, Liturgy, and Tradition

Muhammad Ridwan (Universitas Islam Negeri Sumatera Utara, Indonesia)
Belay Sitotaw Goshu (Department of Physics, Dire Dawa University, Dire Dawa, Ethiopia)



Article Info

Publish Date
13 Apr 2026

Abstract

Abstract: The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church (EOTC) possesses a rich theological tradition in which material elements serve as vehicles for spiritual truth. Among these, wheat occupies a distinctive place, appearing throughout Scripture, liturgy, and living tradition. Yet the full spiritual implications of wheat within this tradition have received limited scholarly attention. Purpose: This study investigates the spiritual implications of wheat in the EOTC, examining its significance across three interconnected dimensions: scriptural revelation, liturgical enactment, and living tradition. The research aims to articulate how wheat functions as a multivalent symbol of divine provision, ethical responsibility, and eschatological hope. Methods: The study employs a qualitative approach combining biblical exegesis of Ge'ez texts (including the broader Ethiopian canon) with liturgical theology and analysis of traditional practices. Primary sources include the Book of Enoch (1 Enoch), the Book of Jubilees, and documented liturgical practices, particularly the preparation and distribution of Nifro (boiled wheat) at funerals and memorial services. Findings: The investigation reveals that wheat in the EOTC functions as a threefold symbol. First, scripturally, it signifies God's covenantal provision (Deuteronomy 8:8) and becomes a test of righteousness through the warning against consuming the "finest of the wheat" while neglecting the poor (1 Enoch 36:26). Second, liturgically, Nifro enacts the theology of death and resurrection, transforming hard kernels into life-giving food that proclaims the hope of the General Resurrection (John 12:24). Third, traditionally, wheat connects the faithful to the covenant symbolized by the Tabot and anticipates the Heavenly Banquet. Conclusion: Wheat in the Ethiopian Orthodox tradition embodies a theology that is simultaneously scriptural, ethical, and liturgical, a theology that can be seen, tasted, and shared. The grain encapsulates the Gospel message: death yields to greater life. Recommendation: Further research is recommended on the comparative study of Nifro with other Orthodox memorial traditions (koliva) and on the role of wheat in contemporary Ethiopian Orthodox diaspora communities.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

lakhomi

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Subject

Description

Lakhomi Journal : Scientific Journal of Culture is an international journal using a peer-reviewed process published in December, March, June and September by Britain International for Academic Research Publisher (BIAR-Publisher). Lakhomi welcomes research papers in culture and other researches ...