The Truth of an Icon

Icons are lovely objects – directing our hearts towards God – sometimes miraculous and truly “windows to heaven.” But I want to be somewhat theological today and write about the “truth” of an icon. Icons are peculiar, when painted according to the most traditional patterns. They are not just “ahistorical” they are positively non-historical. We can look at an icon and see any number of events depicted that do not belong to the same time framework at all. Icons are simply not about history as we popularly understand it. This separates them dramatically from much that flowered in the Western Renaissance.

The “truth” (I hardly know what else to call it) of an icon is never to be found in its past, it’s historical message, but in the future, in what it is manifesting of the age to come. There is a Patristic maxim, put forward by both St. Maximus the Confessor and earlier by St. Ambrose of Milan: the Old Testament is shadow; the New Testament is icon; while the eschaton (the end of all things or the fulfillment of the Kingdom, etc.) is the truth itself. In both of these Fathers, one Eastern, one Western, truth is understood to be a property of the end of things. In theological terms, the truth is “eschatological.”

Thus we have this rather strange aspect of icons. They are eschatological representations. They not only show us what happened (if we’re talking about a Biblical scene) but also show us what that scene means in its fullest and final sense. Saints are not painted as they might have appeared in life, but in an eschatological fashion representing how they shall be in the age to come (at least this is what the intention is behind many stylistic aspects of an icon). They are thin (not heavy and of the earth); their senses are either deemphasized (small ears, small mouth, thin and elongated hands) because they are turned inward to the heart; or overemphasized (large eyes and enlarged forehead) representing heavenly vision and wisdom. They are always presented to us face-to-face, never in profile, for the truth of who they are is only to be known personally (hypostatically) in relationsip, never as a merely existing object. This last aspect is quite notable in the resurrection appearances of Christ. He cannot be objectified.

In the Seventh Council, the Fathers said, “Icons do with color what Scripture does with words.” And so it should not be surprising to find that the Scriptures themselves only open their Truth to us eschatologically. St. John’s gospel is probably the most obvious in this respect. He places Christ’s discourse on the meaning of the Eucharist at the occasion of the feeding of the five thousand, and yet does not have an account of the Last Supper in the Passion Narrative (or at least does not include the Eucharist in his account of the Last Supper as do Matthew and Luke). Christ makes statements in his sermon following the feeding of the five thousand that would and will make sense only to those who are eucharistically aware. It is a sermon out of time.

All of the New Testament is written from a “future” perspective – it’s all after the fact – Christ having been raised and taught the Church and ascended into Heaven. The Holy Spirit has already come. Indeed, the Scriptures of the Old Testament are now seen as fulfilled in Christ. Thus, they will only yield up the “truth” of their meaning by examining them through Christ.

This is also true of our own lives as Christians, as well as the corporate life of the Church. The meal of which we partake together is Christ’s Body and Blood, the Messianic Banquet. It is food from the end of the world. Thus in St. John Chrysostom’s Liturgy, we actually speak of the Second Coming in the past tense.

St. Paul taught us to understand that the truth of ourselves lies not in the present but in the age to come. In the third chapter of Colossians he says:

If then you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things that are above, not on things that are on earth. For you have died, and your life is hid with Christ in God. When Christ who is our life appears, then you also will appear with him in glory.

St. John says the same thing: “Beloved, we are God’s children now; it does not yet appear what we shall be, but we know that when he appears we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is” (1John 3:2).

Thus the icons of the Church stand around us not as reminders of the past, but as witnesses of the age to come. They say to us: “Thus shall you be.” And we ourselves groan within for such truth, as the Scriptures tell us, “Looking to Christ, the author and the finisher of our faith” (Heb. 12:2).

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a priest of the Orthodox Church in America, Pastor Emeritus of St. Anne Orthodox Church in Oak Ridge, Tennessee. He is also author of Everywhere Present and the Glory to God podcast series.



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19 responses to “The Truth of an Icon”

  1. Steven M. Calascione Avatar
    Steven M. Calascione

    An outstanding and out of time posting Father Stephen — many years to you!

  2. Bill Avatar
    Bill

    As an Episcopalian, my meager grasp of icons has come from Dr. Rowan Williams’s book, The Dwelling of the Light: Praying with Icons of Christ.

    Have any of you Orthodox brothers or sisters read this? Is it on the mark?

    God bless!

  3. fatherstephen Avatar

    I have not read it.

  4. Karen Avatar
    Karen

    “They are always presented to us face-to-face, never in profile, for the truth of who they are is only to be known personally (hypostatically) in relationsip, never as a merely existing object. This last aspect is quite notable in the resurrection appearances of Christ. He cannot be objectified.”

    Dear Father, bless! The above is one of the things that became the most immediately obvious to me about the use and presence of Icons in the Church and one of the things for which I am also the most grateful. It is one thing to know in the abstract that God is omnipresent, that we are surrounded by a cloud of witnesses, etc. It is quite another to experience it, and Icons are a very great help in making the latter possible and in also making us more aware of what kind of God it is Who is omnipresent, etc.

  5. Jonathan Avatar
    Jonathan

    Father, I loved the thought about speaking of the second coming in the past tense. I had never noticed that before.

  6. Fr. Milovan Katanic Avatar

    Icons are as you say “presented to us face-to-face….to be known personally….” Bishop Maxim of Western America writes:
    “[The icon] encourages us to go out and meet the other. The Icon is person-oriented! When we venerate an Icon of Christ or a Saint, we demonstrate victory over individualism and show that we are not self-reliant. “
    You can read the bishop’s homily he delivered on Sunday of Orthodoxy here

  7. Georgia Avatar
    Georgia

    The coming of the Parakletos at Pentecost was a kind of second coming.

