Seeing this reminded me, painfully, of an experience of my own with the family of one who was once my best friend. Raised in a strict fundamentalist environment, my best friend’s mother had to ‘look the other way’ and keep silent when I was around to not offend me by letting loose her deep animosity for and rejection of what she deemed my idolatry as an Orthodox Christian. Most of the time she succeeded in this, much to her credit, but occasionally she’d let slip a few words here and there that let me know that, though she tolerated me, I had better stay away from her, and especially not infect her son and her family with my errors. Once or twice, though, she couldn’t hold it in anymore, and she vented at me, always when my friend was not in the room.
One time this rebuke was particularly harsh and hurtful, and even she knew it. We were all seated together at a large table in a local pizzeria waiting for the pizzas to arrive. My friend was antsy and he decided to go and play some video games in the other room of the restaurant, and while he was away, we all chatted together, just friendly, small talk. How it happened, I don’t remember, but because we were all Christians together, we often chatted about spiritual things, the bible, the life in Christ, church, and so on. All of a sudden, my friend’s mother lashed out at the veneration of ikons, that we Orthodox Christians kiss images and worship them, that these images are idols and we idolators. Her verbal attack was short but a direct hit. I was startled and silent for a moment.
‘No, Ginger, this isn’t what you think it is. We are not idolators, and we’re not worshiping images instead of God. Ikons are not graven images, they’re just pictures, and usually of people or events in the bible. We kiss them just like we kiss the bible and each other, out of respect and honor, to show that we believe in God and that we are thankful for His salvation. We are not idol worshippers.’ I spoke these words or something very much like them, quietly and calmly. There was no argument, and no further discussion on the topic. Everyone just knew, I think, that a line had been crossed, and that hearts had been broken on both sides. There was nothing to do now but lighten up, talk about the weather or gardening or joke about how long the pizzas were taking. Then my friend returned to the table.
The next day, it must have been in the evening, or maybe on my day off, my friend’s mother stopped by and knocked at my door. We live about half a mile from each other off the same boulevard, and she is a walker. She would often stop at my house and visit me, knowing that I was living alone and didn’t have family or other friends nearby. She would sometimes bring me little household items that she thought I might need; I was still settling in to my new townhouse and lacked a few things. That day she had one or two kitcheny things with her, and something else wrapped in a brown paper bag. ‘I don’t know if you want this old picture, but you can have it if you do. It’s been in the family as long as I can remember, but I was going to throw it out, and I thought maybe you could use it.’
I took the bag from her and pulled out the picture to take a look. It was a small print of Dürer’s famous ‘Praying Hands’ on a yellowish canvas set in a deep wooden frame. ‘Why, it’s beautiful! Of course, I would like to have it! Thank you! I will hang it in a special place of honor.’ She seemed pleased, even relieved somehow, and then we visited a little, I made some tea, and then she left to visit her daughter a few houses down. After she left, I hung the picture in my dining room on the east wall, on the other side of the doorway to the kitchen from my ikon wall, where my prayer stand is. That way, I'd always be able to see it, and so would my few guests, my best friend, and his mother and father who sometimes visited me.
Her gift, coming right on the heels of our unhappy controversy at the pizzeria, seemed like a silent apology, not to say she was wrong about anything she believed or had said, but somehow a way to make peace with someone whom she thought was, after all, still a Christian, even though an idolatrous one. It almost seemed like a way of saying, ‘since you like religious images, here’s one that at least is harmless, and Protestant, just some praying hands. Maybe you can use it. And by the way, sorry for upsetting you the other night, even though you deserved it.’ I was already used to her ways and though she may not have realized it, I already knew from her silent reproaches in the past where she stood on my Orthodox faith, and I never let it bother me. I overlooked it, just as she usually overlooked my folly.
Worse things than what happened that night at the restaurant have since transpired. Peace and fellowship has been disturbed. The same spirit that divided and injured us in that pizzeria has gone on to make deeper and even unbridgeable the chasm between us. The same spirit that animates whoever has created that contemptuous web page. The same spirit who doesn’t confine itself just to Christians but also infects the peoples of Islam that wage holy war against us infidels. The same spirit that makes people stop at the veil of the Holy Place so as never to really meet the Holy One. The same spirit that makes the veil the object of worship and accuses those who go through the veil to meet the All Holy God, idolators. The same spirit that lies so boldly that we almost believe it. Some of us anyway.
Lord, have mercy on us, and deliver us from the evil one.
αλλά ρύσαι ημάς από του πονηρού
Sounds like what I am going through now. I person I hired and considered a friend got chosen to go on a Southern Baptist "Mission Trip" to Greece because "There are no Christians There". In telling me about the trip, he forgot I was Orthodox, and proceeded to trash both the Greek People and the Orthodox Faith at the same time, mostly based on simplistic Protestant views of Catholicism. My attempts to try and explain were only met with the same arguments, but at a higher intensity. It hurt me deeply. I'm convinced that those "other" faiths have virtually nothing in common with the Orthodox other than terminology, no matter how much we want to believe otherwise. At the core, these other faiths do not and cannot inspire true repentance - and therefore true humility - in a person, without the sacrements. Wishing and hoping we are "basically the same" does not make it so, even for avid Bible readers.
