12.
Why is
it essential to have icons?
Icons are a visual form of theology
that accomplish a silent preaching, and through the
centuries they have taught Christians how to know and love the Lord and His
holy ones, the saints. St. Basil the Great says in his Liturgy that Christ is
the icon of God the Father. When Christ appeared on earth, those who then loved
God the Father loved God the Son. Since that time, those who love icons thereby
reaffirm their love for God in visible form, the God-Man Jesus Christ.
Having and honoring icons is deeply
rooted in the Sacred Apostolic Tradition of Christianity. Dr. Constantine
Cavarnos notes this fact in his book Orthodox
Iconography, and he goes on to list seven important reasons why it is
necessary to adhere to this ancient practice. The professor states that:
(1) The most obvious function of icons is that
they enhance the beauty of a church, an idea that appears in the writings of
the Holy Fathers. A church is the house of God and a house of prayer. As such,
it should be made as beautiful as possible, especially inside, where Christians
gather to worship. The beauty of the church must bear the impress of holiness,
and the pleasure evoked by it must transcend that of mere esthetics. It must be
spiritual.
(2) Icons instruct the faithful in matters pertaining to the Christian
faith, a point emphasized by the Greek Fathers. As St. John of Damascus
remarks, since not everyone is literate, nor has the leisure for reading, the
Holy Fathers agreed that Christ's Incarnation, His association with men, His
miracles, His Crucifixion and Resurrection, and so on, should be represented on
icons. St. Photios, Patriarch of Constantinople, states that: “Just as speech
is transmitted by hearing, so a form through sight is imprinted on the tablets
of the soul, giving to those whose apprehension is not spoiled by [evil]
doctrines a representation of knowledge constant with piety.” Likewise, St.
Basil teaches that “what the spoken account presents through the sense of
hearing, the painting silently shows by representation.” St. Photios goes on to
add that icons not only teach, as written accounts also do, but in some cases
are more vivid than written accounts and thus are superior to the latter as a
means of instruction. As an example, he gives the representation of the deeds
of the martyrs. Icons present simultaneously and concisely many things: a
place, persons and objects, things that would take an appreciable amount of
time to describe in words.
Also
commenting on the icon's capacity to teach, Leonid Ouspensky and Vladimir
Lossky explain that:
The icon contains and professes the same truth as the Gospels and
therefore, like the Gospels, is based on exact concrete data, and in no way on
invention, for otherwise it could not explain the Gospels nor correspond to
them. Thus the icon is placed on a level with the Holy Scriptures and with the
Cross, as one of the forms of revelation and knowledge of God, in which divine
and human will and action become blended [The
Meaning of Icons, p.30].
The Fathers of the Seventh
Ecumenical Council fully concurred. They stated that “by means of these two
ways which complete one another, that is, by reading [Scripture] and by the
visible image, we gain a knowledge of the same thing.”
Thus, the icon is one of the ways God is revealed to man. Through icons,
Christians receive a vision of the spiritual world, for icons are windows into
that world, windows into Heaven, and they are lights which guide us there.
(3) Being preoccupied with everyday
worldly matters and pursuits, Christians can forget things that are of vital
importance — that is, they can fall asleep spiritually. Icons serve as a reminder
of the spiritual realm and as a means of awakening people. St. John of Damascus
writes in this regard that “many times, doubtless, when we do not have in mind
the Passion of the Lord, upon seeing the icon of Christ's Crucifixion, we
recall His saving suffering.”
(4) Icons additionally serve to lift
Christians up to the prototypes, to a higher level of consciousness, of thought
and feeling. As Dr. Cavarnos explains:
The prophets, Apostles, martyrs, saints in general, enjoy a higher level
of being than we do in our ordinary, distracted everyday life. When we see
their icons, we recall their superior character and deeds; and as we recall
them, we think pure, sublime thoughts and experience higher feelings. Thus, for
a while we live on a higher plane of being. As St. John Damascene remarks, “We
are led by perceptible icons to the contemplation of the divine and spiritual”
[p. 32].
