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I.
In the original Greek, the word for
"image" (imago, Latin) is "icon."
Iconography began in the Old Testament. Images were
indeed permitted in the Scriptures. God forbade the
Hebrews to create images of God, because no one had ever
seen Him: "And the Lord spake to you out of the
midst of the fire a voice of words, which he heard, and
ye saw no likeness, only a voice." [Dt.4:12]
"Take good heed to your souls, for ye saw no image
in the day wherein the Lord spake to you in Horeb in the
mountain, out of the midst of the fire." [Dt.4:15]
But while at the same time God forbade the Hebrews to
create images of God, He spoke to Moses, giving him a
command: "And thou shalt make a mercy seat, a lid of
pure gold, the length of two cubits and a half, and the
breadth of a cubit and a half. And thou shalt make two
cherubim graven in gold, and thou shalt put them on both
sides of the mercy seat. They shall be made one cherub on
this side, and another cherub on the other side of the
mercy seat, and thou shalt make the two cherubim on both
sides. The cherubim shall stretch forth their wings
above, overshadowing the mercy seat with their wings; and
their faces shall be toward the mercy seat. And thou
shalt put into the Ark the Testimonies which I shall give
thee. And I will make myself known to thee from thence,
and I will speak to thee above the mercy seat between the
two cherubim, which are upon the Ark of the Testimony,
even in all things which I enjoin thee concerning the
children of Israel." [Ex.25:17-22]
Since
God Himself allowed us to see what the cherubic angels
looked like, they could now be represented in form by us.
But not only the images of the two cherubim's were seen
as icons, but the Tabernacle itself, the icon or image of
Heaven , the Holy of Holies, the Throne of God, from
where God spoke to man. God prohibited images;
representations of Himself simply for one reason; He had
never been seen, while not forbidding the image of other
things visible to us.
In the fullness of time, God put on flesh; He made
himself a man. Now, not only had we seen God in the
flesh, but we had seen His face. Now there was a certain
obligation to make an icon of God in the flesh as a means
of education and veneration.. The failure to depict Him
in images suggested that He had not become man. One
cannot separate God from Jesus Christ; it is impossible
to create an icon of Christ without, at the same time,
making God present.
To paint an icon of Christ, and deny the presence of
God in the icon of Christ is the denial of the Divine
Economy; hence, the denial of our salvation. But what is
not being depicted is God's nature. Only the humanity of
Christ. "Being indepictable in thy Divine nature, O
Master, Thou didst deign to be depicted when, in these
last days, Thou becamest Incarnate...." [Third
Sticheron of the Great Vespers for the Sunday of
Orthodoxy] "While depicting Thy Divine likeness in
icons, O Christ, we openly proclaim Thy Nativity..."
[Kathisma of Matins, Sunday of Orthodoxy] "He who
seeth Me, seeth Him that sent Me" [Jn.12:45] said
the Lord. Elsewhere Christ said to Philip: "Have I
been so long with you, and yet thou hast not known Me,
Philip? He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father; and
how sayest thou then, show us the Father?"
[Jn.14:9]. The Church has taught Her people that, in the
icon of Christ, we also "see" God the Father.
Christ is the very Image or Icon of the Father; so where
One is present so is the Other
II.
There have always been those who deny the icon:
iconoclasts. On the first Sunday of Great Lent, the
Orthodox Church celebrates the restoration of the Holy
Icons, which were banished during the time of the
Byzantine Empire, Leo III the Emperor, in the year 726.
He openly took the position against the painting and
veneration of icons. During this time a terrible number
of Orthodox Christians were martyred --- some for
painting them, for hiding icons in their homes, for
publically confessing them as part of the Orthodox Faith,
and declaring that the renunciation of the icon as a
reunciation of Christ Himself.
Our people have
understood that there are not two religious categories,
one of things of primary importance, others of secondary
importance. Once such a distinction is drawn, there is
much trouble. In the words of St John of Damascus,
"We do not change the boundries marked out by the
Fathers; we keep the tradition as we have received it. We
beseech, therefore, the People of God, the faithful
flock, to hold fast to the ecclesiastical traditions. The
gradual taking away of what has been handed down to us
would be undermining the foundation stones, and would in
short time overthrow the whole structure" (On the
Holy Icons). The defense of the icons, is the defense of
the Orthodox Faith. To defend the Faith, is to defend
Christ. This is why so many fathers, and mothers,
children, teachers, monks, priest, and bishops, have shed
their very blood willingly, knowing that this act of
martyrdom would secure the Faith and strengthen the flock
of Christ.