ReplyDelete'Wishing and hoping we are "basically the same" does not make it so, even for avid Bible readers.'
ReplyDeleteYes, Gene, I do understand what you mean, and this is certainly true of those Christians like the ones we're talking about here. The attitudes they display are atrocious and they're not even really aware of it. Why not? Because, in my opinion, though they may know bible verses by heart and can quote John 3:16 and say 'God is love,' they haven't yet met and followed that God who is love that sent His Only-Begotten Son to save them and not those idolatrous, unborn-again Greeks (or whomever).
But we know that God really is love, and to know that God is to become like Him, not just to use and abuse His words to criminalise others.
Missionary trips to Greece and Russia, well, what can I say? Innocently naive at best, contemptuous and arrogant at worst, either way, they should stay home and convert themselves.
Lord, have mercy.
My metaphor of the veil: These people have made the veil their god, studying it and knowing its every square inch, but like the pharisees of old, they do not go through the veil themselves, nor do they let others go in, but keep everyone with them standing before the veil (the bible, sola scriptura) and worshiping it, instead of the One True and Holy God, whose presence is beyond the veil. But those who follow Jesus our great and eternal High Priest through the veil, they call 'idolators.'
And so I ask, who is worshipping what? who is worshiping Whom?
I clicked on the link--let us hope that this group is on the fringe of the fringe. I thought most of the photographs were nice--some of them were a little ethnic, but I can cope with that better than I can endure hate speech against any religion. Maybe the photos will have the opposite effect--turning people toward an alternative and making the comments appear hateful and downright silly.--Melanie
ReplyDeleteI chanced upon something similar recently - a South African blog attacking Catholics for the "worshipping" of Pope John Paul II because they venerated his relics at his beatification. It was the sort of thing that I wouldn't normally engage but it was so over the top that I felt I had to point out their factual errors by linking to Catholic sources on what Catholics actually believe on these things. They published my comment but without the link for fear that reading Catholic sources (about what Catholics believe) would lead people astray! I actually had an interaction with the blogger about it - all very polite and "loving" but unable to see the bizareness of what they were doing.
ReplyDeleteYes, truly, as it is written of the unbelieving Jews, there is a veil that covers their eyes as well as the veil that they fear to pierce to go into the Holy Place where the God who loves us loves even their doctrinal enemies.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if it is a kind of fulfillment of the words of holy prophet Isaiah,
“Go and tell this people:
“‘Be ever hearing, but never understanding;
be ever seeing, but never perceiving.’
Make the heart of this people calloused;
make their ears dull
and close their eyes.
Otherwise they might see with their eyes,
hear with their ears,
understand with their hearts,
and turn and be healed.”
(Isaiah 6)
Romanos,
ReplyDeleteYour description of the veil is a good one, like a person's own ideology (or any ideology) that puts abstract ideas ahead of simply just loving and caring for one another. Such veils separate us from another as well as from God.
Thank you for your blog, I read it always and appreciate your willingness to share.
That website makes me sad. Not because it is against Orthodox Christianity, but because Christians can have so much hatred towards other people, especially other Christians.
ReplyDeletePandelis, I feel exactly as you. I think, though, that it is a sickness in them, as well as ignorance. They are caught in a net they have made themselves, as the Psalms say. Religion is a sickness, and Christ is the cure, as the Church fathers teach. Religion, of course, is not true religion, as James writes in his epistle, but the man-made religion which men erect, like towers of Babel from which to shoot at their brothers. We know who it is they follow, because John tells us in the Revelation, it is the accuser of the brethren. Anyway, as Christ tells us, 'in the world you will have trouble; but I have overcome the world.'
ReplyDeleteMercy and peace, brother, mercy and peace.
As you would guess, I don't kiss icons, and I'm generally uneasy with them. In fact, I'm one of those dreaded Southern Baptists. Yet I must be a follower of Jesus first, not a Baptist first. We need missionaries to every place where there is no Christianity or dead Christianity...not to convert people to or from Orthodoxy or Baptist-ism, but to convert people to the Jesus whom you and I both serve. Romanós, while I disagree with some of your beliefs, I'd have to be spiritually blind not to see the reality of your faith in Jesus.
ReplyDeleteJim, this is where our common ground in Jesus Christ the only foundation Stone that can ever be laid, and for ever, justifies and actualizes the love we have from Him for each other, that an Orthodox and a Southern Baptist can love and support each other, because we are both followers of Jesus before all else, and because our disagreements can never stand in the way of our first Love. Jesus Christ is the Only Mediator between man and God, and even between man and man, and when we remember that, everything else falls into place, and we find ourselves entering the same heaven, just as we have escaped the same hell, together.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comment, and also for your friendship. Everything that is in Jesus is preserved forever.