Metropolitan
Laurus of Jordanville further notes that:
Orthodox iconography is not realistic, but symbolic. It cannot and
should not illustrate anything that is of this world, which lies in evil,
disfigured by sin, carrying in itself the stamp of sin and attracting to sin.
Iconography should not remind one of anything worldly. On the contrary, it
should attract one's thoughts and feelings away from all worldliness and carry
us over into another, higher world, the spiritual world. Not only should
Raphael's madonnas not be found in Orthodox churches, but also all art that cannot
cut us off from everything earthly, art which, even though it might seem to be
inspired and beautiful from the point of view of aesthetics, nevertheless portrays
only worldly images encountered upon earth and bound up with the world.
Iconography, as well as church chant, should completely separate us from the
world. Without this it is not Orthodox and cannot instruct us in Orthodoxy
[“The Significance of the Practical Study of Liturgies,” Orthodox Life, vol. 45, no. 4, 1995, pp. 46-47].
Dr.
Cavarnos goes on to state that the icon's essentially symbolic nature is
manifest in its ability to lift Christians up to a higher level. An icon is not
an end in itself, it is not merely an aesthetic object to be enjoyed for
whatever artistic merits it possesses, but it is essentially a symbol, carrying
us beyond itself. It is designed to lead us from the physical and
psychophysical to the spiritual realm. Thus, the icon is a pattern (typos) of something heavenly (St. John
of Damascus).
(5) Icons serve to inspire people to
imitate the virtues of the holy ones depicted on them. Icons help in this way
because of their capacity to instruct in the Christian faith, to remind people
of its truth, aims and values, and also because of their ability to lift
viewers to the prototypes. Thus, one of the decrees of the Seventh Ecumenical
Council states that “the more continually holy personages are seen in icons,
the more are the beholders lifted up to the memory of the prototypes and to an
aspiration after them.”
(6) Icons have the ability to
transform one's character, one's whole being. Icons help sanctify people. As
Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos points out, the Synodikon of Orthodoxy
proclaims that by bowing before holy icons and looking at them, the eyes are
sanctified and the nous (a term the
Holy Fathers used to designate the eye of the soul) is lifted up towards the
knowledge of God. Dr. Cavarnos adds that icons help solve the problem of human
transformation and regeneration “by instructing us, reminding us, and stirring
us up morally and spiritually.” This function of the icon is based on the
principle that we become like that which we habitually contemplate. True icons
focus the distracted, dispersed soul of man on spiritual perfection, on the
divine, and they arouse in him the desire to emulate those who have achieved
spiritual beauty. Icons incite the beholder “to see more clearly and steadily
Him Who to see is to love, and loving Whom one becomes
what He originally intended us to be.” By dwelling steadily and lovingly on
such perfection, the professor concludes, we come to partake of it more and
more.
(7) Icons have a liturgical
function, serving as a means of worship and veneration. Like sacred music, the
icon is used as a means of worshiping God and venerating His saints. As such,
Dr. Cavarnos explains, it is “essentially symbolic, leading the soul from the
visible to the invisible, from the material to the spiritual, from the symbol
to the prototype or original which it represents.” The professor sums up the
liturgical function of icons in his notation that:
Neither God nor the saints, of course, need the honor which we offer
them, be it by means of icons, or by means of hymns and music. But it is only
proper for us to do so, as the adoration of God and the admiration of saints
are expressions of a soul that sees and loves the beauty of holiness, of
spiritual perfection, and feels grateful to the Deity and to holy men for their
many benefactions to mankind. Such a response is not merely something proper
for us, but it is also conducive to our salvation. The following remark of John
Damascene calls to attention this point, and at the same time it has a bearing
on several of the functions served by icons: “I enter the common
place-of-therapy of souls, the church, choked as it were by the thorns of
worldly thoughts. The bloom of painting attracts me,
it delights my sight like a meadow, and secretly evokes in my soul the desire
to glorify God. I behold the martyr, the crowns awarded, and
my zeal is aroused like fire; I fall down and worship God through the martyr,
and receive salvation” [p. 34].
