Sir Christopher Wren designed and built more than 50 church buildings in
London during the late 1600s. His design style had two prominent features—the
first of which was sturdy, tall steeples. The second, however, was more
profound. Wren was convinced that all of the windows in his churches must use
clear glass as opposed to the stained glass so popular in churches of that era.
In part, his reason for the clear glass is found in words attributed to him:
“God’s greatest gift to man is light.” Allowing light to bathe people as they
worshiped was, to Wren, a celebration of that gift.
In the Genesis account, on the first day of creation God made light
(1:3). The light God created is even more than just a means by which to see.
It’s a picture of what Christ brought when He entered this darkened world. In
John 8:12, our Lord said, “I am the light of the world. He who follows Me shall
not walk in darkness, but have the light of life.” To the follower of Christ,
light is one of the great reminders of the character of our Savior and the
quality of the life He has given us through His sacrifice on the cross.