In this post I'd like to make a couple of observations regarding the Orthodox iconography of Christ's baptism, the Nativity, and the Transfiguration. Specifically, beyond points of interest in each icon there are common artistic and theological motifs that run through all of Orthodox iconography.
Let's first look at the iconography of Christ's baptism, the first two icons in this post (and just double-click on the images for closer looks). John the Baptist stands on the a bank, blessing Jesus. In the second baptism icon we can see the tree with the ax at the root that we've noted before in John's icons. On the opposite bank are angels waiting to receive Jesus out of the water. If you look close you'll notice that their hands are covered as a sign of respect and adoration for what they are about to receive and touch.
Above Jesus there is a dark crack in the heavens and a dove descending, emerging out of this crack.
Jesus is laying in the Jordan as if it were a grave, a watery tomb. He's often dressed in a way similar to how he is depicted in crucifiction and burial portayals. The Jordan itself is a crack spliting two mountian peaks.
The point of interest for me is this motif of cracks in heaven and earth that is a recurring theme in much of the iconography of Jesus' life.
Jesus cracks Heaven and Earth.
We have already seen this cracking motif in the icons of the Harrowing of Hell, where the earth is cracked open to release those held under Sin's captivity. Further, in the iconography of the Crucifixion we saw the cross cracking open the earth to expose the bones of Adam allowing the saving blood of Christ to cover them. And now we see the cracking motif in the baptism of Christ iconography. The cleansing waters of baptism are seen as filling and washing the wounds of human existence.
This cracking motif is also seen, curiously, in the Nativity icons. The Nativity icons are very busy, in my opinion. Lot's of stuff going on. But the point I'd like to draw your attention to is how Mary sets the baby Jesus in a crack in the earth. This crack is clearly symbolic of hell as some icons portray demons in the crack. The image is clear: This infant is going to be the One who will enter hell and crack it open. This is a clear foreshadowing of the Harrowing of Hell icons. The following two icons are of the Nativity:
The second motif of the baptism icons is the cracking of heaven. The Orthodox call the feast celebrating the baptism of Jesus Theophany. A theophany is a divine appearance or revelation. At Christ's baptism the gospels tell of a theophany, a dove decending and a Voice from Heaven declaring "This is my beloved son, in whom I am well-pleased."
This theophany cracks open heaven as seen in the dark area at the top of the baptism icons. The dove sits in the crack.
Obviously, the grand theophany in the gospel accounts is the Transfiguration of Jesus where God again claims Jesus as his Son. In the transfiguration icons Jesus is standing on top of the mountian. Moses and Elijah are to his right and left. Peter, James, and John are depicted as either bowing in worship or scattered and throw down in the face of the revelation.
Jesus appears to be coming out of a dark crack, now much larger than the one depicted for the baptism.
As Rowan Williams writes, "The dark background against which Jesus is shown is something you will see in other icons as a way of representing the depths of heavenly reality. In the transfiguration, what the disciples see is, as you might say, Jesus' humanity 'opening up' to its inner dimensions. It is rather like the Hindu story of the infant Krishna, told by his mother to open his mouth to see if he has been eating mud; she looks in, and sees the whole universe in the dark interior of his throat. So the disciples look at Jesus, and see him as coming out from an immeasurable depth; behind or within him, infinity open up, 'dwelling of the light', to borrow the haunting phrase from Job 38.19. Mark 1.38 reports Jesus as saying that he has 'come out' so that he can proclaim the good news; and John's Gospel too uses the language of coming out from the depths of the Father (John 16.27-30). Belief in Jesus is seeing him as the gateway to an endless journey into God's love. The often-noted fact that icons show the lines of perspective reversed, so that they converge on your eye, not on a vanishing point in the distance within the picture, is a way of telling us that, once again, what is true of Jesus lies at the heart of all this style of paining: we are being taught to look through into the deep wells of life and truth."
Email Subscription on Substack
Richard Beck
Welcome to the blog of Richard Beck, author and professor of psychology at Abilene Christian University (beckr@acu.edu).