Iconoclasm,
the condemnation of icons, results when the important function of icons is not
understood, and when the crucial distinction between honorable reverence and worship
is overlooked. The failure to differentiate between these two categories was
the cause of the Byzantine Emperor Leo the Isaurian's issuing an edict in 726
that condemned the making and veneration of icons as contrary to the Second
Commandment, and as idolatry.
Following the upheaval against
iconography on the part of the Iconoclasts, the Seventh Ecumenical Council
expressed the dogma of the veneration of holy icons in the following words:
We therefore... define with all certitude and accuracy that just as the
figure of the precious and life-giving Cross, so also the venerable and holy
images... should be set forth in the holy churches of God [for veneration]....
For by so much more frequently as they are seen in artistic representation
[that is, the Lord Jesus Christ, the Theotokos, the angels and saints who are
depicted in the icons], by so much more readily are men lifted up to the memory
of their prototypes, and to a longing after them. And to these should be given
due salutation and honorable reverence [Greek: timetike proskynesis], not indeed that true worship of faith
[Greek: latreia] which pertains alone
to the divine nature; but to these... incense and lights may be offered.... For
the honor which is paid to the image passes on to that which the image
represents [Eerdmans Seven Ecumenical
Councils, p. 550].
The Greek Fathers distinguish very sharply between “honorable reverence”
which is accorded to icons, and “worship.” The
veneration of icons is reverential respect or admiration, whereas worship is accorded only to God.
Moreover, the Fathers emphasized that the veneration given to icons goes to the
prototype that it represents — that is, to Christ, the Theotokos, to some
martyr or other saint. In the words of St. Basil, which were repeated by St.
John of Damascus and other defenders of icons, “The honor which is given to the
icons passes over to the prototype.” That is, in venerating icons, the honor
one renders to the images passes to the person represented on the image.
Therefore, the charge of idolatry shows gross ignorance with regard to the
nature and function of icons.
As the same charge of idolatry is
sometimes repeated today, it is necessary to emphasize that Orthodox do not
approach icons as idols, but as the spiritual image of the one to whom the soul
addresses itself in prayer. It is also necessary to point out that the strict
prohibition in Scripture against the making of idols and the worship of them
does not apply to Christian icons. Protopresbyter Michael Pomazansky explains
that the images of false gods, and people's worship of them, entailed the
worship of demons (or else imaginary beings that have no existence), and thus
it entailed the worship of lifeless objects themselves (wood, stone or gold).
Scripture strictly instructs that one is to put a difference between holy and unholy, between unclean
and clean (cf. Lev 10:10).
The person who cannot see the difference between sacred images and idols
blasphemes and defiles icons. Such a person commits sacrilege and is subject to
the condemnation in Sacred Scripture, which warns: “Thou that abhorrest idols, dost thou commit sacrilege?” (Rom 2:22).
St. Nikolai Velimirovich also
addresses the charges of idolatry made against Orthodoxy over its veneration of
icons. The bishop asks:
Who has waged war against idolatry through the ages, if not the Orthodox
Church, millions of whose faithful have sacrificed themselves
in this victorious battle? Who else has destroyed idolatry? So how could the
Church that has destroyed idolatry be idolatrous? [Homilies: a Commentary on the Gospel Readings for Great Feasts and
Sundays Throughout the Year, vol. 1, p. 137].
A
hieromonk notes that Calvinists disdain icons, based on their rejection of the
Seventh Ecumenical Council. However, as he goes on to point out, as the
fundamental concern of all the Ecumenical Councils was Christological and
soteriological, the obdurate refusal to recognize even one of them signifies in
and of itself a major departure from basic Christian doctrine. Also, as another
hieromonk explains (one who entered Orthodoxy from the Episcopal Church), after
Protestants threw icons out of their churches through the doors, they brought them back in through the windows. That is, icons were reintroduced into Protestant churches
through stained glass windows. And, the hieromonk adds,
Protestants do not regard these icons as graven images.