  8. Bill Avatar
    Bill

    Also, this is very reminiscent of G.B. Caird’s “three tenses of salvation” as outlined in his hard-to-find New Testament Theology.

    For those of you who know who N.T. Wright is, pretty much all his big ideas (though not the bad ones!) are taken from Caird, who was his tutor at Oxford.

    Caird’s Language and Imagery of the Bible would also interest you folks, I think.

    Peace

  9. Micah Avatar
    Micah

    Fr. Milovan:

    “in the Church we are taught to see (iconically) in every man our future
    brother/sister [as he or she is in] Paradise.” –Fr. Justin Popovich

    Wonderful.

  10. Paula Avatar
    Paula

    Profoundly wonderful thoughts. I have been an Orthodox Christian for only a little over a year, the Icons fill my heart and you explained why. Thank you.

  11. Prudence True Avatar

    Growing up surrounded by icons I appreciate the experience of iconography, which differs from the *theology* of icons. The experience of icons is felt in homes and churches, and in seeing the image of Christ in those around us.

    Icons are light and color to Scripture; they are two parts emotion and one part theology. Intellectual explanations have a place, but icons as tools for theology are misunderstood.

    My study of icons is limited, but my experience covers a lifetime – If you focus on the study, you may just miss the experience.

  12. EPG Avatar
    EPG

    The current form of the Book of Common Prayer in the United States contains a prayer near the end of the baptismal liturgy, in which the celebrant asks that God grant the newly baptized “an enquiring and discerning heart, the spirit to know and love you, the courage to will and to persevere, and the gift of joy and wonder in all your works.”

    Joy and wonder is a gift indeed.

  13. Jerry Cornelius Avatar
    Jerry Cornelius

    “Saints are not painted as they might have appeared in life, but in an eschatological fashion representing how they shall be in the age to come (at least this is what the intention is behind many stylistic aspects of an icon). They are thin (not heavy and of the earth); their senses are either deemphasized (small ears, small mouth, thin and elongated hands) because they are turned inward to the heart; or overemphasized (large eyes and enlarged forehead) representing heavenly vision and wisdom.”

    What if these very same Saints are painted as they actually are in real Life, but from a Heavenly perspective, and if we painted each other what would we see? Heart and Heaven simultaneously and could we bear to paint that…Christ [active] in us the Hope of Glory?

    Colossians 1:27 To them God has chosen to make known among the Gentiles the glorious riches of this mystery, which is Christ in you, the hope of glory.

  14. Matthew Garrett Avatar

    I really appreciated your thoughts on the eschatological nature of iconography. Often people find icons strange-looking or even unsettling precisely because they don’t understand the “truth” of icons as you put it. We see only the physical, and rarely get a glimpse into the spiritual. By expressing both the physical and the spiritual, both the temporal and the eternal, icons are more real than our perceived reality is. But because so many people do not have the eyes to see this, they pass of icons as primitive or stylized representations. It should not surprise us, though, when so many professed Christians find it impossible to believe that bread and wine can be the very body and blood of Christ. So many of us lack the eyes of faith and rely only on reason and logic.

  15. fatherstephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    I think that the eschatological character of icons is perhaps one of the most essential characteristics in understanding them. In fact, I probably think that about the whole of the Christian faith.

  16. Micah Avatar
    Micah

    The Second Vatican Council gave the Church a vernacular Liturgy but the nuances of the Eastern Church are so subtle they might easily be missed. “Individuals’ pray without regard to syntax and the type of print” says R.E.S. Tanner, but look for “adjustable semantic spanners” when possible alternative meanings remain undefined. (The Inequality of Unwritten Languages, 2004, p. 67).

    I am struck by Met. KALLISTOS’ statement that the Church is a faithful and true icon of the Holy Trinity (The Orthodox Church, 1997, p. 240).

    “What if these very same Saints are painted as they actually are in real Life, but from a Heavenly perspective…”

    This is a great observation Jerry.

  17. Jerry Cornelius Avatar
    Jerry Cornelius

    Micah,

    Thanks! Father Stephen Freeman made this observation:

    “the Pascha of Christ…..is the center towards which all things are drawn.”

    The way I treat Eschatology in dealing with the transformative attributions and the work of “energetic pneumatology” in relation to the changes that the Saints are going through – literally the ‘alterations’ that are taking place in their Spiritual DNA – is to start with this statement at the Cross:

    John 19:30b Jesus said, “It is finished.”

    I would say that Eschatology starts at the Cross and ripples outwards – Saints are caught up in the pneumatological ripples and the energies rippling through them – triggering the changes and that is what the Iconographers are stiving to paint.

  18. Micah Avatar
    Micah

    “The Pascha of Christ is the center towards which all things are drawn.”

    Jerry you are so right here. The great irony is that the Pascha of Christ has completely crushed the head of the serpent of old (cf. 1 Cor. 15:55).

    The Church Fathers speak of a “divine hook” — as a kind of eschatological suture joining two hitherto divided kingdoms. In the words of Bishop Hilarion (2002):

    “St John Chrysostom’s Paschal homily, goes back to St Gregory of Nyssa’s theory of how God deceived the devil, having hidden the ‘hook’ of His divinity under the guise of His human nature. By swallowing the bait, Hades also swallowed the ‘hook’ that destroyed it from within.

    In this there are overtones to Jonah’s episode in the belly of the whale, which itself points to Christ’s Pascha as the out-of-time event that intersects all time — in Fr. Stephen’s wonderful phraseology.

  19. […] to Glory To God For All Things. Here are a few of Father Stephen’s reflections on icons:  https://glory2godforallthings.com/2010/04/21/the-truth-of-an-icon-2 and https://glory2godforallthings.com/2010/05/14/within-a-mandorla/ I add these because Father […]

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