Pay Attention! See What You See!

 

It has been said that the whole of Orthodox theology and teaching can be found in a single, well-executed icon. I believe it to be true. Over the years, I have found that certain icons have been invaluable in efforts to teach a class of inquirers or catechumens about certain aspects of the faith. Those “certain aspects” could easily be expanded until, time permitting, the whole of the faith would be expounded. I daresay that some evenings in such classes, the students probably thought that time was permitting.

My thoughts turn to this understanding each year as we approach the “Sunday of the Triumph of Orthodoxy,” the first Sunday of Great Lent. Ostensibly, it commemorates the return of icons to the Churches in the year 843, after the final condemnation of the iconoclast heresy. It is worth noting, however, that it is called the “Triumph of Orthodoxy,” and not the “Return of the Icons.” The Christian world outside of Orthodoxy remains clueless to this understanding, assuming that it is a lot of fuss about some pictures, about which they themselves remain dubious.

Like so much else in our world, we see icons only fleetingly. The culture glances at them and says, “Oh. A religious picture.” We see much of the world in the same manner. Our lives are marketed to us, primarily under the guise of emotional experiences. We are sold things for the sake of “enjoyment.” One enjoyment passes into another as we seek to construct a “good day.” In our enjoyment, we are diminished.

Consider this passage:

Attention, from this point of view, means to accept what is given just as it offers itself to us, whether in our basic engagement with the plain sense of a word or phrase, or in our perceptual awareness of the physical appearance of an image. It means a readiness for, and an openness to, another form which is different from me, which actively approaches me from outside of myself, offers itself to me as a gift, welling up to the surface from some mysterious depth. (from The Art of Seeing, by Fr. Maximos Constas)

Throughout an Orthodox service, the Deacon bids the faithful: “Attend!” (translated variously). It calls our wandering minds back to the thing at hand and tells us that our attention is required. In the placing of icons in the Churches and in our homes, the Church also says to us, “Attend!” It means for us to stop and look at the world, and, when well executed, an icon is able to say, “Look at the world in this way!”

The world we live in cannot be described as “iconoclastic,” for it is filled with images. But the images it gives to us, and the veneration it invites for them, are distorted. Even for the Orthodox, there is a great temptation for our own icons to become distorted. This is especially so when they are reduced to “branding.” “We are the Church that has icons!” God has not given them to us in order provide us with tokens of our tribe – that is nothing more than allowing ourselves to live on the level of marketing.

The icons are holy. They reveal to us the truth of God-with-us, and the truth of His relationship with the created world. The world we inhabit has lost its mooring. It wanders among the ruins of the world that went before, as often as not, defining that lost world as an enemy in order to hide from its own aimlessness. Fundamental words are losing their meaning, pressed into political meanings to serve the powers of this age. The Church proclaims that no words have meaning except as they find it in the Word Himself, no images are revealed as truth except as they reflect the Son, who is the express image of the Father.

We need to pay attention – holy things are for the holy. And we must pay attention to what God has given to us. Pay attention to the Word, so that we may understand all words. Pay attention to the icons, that we may understand all images. Pay attention to yourself, so that you may remember whose gift you are and why He has given you.

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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21 responses to “Pay Attention! See What You See!”

  1. Jenny Weyer Avatar
    Jenny Weyer

    Thank you for so faithfully turning our attention back to where it needs to be resting. The gift of your writing, whatever the subject, for me has always been a renewed call to that which is eternal and in right order.

  2. Aric Avatar
    Aric

    “Pay attention to yourself, so that you may remember whose gift you are and why He has given you.” Beautifully put, thank you Father.

    I also just want to thank you more generally. I’ve been reading this blog since I was in my early 20’s in college (2012 or so). In so many ways your thought has shaped and molded me to an extent that I can call you a kind of spiritual father. Even though I remain Catholic, live hundreds of miles away and exist in a different community, I’m thankful to God that your faith has shaped my faith, and I pray that God would bless you abundantly for your charity and response to His call in your life.

    God bless you, Father, and thank you for being an image of Christ in this world.

  3. Peter Avatar
    Peter

    Thank you for this – it’s my first time here. As a side note, perhaps look at adding a link for Bluesky so that those of us who have left the often toxic environments of the other two sites can post your blog.

  4. Esmée Noelle Covey Avatar
    Esmée Noelle Covey

    It is worth noting, however, that it is called the “Triumph of Orthodoxy,” and not the “Return of the Icons.”