No doubt the most rabid attack
against icons comes from the Jehovah's Witnesses, even though these people have
pictures — icons — of their loved
ones in their wallets and homes. Once when a Greek bishop was reviled by one of
the witnesses over the matter of icons, the bishop asked the witness to show
him some pictures of his family members. When the witness produced pictures
from his wallet, the bishop reminded him that the Jehovah's Witnesses are
against icons, meaning that he should tear up all these pictures, as well as
all his pictures at home. When the witness replied that he does not worship
these pictures, the bishop stated that likewise, neither do the Orthodox
worship images. The Orthodox, he explained, honor and kiss icons,
which is passed along to the archetype, as the Fathers and teachers of
the Church have stated. The bishop continued, saying that when the witness'
mind and heart go out to his loved ones in the pictures, he does not call this
idolatry. Neither therefore can the Orthodox be accused of idolatry because
they venerate icons. The icon itself is not an object of worship.
There are many idols in the modern
age, among which are luxury, wealth, recognition, and many other things to
which people attach more importance than God.
Some who spend their entire lives in the
pursuit of these and other idols of the world, and in serving mammon rather
than God, would accuse Orthodoxy of idolatry because of its veneration of
icons. However, the obvious fact remains that icons are not idols.
The attack on icons now seems to be
abating. For some time, there has been a return in the West to the icon, which
was forgotten for the space of so many centuries.
The
use of images has its beginnings in Old Testament times. During the forty years
of wandering in the desert, the Hebrews made camp on Mount Sinai for a whole year, and
there, at God's command, they constructed a tabernacle, a transportable
sanctuary, in the form of a tent. Inside the tabernacle's holy of holies was
the Ark of the Covenant, which was a wooden chest covered inside and out with
gold, and upon which were two golden
images of the Cherubim (Exodus 25:18-22). St. John of Damascus traces the origin of iconography back to this
time, to the Mosaic people, who “venerated on all hands the tabernacle, which
was an image [eikon in Greek] and
pattern of heavenly things, or rather of the whole of creation” [Migne, PG,
1864, vol. 94, cols. 1168-76]. (The word icon
is a transliteration of the Greek eikon.
In Greek it means image, likeness, representation).
It is important to note here that the same Moses, through whom God gave the
commandment against graven images, received at the same time an order from God
to place representations of the Cherubim in the inner part of the temple to
which people turned for the worship of God. Therefore, the fact that God
Himself gave instructions to include images — icons — in the place of worship
completely nullifies the mistaken notion that all images are prohibited
by the Second Commandment.
While there are numerous depictions
on the walls and curtains of the Old Testament Temple, there were no depictions
of the departed righteous ones like those seen in the Christian Church. The reason for their absence is because the righteous ones of Old
Testament times were awaiting their deliverance, were waiting to be
brought up out of hades. This deliverance was accomplished by the descent into
hades and Resurrection of Christ. As the Apostle Paul writes: “They without us
should not be made perfect” (Heb 11:40). The righteous ones of the
Old Testament were glorified as saints only in the New Testament.
Christ, the Incarnate God,
sanctified the use of icons through a miraculous image He sent to Abgar, the
ruler of the neighboring kingdom of Edessa. Abgar, who had leprosy, had heard of Christ's preaching and miracles
during His public ministry and had heard that He was not welcome by many in Judea. He
therefore sent his court artist, Ananias, to invite Jesus to come to his
kingdom. If He did not come, then Ananias was to paint His portrait so that at
least the king could see an image of His face, for he felt that if he could
just see what this remarkable Individual looked like, somehow he would be
healed.
Ananias, upon seeing the
Lord-Healer, tried several times to capture His image. However, he was unable
to set His face down on the linen, for Jesus' face gave out rays of some unearthly
light, it is said. At that time, Jesus, knowing all things, and knowing the
sincere desire of the king, pressed a cloth to His face and imprinted the
character of His divine image upon it. He then gave the image to Ananias with
the message that one of His disciples would visit King Abgar to heal that which
the image did not heal.
When the king beheld this sacred
image, the first Christian icon, he
was cured of his leprosy, save for one small spot on his face. Later, after
Christ's death and Resurrection, the holy disciple Thaddeus of the seventy went
to Edessa and preached the Gospel of Life to the king and those with him. Having
received enlightenment and knowledge of the True God, all of them received
Baptism, at which time the last spot of leprosy left the king.
