Where the Heart Resides

rublevtrinity.jpg

One of the questions that surrounds the knowledge of God, as spoken of by the Scriptures and the Fathers of the Eastern Church, is that of where the heart resides. By this, I do not mean where the heart is located (in the chest or wherever), but where the heart itself lives. Though the heart is by no means disconnected from our rationality, it is also resident in many other places of our lives.

The heart resides in a place that can be addressed in many ways – even ways that we do not normally think of as avenues of communication.

I can recall some years ago being invited to an Episcopal Church to speak to a womens’ group on praying with icons. I was not Orthodox at the time, but I had written my Master’s Thesis on the subject of the theology of icons, all of which made me a likely candidate for a morning’s program.

What struck me at the time (I had brought a number of exemplary icons for my talk) was the interest of the group in wanting me to teach them how to “read” the icons. I do not know another word for it – although I do not think this was their own term. But it was clear that they were trying to read the icons as though it was simply a pictographic form of writing. “What does the icon say?”

The expectation was that praying with icons was simply another form of directing your attention, and that if you knew the key you might have greater understanding as you prayed.

Now it is certainly true that icons have a language of sorts and that they can even be “read.” “Icons do with color what Scripture does with words,” the Fathers of the Seventh Council proclaimed. But you cannot do with color what Scripture does with words in the same manner. Color is one thing and words are another. Both reveal and make present and communicate the Truth of the faith. But that communication is not simply the same thing (or else why would you have both instead of one?).

The group became very disappointed with me as I began to explain that “praying with icons” is pretty much literally that – you pray and you are with icons. It sounds terribly prosaic until you have prayed with icons enough to know what it means. I would compare the phrase to “swimming with water.” I’m not certain you can swim without water – but I’m sure the experience would be quite different. It is, of course, possible to pray without icons – but the experience is quite different as well.

So where is it that the heart resides when it prays with icons? Obviously, with training, it learns to dwell amidst the icons and thus amidst that (or Whom) the icons make present.

I know a woman who came to faith (from agnosticism or atheism, take your pick) in the midst of a Church service, by simply addressing an icon of Christ. She posed a simple question, and the answer came not in words, but in a knowledge and a relationship that had been silent, missing, or unlocatable before. I know for a fact that I could not have done the same thing with words, had I even known what words to speak (and how could I know such a thing?).

There is a story from frontier America of the early Quaker missionary, John Woolman. He was addressing a group of Native Americans with a translator. Quakers (then and now) can be a different sort. Woolman became tired of the process of preaching and translating, and finally asked the translator to be quiet as he continued to share the gospel with his non-English speaking audience. At the end of his talk, one of the natives approached him and said, “I like to hear the place where the words come from.” A peculiar reaction – and yet if you have ever heard inspired speech, you may know precisely what was meant.

Where does the heart reside? We may not always be able to say, but the multi-voiced Tradition of the Church knows precisely where it resides, and when left alone without the insistence of rational control, frequently finds its target and does what we do not of ourselves know how to do. Thanks be to God.

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.


Comments

5 responses to “Where the Heart Resides”

  1. David Avatar
    David

    ‘The heart is but a small vessel, yet there are lions; there are poisonous beasts, and rough uneven roads. But there also is God, also the angels, the life and the kingdom, the light and the Apostles, the treasures of grace – there are all things.’ St. Macarius

  2. fatherstephen Avatar

    David,

    I’ve seen the quote before but kept losing it. Thanks for posting it!

  3. […] şi adaptare Pr. Drd. Picioruş Dorin Octavian, cf. sursei. Published […]

  4. Stephen Avatar
    Stephen

    Thank you.

  5. […] On icons by Fr Stephen at Glory to God for All Things. […]

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Subscribe to blog via email

Support the work

Your generous support for Glory to God for All Things will help maintain and expand the work of Fr. Stephen. This ministry continues to grow and your help is important. Thank you for your prayers and encouragement!


Latest Comments

  1. In researching Kearney, I found it is exactly half way between the East Coast and west Coast. Even today it…

  2. Matthew, being Orthodox when the forbears came was an asset. St Raphael of Brooklyn took care of his people. He…

  3. Thanks Michael and Fr. Stephen. It must be challenging being Orthodox in the Bible Belt, though maybe not?

  4. I want to testify as it is about the time of night when Jesus, if I am awake, when He…

  5. All true, Father but in the mile of road that St. George parking lot fronts on, there are three other…


Read my books

Everywhere Present by Stephen Freeman

Listen to my podcast



Categories


Archives