Theophany – Showing the World to Be the World

I was standing beside the Jordan River, somewhere along its trek through Israel. I was with a group of pilgrims led by Met. Kallistos Ware gathered for the Great Blessing of the Waters. Somehow, it seemed that I was the only priest who had brought an epitrachelion (stole), so I loaned it to the Metropolitan for the service. As the service began, I noticed a school of fish at the edge of the water, watching the bishop as eagerly as the rest of us.

Great art Thou, O Lord, and marvelous are Thy works. There is no hymn which suffices to hymn Thy wonders!

The Metropolitan’s voice boomed out across the valley in its Oxford-accented tones, sounding like the voice of God. The area where we had gathered was also marked by small groups of Protestant pilgrims who had apparently gathered to re-baptize one another. At the sound of the Bishop’s voice, everyone stopped to listen.

The words of the prayer over the waters continued. Written by St. Sophronius of Jerusalem in the 6th century, they carried the same style as that of St. Basil: strings of appositives accompanied almost every statement, expanding, echoing, expounding and explaining each phrase with yet more lines of Scripture.

And then something caught my ear that jarred me awake from the cadence of the words:

And grant to it the grace of redemption, the blessing of Jordan.

Now, that’s a very odd statement to make while standing at the waters of the Jordan. Aren’t the waters of the Jordan always the waters of the Jordan? What is the “blessing of Jordan?” Further, the prayer said,

But show this water, O Master of all, to be the water of redemption, the water of sanctification, the purification of flesh and spirit, the loosing of bonds, the remission of sins, the illumination of the soul, the washing of regeneration, the renewal of the Spirit, the gift of adoption to sonship, the garment of incorruption, the fountain of life.

I was already puzzled that we were praying for God to make the Jordan be the Jordan, and now we were asking Him to “show” this water to be a string of marvelous wonders. Shouldn’t we ask Him to “make” it be those wonders?

The answer came with the drop of a theological coin. Fr. Alexander Schmemann taught that, in the sacraments, we are not asking God to make something to be other than it is but to reveal it to be what it truly is. Asking God to show the Jordan to be the Jordan is simply the most blatant example of this principle.

A problem associated with sacramental thought, if this principle is forgotten, is that things that are blessed somehow cease to be what they are. Instead, they become exceptional moments in which the things of this world are no longer things of this world. They change while everything around them remains the same. We go to Church, the miracle happens, but remains confined to the altar or the font, while the world around it remains unchanged. The Church becomes the locus of the extraordinary while the world is stuck in the ordinary. It is, ironically, a two-storey sacramental order. This thing is holy, that thing is not. It is a diminishment of Christ’s work. The sacraments become points of contact with the second-storey, tiny windows in which miniscule rays of sunshine peak out into an otherwise darkened world. But the world itself remains dark.

The nature of the true sacramental understanding is revealed very precisely in the words of St. Sophronius. The Jordan is the Jordan. It is we who fail to see the world as it is. We imagine the world to be self-contained and self-referential. The Jordan is not the Jordan – that’s just a name: it is just some water, hydrogen and oxygen flowing over the surface of the third rock from the sun.

On the 6th of January (19th on the Old Calendar), Orthodox priests across the world, in their many thousands, will stand beside public waters, rivers, creeks, springs, seas and oceans, in some cases hovering over holes piercing through feet of ice, and speak the words of St. Sophronius. All of them will call upon God to send the blessing of the Jordan on the Nile, the Volga, the Mississippi, the  Bering Strait, the Bermuda Triangle, the Amazon, the Antarctic, the Yenesei, the Tennessee, the Atlantic and Pacific, the Black Sea and the Aegean, the Clinch River here in Appalachia, and all the waters of the world will be shown to be the Jordan.

The Feast of Christ’s Baptism is called “Theophany.” It means the “showing forth of God.” It is so named because, in the event of Christ’s Baptism, we see Christ, the Son of God, hear the voice of the Father (“Thou art my beloved Son…”), and see the Spirit in the form of a dove. It is a “showing forth” of God as Trinity. But when the Trinity is made manifest, everything is, of necessity made manifest. The truth of all things is revealed.

This “truth of all things” is the revelation of the world as sacrament. The waters and all that is in the world is a means of communion with God because of His Divine condescension. The world was not created to be a place of an “alternative” existence, one without God. It exists as the means and focal point of our communion. The sacraments revealed to us within the life of the Church do not exist as isolated instances of a divine encounter but as examples and revelations of what God is in the world. “Heaven and earth are full of Thy glory.”

This understanding does much to explain Schmemann’s insistence that secularism is the great heresy of our age: it is the denial of the sacramental character of the world. Just as man is created in the image and likeness of God, and thus capable of bearing God’s image, so too, creation has a sacramental and iconic capability. The world is not an impregnable wall that hides us from God. It is the very means by which, and the place in which, God makes Himself known. We were created for communion with God. This takes place here and now, within this world.