This sacred image of Christ was
carefully preserved in Edessa for many centuries, even during the persecution of the Church. It was
subsequently transferred to Constantinople in 944, where it was brought out in procession and veneration once each
year. Later, during the Fourth Crusade in 1204, the image disappeared and was
never revealed again.
(In the Fourth Crusade, for three
days Orthodox Christian blood ran in the streets of Constantinople as a massive amount
of art, treasures and monuments were stolen from churches and carried off to
the West as plunder. In this officially sponsored robbery, the Latin marauders
placed prostitutes upon the altars of Orthodox churches as they went about a
wanton spree of murder, pillage and sacrilege. To assuage their notorious greed
for booty, they tore to pieces the altar and iconostasis of the Church of the
Holy Wisdom in Constantinople and brought mules into the sanctuary to carry the gold and silver away.
This systematic looting was undertaken by the Latin clergy, to whom it proved
an irresistible chance of a lifetime to enrich Western Europe's abbeys and
monasteries with Byzantium's holiest relics — reputedly Christendom's finest
collection).
All icons of Christ were made from
the same prototype and pattern of this holy napkin until its disappearance in
the Fourth Crusade. Moreover, as it is shown with this first Christian icon,
icons are Apostolic, they are healing, and they even pre-date the Gospels being written down.
The Evangelist Luke painted icons,
the first of which was the Vladimir icon of the Mother of God holding the Pre-Eternal Child. There still
exist today many icons painted by St. Luke.
Protopresbyter Michael Pomazansky
states that it is natural to suppose that in the early history of Christianity,
the first need was that the people be drawn away from pagan idol-worship, and
only later could there be brought into being the idea of the fullness of forms
for glorifying God and His saints. Among these forms there is a place for
glorification in colors, in sacred images.
The use of icons by Christians, as
was noted, goes back to the first century of Christianity. Ecclesiastical
archaeology has found that in the ancient Christian Church, there were sacred images
in the catacombs and other places of assembly for prayer. A rudimentary art
existed among Christians of the first two centuries. It employed such forms as
the dove (a symbol of the peace of Christ), the fish and the Shepherd (symbols
of Christ), and the peacock (a symbol of the Resurrection). Also, as early as
the first century, Christians used representations of events in Holy Scripture
on their tombs, and pictorial representations of events from the life of
Christ, dating most likely from the early part of the second century, have been
found in catacombs of Rome and Alexandria. Until the outbreak of Iconoclasm in 726, iconographic representations
increased with each succeeding century, and iconography became more refined.
Before a board has the countenance
of Christ portrayed on it, it is only a piece of wood. Once the image of Christ
is painted on it, however, the wood becomes sanctified and is a source
of sanctification for people, even if the wood is of inferior quality. This
ability to sanctify is seen in the beginning of the repentance and con of the
Bulgarian people to Orthodox Christianity, something that happened because of
an icon of the Last Judgment. When St. Methodius showed it to King Boris and
explained it, the icon made such an impression on him that Boris, and along
with him all the Bulgarian people, came to believe in Christ. Something this
extraordinary could happen because, as St. Seraphim of Sarov explains, the grace of God works through icons. The
saint goes on to state that icons heal sinners,
... and not only their bodies, but their souls, too, so that even
sinners, according to their faith in the grace of Christ present in the icons,
were saved and attained the Kingdom of Heaven.
St.
John of Kronstadt further instructs that:
If anyone would ask you why you pray to soulless icons, what profit you
derive from them, say that we derive incomparably greater profit from our icons
than we do from the kindest and most benevolent living persons; say that
blessed power and help to our souls always comes to us through the icons,
saving us from sins, sorrows and sicknesses, especially from the icons of the
Savior and of the Mother of God; that one single look with faith upon them, as
upon the living and those who are near to us, saves us from cruel sorrows,
passions and spiritual darkness; that if touching the Savior’s garment, and the
garments and handkerchiefs of the Apostles could restore health to the sick,
much more are the images of the Savior and the Mother of God powerful to heal
believers of every affliction, in accordance with their faith in the Lord and
His Mother.