And so, for those who gave their lives and shed their
blood for the sake of the Holy Icons, for the celebration
of the victory of the re-establishment of the icons for
veneration, and worship, the Church has set aside a
special day, the Sunday of Orthodoxy. The fact that God
had become incarnate is the basic theology as to why the
Theotokos, and the Saints, and the Angels may be
depicted. Now man, in his deified state, may now be
depicted in the icon, since God deigned to dwell in us.
We do not worship man, but the Holy Trinity Who
sanctifies the object by His Grace . It is not idolatry
when reverencing the Saint, because the veneration is not
to the human person, but to God who dwells in him, who
sanctifies him. We venerate and worship the icon, but
adoration belongs to God. We honor and venerate the
Saints for their service to the Creator. "I will
dwell in them and walk in them, as God hath said"
[Cor.2, 6:19]. As well: "If a man love Me, he will
keep My words, and My Father will love him, and We will
come unto him and make Our abode with him"
[Jn.14:23] "Know ye not," says the apostle
Paul, "that your body is the temple of the Holy
Spirit which is in you?" [Cor.1, 6:19] Also, Saint
John of Damscus says: "During their life, the Saints
are full of the Holy Spirit. After their death, the Grace
of the Holy Spirit continues to dwell inseperable in
their souls, in their bodies, in their sepulchres, in
their images and their holy icons, and this not by
essence, but by Grace and energy."
The icon is one of the many mysteries of the Orthodox
Church. It is not merely paint set upon a canvas, or a
piece of wood as if it were a lifeless artifice of the
human imagination. Christ, the Theotokos, the Saints, and
angels, are mysteriously present in their icons;
mystically, spiritually, by the Uncreated Energies of
God. The forms and their surroundings are not arbitrary.
The icon is not just another form of art. It is the
standard for all art. It is art par exellence.
Iconography is historically and theologically factual.
Imagination, personal ideas, human emotion, and the self,
has no place in iconography.
III.
The iconographer, just as all Orthodox Christians,
must be humble of heart. Contrition will purify his heart
to enable him to see clearly his task. Or rather so that
he may have the Holy Spirit dwelling in him fully, in
order to allow God to work through Him.
Dr. Constantine Cavarnos, a friend of the late Photios
Kontoglou of blessed memory, and author of the book,
"Byzantine Thought And Art" says, "With
regard to the creation of works of spirirtual art,
Kontoglou holds that there is presupposed a certain
inward state. Such works, he believes, cannot be created
"by any carnal man, even though he be the greatest
master." They can be produced [i.e., icons] only by
an artist, even though he be unlettered, who fasts,
prays, and lives "in a state of contrition and
humility." For only then is the soul "imbued
with Grace, soars upward with spiritual wings, and
becomes capable of representing the deep realm of
mysteries."
This is also true for those who gaze upon the icon. In
other words, if a man is carnal, worldly, and has his
cares in this world, or if he is impious, then his
spiritual awareness belongs to the Devil. If a mans heart
desires the things of the world then he cannot comprehend
the mystery, or the beauty of the spiritual and
sanctified world. Dr. Cavarnos continues,
"Similarly, says Kontoglou, the beauty expressed by
such works is not perceived by carnal, sophisticated,
impious men any more than is the truth and beauty of
"the Gospels and of everything that emits a
spiritual fragrance." Such persons only understand
the language of the senses; spiritual art, however,
"does not address itself to the senses, but to the
spirit."
The iconographer is merely a tool. The Holy Spirit is
the conductor, the guide. The paint brush is empty and is
useless, unless the painter picks up the brush and guides
it along. It is the same with the iconographer. The
iconographer is like the brush, and the Holy Spirit is
the conductor.
Not just any color, but "sacred colors",
forms,"mystical forms", and appearence can be
given to the garments or the background of the icon. The
face is the central focus of the icon.There is a unique
approach to it. The icon must bring to the heart and
mind, to the soul and spirit, the prescence of God, and
His grace in a literal way.
The
face, along with the subtle gestures of the body; the
feet, and hands, the entire body, even the posture is
significant. Even the technique of applying the paint to
the drawing, which will become the icon, makes the
difference between a truly beautiful icon, and one that
is flawed. These features make the icon meek, and humble,
or intense and powerful. One may see Compassion and
contrition in one icon, and in another, one sees
judgment, sternness. Each one of these expressions can
move him or her who gazes upon the icon to a greater
spiritual level of faith.