St. Maximus the Confessor spoke of a number of cosmic reconciliations, or an overcoming of divisions: male/female, paradise/world, heavenly/earthly, intelligible/sensible, uncreated/created. None of these distinctions disappear, but are fulfilled in their proper role and purpose. The world as sacrament participates in this overcoming of divisions in the union of humanity to God. Our union with the created order, particularly as sacrament, describes the essential priesthood of humanity – “microcosm and mediator,” in the words of St. Maximus.

This is the showing of the world to be what it is meant to be, as well as its revelation to us of ourselves in Christ. And all of creation, like the fish, gathers at our feet to see this strange wonder!

About Fr. Stephen Freeman

Fr. Stephen is a retired Archpriest of the Orthodox Church in America. He is also author of Everywhere Present: Christianity in a One-Storey Universe, and Face to Face: Knowing God Beyond Our Shame, as well as the Glory to God podcast series on Ancient Faith Radio.



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23 responses to “Theophany – Showing the World to Be the World”

  1. Janet Clement Avatar
    Janet Clement

    How excellent this is! And how relevant. It made my day, my month, year, and life to know this and hold onto it. I am sending it to someone who was recently baptized in my church, St. Alexander Nevsky in Richmond, Maine. Blessings and Love Always, Anna

  2. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks Fr. Stephen.

    In the Catholic Church, the Baptism of the Lord is celebrated this year on January 12th. I am so happy that the church calendar/year exists and that I can live both through and with it! In former times, this was simply not the case. The secular calendar reigned supreme even though I was supposed to be living another kind of yearly rhythm altogether as a Christian.

    If the entire created order is sacramental, then what makes the sacraments which are specific to the Church so special? Do they have more power? Are they infused with even more grace? I ask this mainly because I am not sure what to say to people who say “God´s grace is everywhere available … I don´t need the Church´s sacraments … I don´t even need the Church!”

  3. Randy L Evans Avatar

    Father, bless. I’m assuming you’ve read Rod Dreher’s latest book, “Living in Wonder.” I found it to be a wonderful unfolding of God’s divine presence in and through and over and above all created things.
    What are your reflections about his book?

  4. helene d. Avatar
    helene d.

    Thank you Fr. Stephen for these luminous words on this holy day of Theophany !
    I am imbued with the wonderful prayer of Saint Sophronius and all the Orthodox hymnography of this feast experienced this morning, with the rite of blessing the water with the help of the cross immersed in the water itself. We were then each sprinkled and drank of this blessed water ! The troparion of Theophany transports us beyond the Jordan! What strength, what beauty ! This feast is also called “Feast of Lights” because it brings together water and fire, the warmth of the Holy Spirit….

    You say that Saint Maximus the Confessor spoke of a certain number of cosmic reconciliations, or overcoming of divisions, (…) and that none of these distinctions disappear, but they are accomplished in their proper role and purpose. This warms the heart! In which text of Saint Maximus can we find this development ?
    Glory to God for all his gifts!

  5. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    I think last year I saw a video where the Greek Orthodox bishop in our city blessed our main river. He threw a cross on a line into the river and then pulled it out again. I think he repeated the process three times. I enjoyed it.

  6. Owen Kelly Avatar
    Owen Kelly

    The world is full of trinities. There is the knower, the thing known, and the knowledge that proceeds between them. There is the lover, the thing loved, and the love that proceeds between them. This subject-object dynamic is perhaps the most basic and profound pattern of our life.

    “But when the Trinity is made manifest, everything is, of necessity made manifest. The truth of all things is revealed.”

    At Theophany, there is the Father, the Son known and loved, and the Spirit proceeding from the Father to/through the Son. (The Filioque seems to deny the construct of creation.) Entering the watery grave with Christ thus becomes a portal to experience the world in its divine aspect.

    We are caught up, in a creaturely mode of existence, to share in the knowing and loving of God’s own life manifest as the sacramental cosmos. This is our God and our life in Him!

  7. Owen Kelly Avatar
    Owen Kelly

    Matthew,
    Father Stephen can answer this much better than me, but you asked, “If the entire created order is sacramental, what makes the sacraments which are specific to the Church so special?”

    One might think of the church as the vanguard of the new creation. By “new,” I mean newly perceived, since the creation itself is good already as God’s handiwork. Rightly perceived, this world is Christ through and through. Dostoevsky has one of his characters say, even in the midst of a deadly illness, “do not weep, life is paradise, and we are all in paradise, but we do not want to know it, and if we did want to know it, tomorrow there would be paradise the world over.” The Church – at its best – is the community of enlightened ones, those who see with liberated vision.

    In my view, the sacraments are there to help us see rightly, to renew our perception of reality. The “fall” means a dearth of vision, a kind of ocular ignorance. Sacramental grace therefore works to readjust our sight. Trees and clouds, mountains and butterflies, can of course do this too. But God has been more specific in the mysteries of the church, imo, condensing (as it were) the pattern of his Life in the world that we may receive it with a more concentrated effect – to open the eyes of our hearts.