Archimandrite
Panteleimon of Jordanville explains that the most powerful witness to the
holiness of icons is the innumerable signs and miracles that the Lord condescends
to accomplish through them, especially through those termed miraculous. Orthodox Russia abounded
with these icons, and several have been brought to North America. Fr. Panteleimon notes that
these icons are fountains of healing
and have cured people of many afflictions — some from despondency, some from
passions, some from life's sorrows, and some from bodily illnesses, and he
notes that these icons have healed each and everyone alike from wounds of the
soul, from sins.
To have icons and venerate them by
honoring them is an Apostolic Tradition,
one that Christians are bound to revere and observe. However, this tradition
refers only to holy (or Byzantine)
icons — that is, icons of the solemn, spiritual and hieratic style that depict
deified humanity. Through their spiritual expression, these traditional icons
inspire compunction and raise people up from the world of matter to the world
of spirit, to the holy prototypes, and to God. Traditional icons are faithful
to the highest degree to the spirit of Apostolic Tradition.
There is a great difference between
Orthodox iconography and Western religious painting. Since the Italian
Renaissance of the fourteenth century, the Latin Church began to abandon the
sacred art of the ancient Christian period, and it began to employ
naturalistic, carnal religious paintings that hold mankind captive to the world
of matter and flesh. In this new Western religious art, sacred subjects served
as a pretext to express the subjective feelings and ideas of a painter, and
oftentimes crudely sensual and sentimental elements would creep into the
features of the subjects, giving an insipid quality to the art. Commenting on
the West's great deviation from Orthodox iconography, Protopriest Victor
Potapov writes that:
In the Orthodox notion, an icon depicts the world glorified; in it there
ought not to be anything earthly or worldly. Therefore, the techniques of
depiction are altogether different from those that are used in realistic
painting.
Rome has completely
departed from classic Byzantine fundamentals. This was expressed particularly
forcefully during the epoch of the Renaissance. The very philosophical
direction of this period hymns man's egoism and powerfulness, his
self-perception in the surrounding material environment. As a result, the
ecclesiastical art of the West also headed along this path — along the path of
free creativity, independent of the Church and its enactments. A free attitude
toward Church ideas and a mixing of Church traditions with contemporary reality
resulted in Western religious art allowing the distortion of the sacred image
by striving toward human, earthly sensuality.
That which the ancient Church so painstakingly avoided
— the influence of antique pagan painting and realism — was in full measure
reborn in Western Christianity and has covered the walls of the largest
Catholic churches and cathedrals.
Naked bodies, contemporary dress and decor became the norm, while spiritual
beauty was reduced to something worldly and everyday [Orthodoxy and Heterodoxy].
The great chasm between Byzantine
iconography and Western religious art can be seen in a Western madonna, where the Mother of God is depicted as a woman no
different from all other women. (At times, it is even blasphemous. An example
is a painting by Fouquet in which the king's mistress is used in place of the
Mother of God). On the other hand, an icon of the Theotokos imparts the
fragrance of sanctity and communicates the divine motherhood. In the Mother of
God of Vladimir, for example, one can feel the spirit of faith, the imprint of
Orthodoxy. Likewise, where the Pre-Eternal Child is shown in Western paintings
as a baby indistinguishable from all other babies, an Orthodox icon shows the
teaching of the Church on the Incarnation of God and Divine Wisdom.
In eighteenth-century Russia,
and then among the Greeks after the Revolution of 1821, innovative icons
modeled after Roman Catholic paintings of the Renaissance were introduced. Like
their Western prototypes, these icons were ostentations, worldly and devoid of
spirituality. The outstanding Russian philosopher and gifted writer, Prince
Evgenii Nikolaevich Trubetskoi, examines these realistic paintings of the
Western models and notes that they depict Christ and the saints with “puffy
faces,” “red mouths,” “thick arms,” “fat thighs,” and the like. He remarks that
“icons must not be painted from living people,” because an icon is not a
portrait, but a prototype of the future man-within-the-Church.” [Icons: Theology in Color, pp. 20-22.] As
Dr. Cavarnos further remarks, the aspect of the figures depicted must be
unworldly, ascetic, their features refined, spiritualized.