The Theology of Faƫrie
The Little Way of St. ThĆ©rĆØse of Lisieux
The William Stringfellow Project (Ongoing)
Autobiographical Posts
- On Discoveries in Used Bookstores
- Two Brothers and Texas Rangers
- Visiting and Evolving in Monkey Town
- Roller Derby Girls
- A Life With Bibles
- Wearing a Crucifix
- Morning Prayer at San Buenaventura Mission
- The Halo of Overalls
- Less
- The Farmer's Market
- Subversion and Shame: I Like the Color Pink
- The Bureaucrat
- Uncle Richard, Vampire Hunter
- Palm Sunday with the Orthodox
- On Maps and Marital Spats
- Get on a Bike...and Go Slow
- Buying a Bible
- Memento Mori
- We Weren't as Good as the Muppets
- Uncle Richard and the Shark
- Growing Up Catholic
- Ghostbusting (Part 1)
- Ghostbusting (Part 2)
- My Eschatological Dog
- Tex Mex and Depression Era Cuisine
- Aliens at Roswell
On the Principalities and Powers
- Christ and the Powers
- Why I Talk about the Devil So Much
- The Preferential Option for the Poor
- The Political Theology of Les MisƩrables
- Good Enough
- On Anarchism and A**holes
- Christian Anarchism
- A Restless Patriotism
- Wink on Exorcism
- Images of God Against Empire
- A Boredom Revolution
- The Medal of St. Benedict
- Exorcisms are about Economics
- "Scooby-Doo, Where Are You?"
- "A Home for Demons...and the Merchants Weep"
- Tales of the Demonic
- The Ethic of Death: The Policies and Procedures Manual
- "All That Are Here Are Humans"
- Ears of Stone
- The War Prayer
- Letter from a Birmingham Jail
Experimental Theology
- Eucharistic Identity
- Tzimtzum, Cruciformity and Theodicy
- Holiness Among Depraved Christians: Paul's New Form of Moral Flourishing
- Empathic Open Theism
- The Victim Needs No Conversion
- The Hormonal God
- Covenantal Substitutionary Atonement
- The Satanic Church
- Mousetrap
- Easter Shouldn't Be Good News
- The Gospel According to Lady Gaga
- Your God is Too Big
From the Prison Bible Study
- The Philosopher
- God's Unconditional Love
- There is a Balm in Gilead
- In Prison With Ann Voskamp
- To Make the Love of God Credible
- Piss Christ in Prison
- Advent: A Prison Story
- Faithful in Little Things
- The Prayer of Jabez
- The Prayer of Willy Brown
- Those Old Time Gospel Songs
- I'll Fly Away
- Singing and Resistence
- Where the Gospel Matters
- Monday Night Bible Study (A Poem)
- Living in Babylon: Reading Revelation in Prison
- Reading the Beatitudes in Prision
- John 13: A Story from the Prision Study
- The Word
Series/Essays Based on my Research
The Theology of Calvin and Hobbes
The Theology of Peanuts
The Snake Handling Churches of Appalachia
Eccentric Christianity
- Part 1: A Peculiar People
- Part 2: The Eccentric God, Transcendence and the Prophetic Imagination
- Part 3: Welcoming God in the Stranger
- Part 4: Enchantment, the Porous Self and the Spirit
- Part 5: Doubt, Gratitude and an Eccentric Faith
- Part 6: The Eccentric Economy of Love
- Part 7: The Eccentric Kingdom
The Fuller Integration Lectures
Blogging about the Bible
- Unicorns in the Bible
- "Let My People Go!": On Worship, Work and Laziness
- The True Troubler
- Stumbling At Just One Point
- The Faith of Demons
- The Lord Saw That She Was Not Loved
- The Subversion of the Creator God
- Hell On Earth: The Church as the Baptism of Fire and the Holy Spirit
- The Things That Make for Peace
- The Lord of the Flies
- On Preterism, the Second Coming and Hell
- Commitment and Violence: A Reading of the Akedah
- Gain Versus Gift in Ecclesiastes
- Redemption and the Goel
- The Psalms as Liberation Theology
- Control Your Vessel
- Circumcised Ears
- Forgive Us Our Trespasses