    Excellent point Father, thank you.

  5. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Peter,
    Welcome. I’ll touch base with my IT person – I can’t keep up with the various social media offerings and the changes that go on. But I’ll see about adding that button.

  6. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Aric,
    Thank you for your kind thoughts and words! May God give you grace for all things!

  7. Matthew Avatar
    Matthew

    Thank you Aric. I echo your thoughts.

  8. Justin Avatar
    Justin

    “The icons are holy. They reveal to us the truth of God-with-us, and the truth of His relationship with the created world.”

    As a recent convert I, to this point, have not been terribly comfortable with the various processions in the Church, but they is growing on me. Sunday’s procession has always been especially awkward for me, but I learned something about myself in it today. I carried my icon of Christ over my heart, and every time I looked down on him, I would weep. Forgetting all the theological and historical arguments, I realized that… Jesus is, and has been, and always will be right there–materially–with me as I walk through my life, just like the icon showed me on our little walk today. It is a physical reminder to me–and not just in my head–and I now can celebrate that. I’m sorry to not have seen it before now, but I will now never forget.

  9. hélène d. Avatar
    hélène d.

    Thank you Justin for this beautiful testimony !
    It is today that you were able to receive this wonder, that you were ready to receive it !
    I rejoice for you ! Glory to God !

  10. Dee of St Herman Avatar
    Dee of St Herman

    Father,
    Thank you for this article. Indeed, that icons might be used as a token of a tribe diminishes the reception of the holy work that icons do to reveal the reality of our lives in Christ.

    Sometimes, I wish I could express the wonder of what I have experienced through the iconography of the Orthodox Church. I’m not sure whether I would have become a Christian without them. It still surprises me how our Lord prepares us to receive His presence.

    Before I became a Christian, I had understood models in chemistry as ‘icons’ of a reality that we cannot see with our eyes. Still, they conveyed a reality that I was convinced was real, and I completely believed that God, the creator, spoke through them. At the time, I didn’t use the word ‘icons’ to describe the work of these models, but when I began to read about Orthodox theology and the importance of icons in theology, I remember being excited, a quickening in my heart that I knew that there was a reality here that in some fundamental way, I understood. This was the preparation wrought in me, of how the Lord our Shepherd brought me to Him through the theology and the holy work of Orthodox iconography. The holy icons, it seems, were Our Shepherd’s staff, nudging me to follow Him into His Church.

    Glory to God for His mercy.

  11. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Dee,
    It’s interesting to me that I had an affinity for icons for years before I began to understand them. Indeed, I wrote my thesis at Duke on the theology of icons, a few years prior to actually become Orthodox. Little did I know that there was an understanding that would only come to me after my being received into the Church and the veneration of icons became a regular and normative part of my life. I find no fault in my thesis – but there is a depth now that (strangely) helps me understand the deeper meaning of words I wrote at that time.

    Theory and practice go hand in hand, surely. How merciful God is!

  12. Dee of St Herman Avatar
    Dee of St Herman

    Indeed Father,
    As you say, I experienced so much more understanding after being accepted into the Church and living with the holy icons over the years. Yes, I completely agree that theory and practice go hand in hand.

  13. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Dee,
    I don’t think I knew that prior to my Orthodox experience.

  14. Dee of St Herman Avatar
    Dee of St Herman

    Father,
    It’s hard to convey to others who have not been immersed in the Orthodox Lifeway. It isn’t something that we can humanly create or establish. It is truly the work of the Holy Spirit, given to us over generations and cultures, that enlivens us over the generations and speaks to us in prayers as we stand or kneel before the icons.

    Each time I light a candle, the spark from the match kindles the fire in my heart. The light reflecting from the surface of the icon of Christ and the Theotokos shines on my face, enveloping my mind and heart. Immediately, I am reminded I am His child, though unworthy that I am. With such gratitude and hope, I say my prayers.

    As I write this, on the wall beside the desk where I sit, the icon of Christ holding the biblical passage says, “You did not choose me, but I chose you–that you should bear fruit.” This was the very first icon that spoke to me. When I first brought this icon into my home, I was afraid to become a Christian. By the humble and loving grace of Jesus Christ, I hung on with the help of this icon. The living reality is so hard to convey.