Western icons patterned after
Western religious paintings are not only unrelated to the Orthodox Christian
faith, but are contrary to it, since their expression is carnal, not spiritual.
The tradition to honor icons does not apply to innovative icons modeled after
Roman Catholic paintings of the Italian Renaissance. In fact, it is an
infringement of Apostolic Tradition to use worldly icons.
Fortunately, the deviation from
iconographic tradition has largely ceased, and Byzantine icons are replacing
innovative ones. Traditional iconography, with its unsurpassed spiritual
beauty, has commanded such high respect that Byzantine icons are sought-after throughout
the world, even by the non-Orthodox. As Michael Whelton, a convert to
Orthodoxy, writes, even when he and his wife were still Roman Catholics, “iconographic art always struck us as a more mature religious
art form.” [Two Paths... p. 15.] Mr.
Whelton's observations are echoed in Herbert Reed, a famous English
aesthetician and art critic, who wrote: “Byzantine painting is the highest form
of religious painting that Christianity has known.” [The Meaning of Art, p. 117].
A Greek monk remarked in a lecture
that Satan, realizing that the Church has saved countless souls through the
centuries through icons, presents a parody of icons — that is, fallen, evil
images, on TV and in the movies. As another monk noted, whereas icons, being
windows into Heaven, remind one of the importance of the spiritual life, thus
sanctifying and saving a person, the evil images presented on TV, being windows
into hell, accustom people to terrible sins without showing the disastrous
results. As he went on to state, fallen visual entertainment has come to
dominate the world to an incredible degree, and brainwashing people and
changing their outlook on life as it does, it gradually destroys a person.
Because the Orthodox Christian home
is like a family Church (Rom.
16:5), an Orthodox chooses an eastern wall or corner of a room in which to set
up an icon corner. In this area are icons of Christ, the Theotokos, and those
saints to whom one regularly prays. According to a tradition dating to the time
when Christians held their services in the catacombs, oil-burning lampadas are
kept lit in front of the icons (never votive candles).
At the Russian monastery in
Jordanville, New York, the flames burning in front of the icons throughout the
churches were brought over from those burning before Christ's tomb in the
Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem. The Russian monks at Jordanville,
following the practice of the monks on Mount Athos, instruct that the flames of the
lampadas should be low, or what they call passionless. That is, the flames
should burn steadily and not flicker. With a low flame, one is not distracted
when one prays before icons.
It is an ancient custom to take
icons on journeys. Recently the remains of a Russian ship, the Slava Rossii, which went down off the
southern coast of France in 1870, were discovered. Recovered from the wreckage were over eighty
small metal icons used by the sailors in their daily devotions. One authority
writes of this find:
Why were such metal icons so numerous aboard the Slava Rossii? Ever
since the early Christian period, icons had functioned as palladia — that is,
as protectors. The sailors were probably no more pious than other members of
Russian society, and in carrying such icons were probably expressing their
native devoutness and the natural desire to be kept safe from harm [Diane Le
Berrurieur, “Icons from the Deep,” Archaeology,
vol. 41, no. 6, 1998, p. 27].
Like
the Russian sailors, one ought to maintain this ancient custom when traveling
by taking along a small diptych or triptych icon. When one stops for the night
or takes a rest during one's travels, one should determine the direction of
east and pray facing in that direction before the icons. Praying facing east is
an ancient Christian custom mentioned by St. Basil the Great in his treatise On the Holy Spirit. This Holy Father
writes that “we all look to the east in our prayers, but few of us know that we
are seeking our own old country, Paradise, which God planted in the east.”
In venerating icons, one should
approach them with the same reverence and love that one reserves for the Holy
Cross and Holy Scriptures. One venerates icons in order to communicate the
reverence, respect and love that one holds for the subject of an icon. As it is
not unusual for people to kiss the pictures of their beloved ones, so likewise
Christians, as pilgrims in this fallen world, should reverently kiss the images
of the holy persons in Heaven — the Savior, His All-Pure Mother, and the
martyrs and other saints.
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