  8. Nathan Fischer Avatar
    Nathan Fischer

    > I ask this mainly because I am not sure what to say to people who say “God´s grace is everywhere available … I don´t need the Church´s sacraments … I don´t even need the Church!”

    Matthew, one thought that came to mind for me in reading this is that we don’t even have to wonder at what happens when this is how we approach the sacraments and creation. These were the arguements made by certain Protestant groups during the Reformation, and the end result was not a world in which we see God’s grace everywhere, but rather a world in which we see His grace nowhere. This was very much the voice that gave birth to secularism. The sacraments, within the context of the rituals (liturgy) of the Church, are fundamentally necessary in order to see rightly what the character of the Creation even is.

  9. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    Simple answer to such questions: Water is everywhere on planet earth, but you still need a glass and a flowing source to drink it. Modern people want everything to be private, under their own command (because their essential self-identity is as a consumer). You cannot receive grace except by humility. God humbles us (or ask us to humble ourselves) in order to receive grace. Attending Church is humbling. It’s why He lets them be so messy. I think.

  10. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Randy,
    What I have read, I liked. I was at his book launch in Birmingham back in October and had some private time with him. Worth a read, for sure.

  11. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Helene,
    I’ll track down the Maximus reference.

  12. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Nathan,
    Precisely.

  13. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thanks so much Owen, Nathan and Fr. Stephen. 🙂

    May I continue to improve my vision as I avail myself of the sacraments!

  14. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    After a bit of reflection, I think that people must be thinking about grace as though it were some sort of inert substance – something that we can “mine” or “tap into” at our convenience. Grace, in Orthodox thought, is nothing other than the Divine Energies – God Himself – and that only comes as Person. The Father, through Christ, by the Holy Spirit. And the purpose of God is to bring us into communion with Himself – who is our true and only life. And the Church is the manifestation of that communion in this world. So, those who seek grace apart from the Church are at counter-purposes with God.

    He is generous and kind and even if our motives and thoughts are misguided and off-base, He still works with us, and, indeed, many find grace in a manner that is seemingly apart from that Divine purpose. But, they fail to see that the grace which they receive has as its purpose our true communion with Him (which is the Church).

  15. Byron Avatar
    Byron

    I would add that one Saint said, “A man can find God watching a fox cross a road.” There is so much in that statement (to me)! I’ve often pointed out to people that it is not only us who are transformed, but all of Creation is renewed!

    As one country song I like opined, “I’m just a part of the greater plan. It doesn’t matter which part I am.” I like the humility of that phrasing!

  16. Fr Paul Yerger Avatar
    Fr Paul Yerger

    Amen!
    Preach on!

  17. Owen Kelly Avatar
    Owen Kelly

    Fr. Stephen,
    When I posted my response to Matthew above, I had in the back of my mind the following quote by Fr. John Behr. It doesn’t seem to deny what you said above about the Church as communion, but I wanted to ask what you think.

    “I can no longer see the church as a select group of people called out from unbelievers.
    Rather, the Church is the whole of creation seen eschatologically; from which we already see islands in the present, called out from ‘the world’ (in the negative sense).”

  18. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Owen,
    There’s no contradiction between what he is saying and what I’m saying – I think. Think of Ephesians 1. God has purposed to gather together in one all things in Christ Jesus. That is the Church. Khomiakov (19th century Russian) said that the Church begins as God says, “Let there be light.” It is all creation.

    This is not a statement on modern ecumenism which is mostly a substitute for true and real communion. I think it’s good to resist the temptations of modernity’s notions of unity. But, having said that, we do well to recognize that God is gathering together all things together in one in Christ Jesus. The Church is the vanguard of that – something we can see – it’s visible. But knowing that should not draw us into making judgments about what He is doing that we do not see, or do not yet see.

  19. Barbara Lehto Avatar
    Barbara Lehto

    Wondrous!

  20. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    So if something salvific is happening outside the realm of the visible Church, it is nevertheless happening because of the visible Church?

  21. Owen Kelly Avatar
    Owen Kelly

    Father,
    Thank you for the comment re: Khomiakov. Fascinating stuff in light of Ephesians 1.

  22. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Matthew,
    Not sure I would want to say it quite like that. I think some more.

  23. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Fr. Stephen said:

    “After a bit of reflection, I think that people must be thinking about grace as though it were some sort of inert substance – something that we can “mine” or “tap into” at our convenience. Grace, in Orthodox thought, is nothing other than the Divine Energies – God Himself – and that only comes as Person. The Father, through Christ, by the Holy Spirit. And the purpose of God is to bring us into communion with Himself – who is our true and only life. And the Church is the manifestation of that communion in this world. So, those who seek grace apart from the Church are at counter-purposes with God.”

    Thanks so much for this Fr. Stephen. I think I completely agree, though I did ask a another question in a comment below about in-Church/outside-Church.

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