- Doing Beautiful Things
- The Most Remarkable Sequence in the Bible
- Targeting the Dove Sellers
- Christus Victor in Galatians
- Devoted to Destruction: Reading Cherem Non-Violently
- The Triumph of the Cross
- The Threshing Floor of Araunah
- Hold Others Above Yourself
- Blessed are the Tricksters
- Adam's First Wife
- I Am a Worm
- Christus Victor in the Lord's Prayer
- Let Them Both Grow Together
- Repent
- Here I Am
- Becoming the Jubilee
- Sermon on the Mount: Study Guide
- Treat Them as a Pagan or Tax Collector
- Going Outside the Camp
- Welcoming Children
- The Song of Lamech and the Song of the Lamb
- The Nephilim
- Shaming Jesus
- Pseudepigrapha and the Christian Witness
- The Exclusion and Inclusion of Eunuchs
- The Second Moses
- The New Manna
- Salvation in the First Sermons of the Church
- "A Bloody Husband"
- Song of the Vineyard
Bonhoeffer's Letters from Prision
Civil Rights History and Race Relations
- The Gospel According to Ta-Nehisi Coates (Six Part Series)
- Bus Ride to Justice: Toward Racial Reconciliation in the Churches of Christ
- Black Heroism and White Sympathy: A Reflection on the Charleston Shooting
- Selma 50th Anniversary
- More Than Three Minutes
- The Passion of White America
- Remembering James Chaney, Michael Schwerner and Andrew Goodman
- Will Campbell
- Sitting in the Pews of Ebeneser Baptist Church
- MLK Bedtime Prayer
- Freedom Rider
- Mountiantop
- Freedom Summer
- Civil Rights Family Trip 1: Memphis
- Civil Rights Family Trip 2: Atlanta
- Civil Rights Family Trip 3: Birmingham
- Civil Rights Family Trip 4: Selma
- Civil Rights Family Trip 5: Montgomery
Hip Christianity
The Charism of the Charismatics
Would Jesus Break a Window?: The Hermeneutics of the Temple Action
Being Church
- Instead of a Coffee Shop How About a Laundromat?
- A Million Boring Little Things
- A Prayer for ISIS
- "The People At Our Church Die A Lot"
- The Angel of Freedom
- Washing Dishes at Freedom Fellowship
- Where David Plays the Tambourine
- On Interruptibility
- Mattering
- This Ritual of Hallowing
- Faith as Honoring
- The Beautiful
- The Sensory Boundary
- The Missional and Apostolic Nature of Holiness
- Open Commuion: Warning!
- The Impurity of Love
- A Community Called Forgiveness
- Love is the Allocation of Our Dying
- Freedom Fellowship
- Wednesday Night Church
- The Hands of Christ
- Barbara, Stanley and Andrea: Thoughts on Love, Training and Social Psychology
- Gerald's Gift
- Wiping the Blood Away
- This Morning Jesus Put On Dark Sunglasses
- The Only Way I Know How to Save the World
- Renunciation
- The Reason We Gather
- Anointing With Oil
- Incarnations of God's Mercy
Exploring Preterism
Scripture and Discernment
- Owning Your Protestantism: We Follow Our Conscience, Not the Bible
- Emotional Intelligence and Sola Scriptura
- Songbooks vs. the Psalms
- Biblical as Sociological Stress Test
- Cookie Cutting the Bible: A Case Study
- Pawn to King 4
- Allowing God to Rage
- Poetry of a Murderer
- On Christian Communion: Killing vs. Sexuality
- Heretics and Disagreement
- Atonement: A Primer
- "The Bible says..."
- The "Yes, but..." Church
- Human Experience and the Bible
- Discernment, Part 1
- Discernment, Part 2
- Rabbinic Hedges
- Fuzzy Logic
Interacting with Good Books
- Christian Political Witness
- The Road
- Powers and Submissions
- City of God
- Playing God
- Torture and Eucharist
- How Much is Enough?
- From Willow Creek to Sacred Heart
- The Catonsville Nine
- Daring Greatly
- On Job (GutiƩrrez)
- The Selfless Way of Christ
- World Upside Down
- Are Christians Hate-Filled Hypocrites?