Dr. Constantine Cavarnos says that Photios Kontoglou
"emphasizes the simplicity, clarity, restraint,
power, originality and great spirituality of Byzantine
art", this is to say iconography. He continues,
"This art, he [Kontoglou] observes, is "an art
with most powerful character and with the greatest
spirituality and originality." Dr. Cavarnos
continues, "But there are many, Kontoglou is aware,
who think very differently. They look down upon Byzantine
art" [icons] "because it lacks naturalness. He
does not deny that Byzantine paintings and mosaics lack
what is called "naturalness." But he observes
that painting is not good because it is
"natural," in the sense of observing carefully
the anatomical structure of the body and the principles
of perspective, but for other reasons. A work may look
"natural and precisely for that reason not be
good." Thus the hands and feet in a Byzantine icon
may appear unnatural, yet they are truer, more
expressive, more artistic than the hands that have been
painted, say by Raphael."
"Byzantine iconogaphy, then, is not to be
condemned for not being naturalistic, realistic, or for
not reproducing faithfully the external world. For its
aim is something very different. Byzantine iconography
has a religious function. It seeks to express spiritual
things in order thereby to help man rise to a higher
level of being, to lift his soul to the blessedness of
God." Iconography is not meant to serve the
passions, but calm them, to bring the onlooker into a
truer, and higher reality than secular, worldly art. When
we gaze upon the icon, when we pray before the icon, we
are in communion with God and His Saints. The icons
intentention is to bring about repentence, and to ask God
to lift our minds and hearts, to a less worldly, but more
pious level of spirituality. The icon should soothe the
passions and calm our rage. When we look at the icon, the
icon will suggest to our minds to pray, if we are
spiritually opened to its message. Mr. Cavarnos tells us
that, "Kontoglou emphatically places inner,
spiritual beauty above external beauty, and spiritual art
above secular art. External, Physical beauty, he remarks,
is shallow and perishable, while spiritual beauty is deep
and imperishable. Physical beauty arouses the outer
senses; spiritual beauty, the inner senses-- it makes us
feel reverence, humility, contrition, the
"gladdening sorrow" of which Saint John of
Climacos speaks."
IV.
When we venerate the icon, when we kiss them, when we
speak to Christ, or the Theotokos, and the Saints and the
angels through the icon, they receive our kiss, they hear
our voice. By the power of divine Grace these actions
pass though the icon and are received by the prototype.
Leonid Ouspensky the writer of the book "Theology Of
The Icon" says that, "The icon is venerable and
holy precisely because it portrays and bears his
name". Meaning, that the icon is holy simply because
of the Saint who's name is on the icon. When the
iconographer has finished painting the icon, the last
thing he/she puts on the icon is the name of the Saint.
At once, as soon as the name is painted on the icon, the
Saint becomes present in the icon, and at this point is
what makes the icon holy, but not only the spirit of the
Saint, but the Grace and mystical energy of God enters
into it. Ouspensky continues: "This is why grace,
characteristic of the prototype, is present in the icon.
In other words, it is the grace that the relationship
between the faithful and the Saint is brought about
through the intermediary of the icon of the Saint. The
icon participates in the holiness of its prototype and,
through the icon, we in turn participate in this holiness
in our prayers." Dr. Alexander Kalomiros, lay
theologian, and author of "Against False
Union", and "Figures Of Things Celestial",
tells us "Through the icon, we participate in that
holiness according to the measure of the purity of our
hearts; we receive the Grace which flows from the
material of the ikon. We are mystically sanctified by the
operation of the Holy Spirit." Dr. Kalomiros
continues, "The ikons show us poor men the Kingdom
of God coming with power, according to the measure of
man's capacity and receptivity, even as the
Transfiguration of Our Lord on Tabor revealed His glory
to the three disciples "as each one could
endure." The iconographer possesses an unbelievable
gift from God. He/She is able to bring the Saints, the
angels, the Theotokos, and even Christ God Himself to
earth. They are present with us, in their icons. They are
there in a very literal way; mystically, spiritually.
"In truth, how strange is God's will! He has chosen
humble matter, which we despise, to make it into a
vehicle of His Grace. The oil of Holy Unction, the water
of Baptism, the myrrh of Holy Chrism, the bread and wine
of the Holy Eucharist the bodies of the Saints, and their
ikons; all these material things, nevertheless, raise us
to Heaven, much more than those great and sublime ideas
which we men conceive with our poor minds."
[Alexandar Kalomiros]
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