Tuesday, September 7, 2010

That Christ be formed in us

The following is quoted from Fr Anthony Coniaris' book Daily Vitamins for Spiritual Growth: Day by Day with Jesus through the Church Year, for August 3rd, which my sister in Christ, Mary Lona, sent me a while back, together with my response.

There appears in most Orthodox churches in the apse just above the holy table, a large painting of the Theotokos with the Christ Child in her bosom. The child has an adult face to denote that even in childhood He is the ‘wisdom of God and the power of God.’ Through the years I have met persons who have expressed dismay that the entire front wall of the sanctuary should be reserved for the Theotokos. These people believe that it should be Christ alone who should be depicted in such a strategically important visual area. Yet the figure of the Theotokos with child in the apse conveys to the worshipper a fundamentally important message, that is, Christ must be formed in us’ [Galatians 4:19] as He was formed in the Theotokos.

Elizabeth Briere writes, ‘People have been heard to remark that in Orthodox churches there are often more candles lit before the icon of the Mother of God than before the icon of Christ. That observation, however, is unwittingly revealing, for the usual icon of the Mother of God does not depict her alone; it is in fact an icon of the incarnation.’

The Theotokos is not someone on a pedestal. She is one of us, a prototype of the true believer. She summons us to respond to the call of God with the same faith and obedience as she did in order that Christ be formed in us as He was formed in her. Mary is the Typos [type] of the Church, the expression of the fulfillment of the Church's mission. She is the example of the new people in whom and among whom God dwells: “I will live in them and move among them, and I will be their God, and they shall be My people” [1 Cor. 6:16]. Mary is the fulfillment of the purpose of Christ's coming to us. He came to make us temples of the living God. “Do you not know,” asks St. Paul, “that you are God's temple and that God's Spirit dwells in you?...God's temple is holy, and that temple you are” [1 Cor. 3:16-17]. As Mary became God's temple, so we are to become His temples.

Dear sister,

I've never read this passage, but this is my theology of Mary and this is how I explain to visitors to an Orthodox church as to why she is depicted in the apse as the ‘platytera’. I have one other explanation of her presence there. It is that she is the first Christian, and she leads us in the worship of her Son. The idea that she is up there to encourage us to form Christ in us just as she did, though spiritually of course, is an idea that is a bit harder to justify to people sometimes, who only notice how big she is while everyone else is so small.

When I give church tours, I always explain the arrangement of the two ikons flanking the royal doors in this way (and I received this from the priest who catechized me, Fr Michael Courey):

The ikon on the left is not an ikon of Mary, though she is in it (she is never shown without Jesus in an ikon except when it is a historical impossibility). The ikon on the left, the royal door (opening), and the ikon on the right, are all ikons of Christ, in this way:

On the left, it is the ikon of Christ in His first coming, born of woman. On the right, it is the ikon of Christ in His second coming, enthroned for judgment of the living and the dead (in some churches he is not shown seated on a throne, but in our church He is, and so is Mary seated with Jesus in her lap, on the other side). And in the center, the royal doors (when they are open) form the ikon of Christ in His presence with us today, in the form of His priests who go in and out through this opening, in the form of the Word of God (the scriptures) as they are proclaimed at this open doorway, and in the form of the Holy Mysteries which also come to us through this opening. So in the manner of a paradox, a non-ikon, a ‘hole in the wall’ is also an ikon, the ikon of Christ with us NOW, as living ikon.

Along with that explanation, I quote the saying, “Between Christ's first and second comings, there's no Body here but us, living ikons.” This has been how I explain these ikons when giving a church tour for almost 20 years. I've been Orthodox for 22 years, since I was 37, and from at least the age of 40 I was giving church tours, because I am an evangelist and a publicist. I know how to talk to crowds.

Anyway, yes, this is robust, authentic Orthodoxy. We are not throwing out the baby with the bathwater as people claim the Reformers did (actually not all of them did), but we are staying as close to scripture as we can, and quietly side-stepping the human weaknesses and errors that have been accumulating for centuries. This is a process that is always going on in the Church, but especially now, it is needful to be gently persistent in promoting what is good and true and without any shadow of doubt, and in such a way that the weak and foolish crutches of the spiritually lame will be discarded voluntarily, as crippled souls regain their powers of locomotion in the Christ.