- Christ and Horrors
- The King Jesus Gospel
- Insurrection
- The Bible Made Impossible
- The Deliverance of God
- To Change the World
- Sexuality and the Christian Body
- I Told Me So
- The Teaching of the Twelve
- Evolving in Monkey Town
- Saved from Sacrifice: A Series
- Darwin's Sacred Cause
- Outliers
- A Secular Age
- The God Who Risks
Moral Psychology
- The Dark Spell the Devil Casts: Refugees and Our Slavery to the Fear of Death
- Philia Over Phobia
- Elizabeth Smart and the Psychology of the Christian Purity Culture
- On Love and the Yuck Factor
- Ethnocentrism and Politics
- Flies, Attention and Morality
- The Banality of Evil
- The Ovens at Buchenwald
- Violence and Traffic Lights
- Defending Individualism
- Guilt and Atonement
- The Varieties of Love and Hate
- The Wicked
- Moral Foundations
- Primum non nocere
- The Moral Emotions
- The Moral Circle, Part 1
- The Moral Circle, Part 2
- Taboo Psychology
- The Morality of Mentality
- Moral Conviction
- Infrahumanization
- Holiness and Moral Grammars
The Purity Psychology of Progressive Christianity
The Theology of Everyday Life
- Self-Esteem Through Shaming
- Let Us Be the Heart Of the Church Rather Than the Amygdala
- Online Debates and Stages of Change
- The Devil on a Wiffle Ball Field
- Incarnational Theology and Mental Illness
- Social Media as Sacrament
- The Impossibility of Calvinistic Psychotherapy
- Hating Pixels
- Dress, Divinity and Dumbfounding
- The Kingdom of God Will Not Be Tweeted
- Tattoos
- The Ethics of :-)
- On Snobbery
- Jokes
- Hypocrisy
- Everything I learned about life I learned coaching tee-ball
- Gossip, Part 1: The Food of the Brain
- Gossip, Part 2: Evolutionary Stable Strategies
- Gossip, Part 3: The Pay it Forward World
- Human Nature
- Welcome
- On Humility
Jesus, You're Making Me Tired: Scarcity and Spiritual Formation
A Progressive Vision of the Benedict Option
George MacDonald
Jesus & the Jolly Roger: The Kingdom of God is Like a Pirate
Alone, Suburban & Sorted
The Theology of Monsters
The Theology of Ugly
Orthodox Iconography
Musings On Faith, Belief, and Doubt
- The Meanings Only Faith Can Reveal
- Pragmatism and Progressive Christianity
- Doubt and Cognitive Rumination
- A/theism and the Transcendent
- Kingdom A/theism
- The Ontological Argument
- Cheap Praise and Costly Praise
- god
- Wired to Suffer
- A New Apologetics
- Orthodox Alexithymia
- High and Low: The Psalms and Suffering
- The Buddhist Phase
- Skilled Christianity
- The Two Families of God
- The Bait and Switch of Contemporary Christianity
- Theodicy and No Country for Old Men
- Doubt: A Diagnosis
- Faith and Modernity
- Faith after "The Cognitive Turn"
- Salvation
- The Gifts of Doubt
- A Beautiful Life
- Is Santa Claus Real?
- The Feeling of Knowing
- Practicing Christianity
- In Praise of Doubt
- Skepticism and Conviction
- Pragmatic Belief
- N-Order Complaint and Need for Cognition
Holiday Musings
- Everything I Learned about Christmas I Learned from TV
- Advent: Learning to Wait
- A Christmas Carol as Resistance Literature: Part 1
- A Christmas Carol as Resistance Literature: Part 2
- It's Still Christmas
- Easter Shouldn't Be Good News
- The Deeper Magic: A Good Friday Meditation
- Palm Sunday with the Orthodox
- Growing Up Catholic: A Lenten Meditation
- The Liturgical Year for Dummies
- "Watching Their Flocks at Night": An Advent Meditation
- Pentecost and Babel
- Epiphany
- Ambivalence about Lent
- On Easter and Astronomy
- Sex Sandals and Advent
- Freud and Valentine's Day
- Existentialism and Halloween
- Halloween Redux: Talking with the Dead
The Offbeat
- Batman and the Joker
- The Theology of Ugly Dolls
- Jesus Would Be a Hufflepuff
- The Moral Example of Captain Jack Sparrow
- Weddings Real, Imagined and Yet to Come
- Michelangelo and Neuroanatomy
- Believing in Bigfoot
- The Kingdom of God as Improv and Flash Mob
- 2012 and the End of the World
- The Polar Express and the Uncanny Valley
- Why the Anti-Christ Is an Idiot
- On Harry Potter and Vampire Movies
Dr. Beck, with all due respect, why are you using the Archbishop of Canterbury as your source for information about Eastern Orthodox iconography?
Hi Kirk,
I'm working with a few different sources. Mainly art sources that have little theological commentary. But one of my sources is Williams' The Dwelling of the Light: Praying with the Icons of Christ.
However, some of what I'm writing is original to me. The "cracks" motif of this post is uniquely my own. I have not read anything linking icons via a "crack metaphor. " But I'm sure this has been noted elsewhere. I'm no Orthodox iconography scholar. Just a psychologist.