    All of this would not be possible without the Orthodox Church. This is our lifeboat. And indeed, we are not saved alone. Only in the immersion of the Life, whether in baptism and/or chrismation, living through the hardships, the mess, the reality of our Church in the heavens and on earth envelopes us, infuses us, and keeps us through the ages.

    Glory to God for His mercy.

  15. Dee of St Herman Avatar
    Dee of St Herman

    Our media encourages cynicism, which is understandable in some cases.

    Nevertheless, as a cultural habit, cynicism can prevent us from perceiving what is needed for the heart and mind and conveyed through the holy icons. As you have said in your book and articles, and this is what is conveyed in the icons, we live in a one-storey universe.

    This is the age of our Lord. The Kingdom has come. Although in our fallen state this is hard to see.

  16. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Indeed. Only love understand anything.

  17. hélène d. Avatar
    hélène d.

    P. Stephen, can we say that with the Icons, but also the whole understanding we have of Orthodox worship is based on the fact that we recognize the invisible presence of Christ in the transparency of images, symbols and rites. To see Christ, to see God in his humanity, – apart from “our pleasure where we are truly diminished”! – to see Christ invisibly present in every man and woman we encounter… what restoration of natural and spiritual vision does this require ? This goes beyond the time of Great Lent with its fasting on all things…
    And how can we be freed from a view, a vision, obscured by lust, which would allow us to see all creatures no longer as prey and objects of enjoyment and power, but as the subtle presence of the Creator in his world….
    We can understand, intuitively feel all these things and, as Dee says, “have felt an acceleration in my heart” and at the same time perceive all the heaviness of the psychic being and its dependence on its desires… There is truly an inner “tension” that “leaves my temples no rest” !…
    But the wonder is this “attraction” towards the Goodness and the extreme humility of the Lord…

  18. Fr. Stephen Avatar

    Hélène,
    Yes, I think we can.

  19. Mallory Avatar
    Mallory

    Thank you, Father Stephen. This is an element of my faith I have not yet explored or experienced viscerally but I am eager to! I often, daily even, feel the presence and Grace of Christ in my heart when I’m reading his words, but have yet to experience that same holy feeling when looking at icons. I pray to be shown!

    I have a question on Scripture (so many it seems, but I’ll keep it to one!)–I keep noticing lately that Jesus in the New Testament (I read the KJV) seems to be speaking to the people in front of him, in present, urgent tense, saying that he will be coming back soon, after His resurrection. Can you illuminate this for me? I keep wondering at statements like this, that I’ve never noticed before:

    “Verily I say unto you, There be some standing here, which shall not taste of death, till they see the Son of man coming in his kingdom” This is one in many, also “But woe unto them that are with child, and to them that give suck, in those days! for there shall be great distress in the land, and wrath upon this people.” Doesn’t this imply that the tribulation is coming soon? And that the people he is preaching to will be alive to witness it, or at least their children? I suppose I’m asking a timeline question, I sincerely want to understand what I’m missing here. His words seem clear to me, but that would mean we are not waiting for tribulation? Is is possible Jesus did come back like he tells them he will? As you can see, I’m filled with questions, I’m hoping you can help me make sense of this.

    As always, thank you for your writing.

  20. Joanie Miller Avatar
    Joanie Miller

    Im glad I read this . Thanks

  21. juliania Avatar
    juliania

    Mallory,

    I found it helpful, coming (as usual) late to this subject/post, to go to some of Father Stephen’s earlier postings on the same subject that are linked below his present one. So for this time, I went to the earliest version and read through some of his answers to others. Here is one sentence that I felt answered your questions, particularly if you apply it alongside of the title of the post:

    ” …There is a mystery in prayer that is really only made clear in the setting of participation in the life of God. Moses, Abraham, me, you, none of us “change God’s mind” when we pray – but we enter into His life…”

    Other posters here have expressed this, and Christ could himself in the example you gave, pick out from the crowd listening to him those he recognized as ready even before death to have such an experience of participating in eternity. That’s how I interpret such statements. As well as that for some, much more will be their experience of life’s loneliness, as for one who suffers at the loss of a chld, even though the promise awaits everyone. I’ve had the feeling that Scripture gives us glimpses of particular ways this happens, icons if you like, for every kind of human being- sometimes including a mysterious non-ending that retains mystery. We don’t get to fill in all the gaps, have everything explained. If we did, what would be left to look forward to, when all shall be revealed?

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