In Hebrew this is the true meaning of Halacha, ‘the walk,’ though people translate it as ‘tradition’ when in actual fact, true Halacha is the exact opposite! To walk without crutches, to regain the power to walk (in the Spirit). So, the Jews, who are our closest relatives, are also subject to the same enfeebling false humility and mindless repetition of gradually deviating ‘tradition.’

Brock's latest blog post brings some of this out, and mentions Halacha, in his study of 1st Thessalonians chapter 4. As you know, he and I are partners in evangelical crime, we believe the Word and seek to know it, understand it, promote it, and live it in the original languages. Somebody has to have the gift of tongues in this day and age, to keep people in touch with the apostolic and prophetic mind.

Thanks again for your email and the quoted passage from Fr Coniaris. Most of what I know as an Orthodox Christian has come from him.

Your little brother in Christ,
who knows nothing and is nothing, only Christ.
Romanós

Postscript—In looking for a suitable image of the ‘platytera’ ikon of the Theotokos to use in this post, I came across a wonderful webpage that shows ‘ikons under construction,’ in a way that few people experience. Take a look at what it takes to install three new ikons in St Katherine's Greek Orthodox Church of Northern Virginia by clicking this LINK. [Sorry, but this link now appears to be broken, 5/29/2011.]

Αγίασον τους αγαπώντας την ευπρέπειαν του οίκου Σου.
Sanctify those who lovingly work for the beauty of thy House.

2 comments:

  1. I can see the beauty of some icons and of some mosaics and stained-glass images and statues, but am very reluctant to include them as aids to worship because of the prohibition of graven images (Exodus 20:4). I realize that people understand that commandment in different ways, and am aware that Orthodox icons avoid sculpture and realism.

    I'm not always consistent in my application of the commandments, but no icon can do full justice to the truth of the Lord. We don't want to worship "the Jesus of the picture." We want to worship the real one, looking forward to the beauties of eternity, which will far surpass anything here.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It is not the visual beauty of the ikons—once one of my Sunday School students admitted that when she was little she thought the ikons were ugly, because they were so stylized and unrealistic.

    Mosaics are really church decoration though they are termed ikons loosely. They can be beautiful, but again, visual beauty is not the goal.

    Stained glass religious window art is almost exclusively Protestant and Catholic and so do not qualify as ikons either, much as mosaics don't.

    Statues of Christ, Mary, Moses, the saints or prophets are not admitted into the interior of the church, nor even as external decoration, except possibly where Roman Catholicism has temporarily held sway in an Orthodox area. Even then they are strictly prohibited as breaking the commandment you cite (Exodus 20:4).

    You are correct, no ikon can do full justice to the truth of the Lord, whether it be an Orthodox ikon, a Catholic or Protestant religious image or painting, a movie (no matter how well-done or faithful to the scriptures), or even a thought drawing rooted in human theology or philosophy. Nothing we come up with, nothing, can compare to the reality of who He is, and what He has done for us, nothing!

    But neither do the Orthodox worship "the Jesus of the picture." We worship the Father "in spirit and truth" as the Lord Himself tells the Samaritan woman that is the only kind of worship the Father wants. If that is happening in us, then it isn't even a question of internal or external images: we see and know the Lord and are seen and known by Him: Holy, Holy, Holy, Lord God of Sabaoth! Heaven and earth are filled with Your Glory! Hosanna in the Highest. Blessed is He who comes in the Name of the Lord! Hosanna in the Highest!

    If this kind of worship is not happening in us, then nothing else matters, not church design, decoration or lack of it, nor institutional structures whether biblical or traditional, nor sacraments or ordinances, nothing, nothing else matters: If we are not worshipping the Father in spirit and in truth, we are simply wasting our time, and offending Him by our sanctimony and covert blasphemy.

    There is only one true worship. We know what that is, and that has never changed. But people everywhere will consistently hide from the Lord even within the confines of the Church, which is the new Paradise, the new Eden planted for the new Adam and for the new Eve, His Bride, that is, the people of God: for us.

    Thanks, brother, for your affirmation of these truths!

    ReplyDelete