4.11.2013

God's Windows

Long time readers know of my interest in Eastern Orthodox iconography (see the sidebar for some of my posts on the subject). Shoot, I even have a tattoo of Rublev's trinity icon on my arm.

A few years ago l lead a class at my church about Orthodox iconography. Crazy, I know, as I barely know anything myself about all this. But I was greatly aided by Fr. LeMasters, the priest at St. Luke's, our local Orthodox church. Fr. LeMasters kicked off the class by visiting our church and for the final class we went over to St. Luke's--Hooray, bible class field trip!--to see the icons at St. Luke's and hear from both Fr. LeMasters and St. Luke's iconographer. It was a really rich experience.

Anyway, I've been reading Ben Myer's excellent book about the theology of Rowan Williams--Christ the Stranger--and was struck by this passage in Ben's discussion of icons:
If you ask Roman catholic believers what it is that makes the church distinctive, they will probably begin speaking of the sacramental hierarchy by which the whole church is ordered and held together. Put the same question to contemporary Protestant theologians, and they will start telling you about 'practices,' those communal behaviors by which the church marks itself out as an alternative social order. But if you ask a Russian Orthodox believer what makes the church distinctive, she will think at once of holy lives: when she says the word 'church,' it is not the face of the bishop that comes to mind, nor merely her own face, but the faces of the saints.

Why are all the walls of Russian churches so crowded and cluttered with icons of the saints? It is not because the Orthodox love pictures, but because they love light. For the icons are not art works, but windows: they are the small openings through which the light of God bursts in upon the gathered church. It is here, in the lives and prayers of the saints, that the church is irradiated and sustained. The saints have lived in such proximity to God that they become a kind of intercession for the rest of us. God looks at us through them: they are God's windows.

3 comments:

  1. I love this. From stem to stern. qb

    ReplyDelete
  2. As a post-Evangelical pastor (who minored in Art History) with a Eastern Orthodox brother, I resonate with this post! Thank you. I remember my brother telling me about the Icons being mirrors, reflecting the saints around us. The church is so much more than what happens between God and me, and more about God being reflected in these saints' lives.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Rowan Williams has written 2 lovely little books on praying with icons, one on icons of Christ (The Dwelling of Light) and the other on icons of the Virgin (Ponder These Things).


    Dana

    ReplyDelete