Dr. Beck,
I did not realize that Dr. Williams had written about icons. It seems to me not unlike the situation you would have if John Madden authored a book about golf.
As a student of Orthodoxy (and ACU graduate, btw), I would imagine that the Orthodox Church does not leave the interpretation of icons to the individual, but to the Church. Hence, I would recommend that you look for an Orthodox writer. Have you investigated Ouspensky and Lossky's book, "The Meaning of Icons"?
Hi Kirk,
Thanks for the book title. I checked it out of our library.
You said, "So the disciples look at Jesus, and see him as coming out from an immeasurable depth; behind or within him, infinity open up, 'dwelling of the light', to borrow the haunting phrase from Job 38.19."
In keeping with my habit of how I respond on your blog, I will note what a gnostic source says about this:
from the Gospel of Thomas verse 50. Yeshua says: If they say to you: From whence have you come?, say to them: We have come from the Light, the place where the Light has come into being from Him alone.."
This gospel tends to bring out the identification with Jesus that one can achieve. And of course light is a dominant theme of gnostic christianity. I will have to think about and look for the crack metaphor.
Dblwyo made an awesome connection on the “ugliness” thread to Buddhism.
I though I’d post a part of my response here, because it involves Buddhist icons integrating ugliness as a motif, and also, if you visit the link below, it’s not a far stretch to see the heruka (Buddhist iconic deity) as emerging through the stylized cosmos via an aporia-crack, similar to the cracks that Richard notes involving Jesus, creating a wake (crack) into Enlightenment.
As you can see, in Vajrayana (Diamond-Way, or Tantra) Buddhism and its sub-families of traditions, there are wrathful-only deities, and there are integrated peaceful-wrathful heruka deities (a branch of Buddhism with deities), whose graphic ugliness and ferocity in iconographic images aims to keep novitiates on paths of enlightenment. Ugliness, and even violent ugliness, in images are intentional mediations of enlightenment. And form their own crack, crack-breaking out of ignorance and into enlightenment.
See one iconographic image (Nyingma family) and the essay: http://huntingtonarchive.osu.edu/exhib/sama/heru/pgs/T1036M.html.
The icons and the essay are a little misleading.
Tantric Buddhist tradition isn’t textual, and it can’t be mediated textually by study (like Theraveda). Nor is it truly iconographic (like Eastern Orthodox Christianity), but rather, this tradition is mediated by ordained mentors who make assessments of all novitiates, and then prescribe visual heruka-deities as meditative aids. You can’t just pick and choose your god. You must be “given” a heruka-deity. And only after assessment. The gods have no objective existence. The mediation of the tradition happens not through text, nor through icons, but through the body, the physical human body of the ordained mentor, because our physical bodies are the "crack," the aporia, into enlightenment. Tantric Buddhism isn’t a way of denial, but rather, an embrace of passion and its torque. My father was ordained in this tradition in Tibet, and, as an ex-Lutheran minister, turned neuroscience professor (now retired), and occasional college lecturer on comparative religions, he knew how to retain a Buddhist-version of Luther’s fun social habit of “Table Talk,” which meant our dinner time was for less talk, and not for text, and more for making funny faces or ugly ones. No reflection on Mom, as chef. I’d hope.
Since I'm a Christian, I see a typological connection between the heruka at the link above and Jesus, and the subject of His incarnation as a "crack" and opening into our space-time – I’m curious, now, to discover an iconic depiction of Jesus cleansing the Temple, perhaps a fearful-wrathful-ugly iconic depiction of Jesus, not a sanitized and beautified Jesus, but Jesus tearing through the Temple, like a Crack in our false Temple economy, with the buyers and sellers (like me) really getting the point.
Jim
Some would say that the "crack" is a gateway into the galaxy, a "stargate".
One wonders why only a "crack" ? Or better yet why a "crack" at all?
What Paul calls "this present darkness" is only temporally "cracked" by the first advent. The god of this world remains. The Spirit of Christ enters via the work of Christ and remains to provide comfort; the Church confronts the god of this world with the Word and Spirit. The Church awaits the second advent in which the Christ enters the world not through a small crack over the Jordan, but in worldwide overwhelming glory.
Why does the "darkness" persist? Why the "darkness" at all if it originated in "heaven"? Was there no other realm into which to send the "serpent" and his kind ?
Guess I'm complaining about this "darkness" --- must keep in mind that "His grace is sufficient".
Anyway suspect that the transfiguration imagery is more likely just "Light-darkness" contrasting.