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Posts Tagged ‘Orthodox Christians’

Writing Icons and Building a New Church

by coldwarrior ( 45 Comments › )
Filed under Art, History, Orthodox Christianity, Religion at September 1st, 2013 - 8:00 am

Recently, Mrs Coldwarrior and I went to the Festival for The Holy Trinity Orthodox Church (Greek) just north of Pittsburgh. This is the first festival at their new site. They were on the North Side in Pittsburgh and have grown so much that they needed more space for the congregation and for events and education. This church does not belong to the Orthodox Church in America, founded in 1794 and granted autocephaly in 1970. The OCA rules itself and is not beholden to Rome, Constantinople, or Moscow. It is an American Church that can trace direct lineage back to St Peter throw the churches of the Middle East, Asia Minor, and Eastern Europe. The Liturgy and Canon is the same as in Constantinople, or Moscow , here it is in English.  At Holy Trinity, they will use some Greek. At my church, Holy Ghost, we will occasionally use church Slavonic as the Parish was founded as a Russian Orthodox Church.

While the Church continued to grow in Alaska, immigrants began arriving in what we today call the lower 48. In the 1860s a parish was established in San Francisco by Serbians, Russians and Greeks. [Today this parish is the OCA’s Holy Trinity Cathedral.] Gradually other similar parishes were established across the territory of the United States and, with the great waves of immigrants from Central and Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and Southern Europe at the end of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century, the headquarters of the North American Orthodox Diocese was moved to San Francisco and later to New York. By the early 1900s almost all Orthodox communities, regardless of ethnic background, were united in a single diocese, or jurisdiction, which was under the Russian Orthodox Church. In fact, the first bishop for Arab-Americans, Bishop Raphael Hawaweeny, was also the first Orthodox Christian to be consecrated to the episcopacy in North America. He and the parishes under his direction were an integral part of the North American Diocese. [Bishop Raphael was glorified as a saint in May 2000 by the Orthodox Church in America.]

In 1917 the Russian Revolution broke out. As a result communications between the North American Diocese and the Church in Russia were greatly hindered. In the early 1920s the Patriarch of Moscow, Saint Tikhon for ten years he had served as Bishop of the North American Diocese issued a decree calling on dioceses outside the borders of Russia [by then the Soviet Union] to organize themselves autonomously until such time as normal communications and relations with the Church in Russia could resume. Shortly thereafter, at a Council of all hierarchs and clergy and parish delegates, it was decided that the Church in North America could no longer maintain strict administrative ties with the Church in Russia, especially since Patriarch Tikhon had been arrested. [He subsequently died in 1925, and glorified as a Saint by the Russian Orthodox Church in 1989.]

Concurrently, various ethnic groups which had been an integral part of the single diocese organized separate dioceses, or jurisdictions, and placed themselves under their respective Mother Churches. This gave rise to the present situation of Orthodoxy in North America, namely the existence of multiple, overlapping jurisdictions based on ethnic background, rather than following the canonical principle of a single Church entity in a given territory.

This Parish is part of the The Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. They “All recognize the spiritual preeminence of the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople who is acknowledged as primus inter pares, first among equals. All share full communion with one another. The living tradition of the Church and the principles of concord and harmony are expressed through the common mind of the universal episcopate as the need arises. In all other matters, the internal life of each independent Church is administered by the bishops of that particular Church.”

This subtle difference, and other minor issues,  are being addressed by the American Bishops of the Orthodox Churches at this time. The goal is to unify all of the Orthodox Churches in America under one organization, That’s the Greeks, Russians, Coptics, Serbians, Ukraninas, et ecetera. Right now, there is very little difference. If a Russian Orthodox goes to the Greeks for Liturgy, he can take the sacraments without any problem.

Holy Trinity managed to buy ten acres from the Sisters of Divine Providence (at quite a discount) and have built a church that resembles the Hagia Sofia in occupied Constantinople.

The festival was, of course, fantastic! Much Uzo and wine and gyros and music and dancing! There was true joy in their faith and their accomplishment of building this beautiful House Of God.

Now, about ‘Writing the Icons’. Please watch these videos of the new church being built:

 

Do Note: The Icons are not idols, they are not worshiped. They are representations of the history of the Church and scenes from the Bible. They originated before the printing press. They tell a story.

The Greek team that wrote the Icons were led by Dr. George Kordis. They brought over 5 colors of pigments, some brushes, spices, incense, and wine for the paints and got to work. They used 3000 eggs as the binder for the pigments.

Day 2

April 4, 2013: Dr. George Kordis and his iconography team continue work on the Pantokrator icon of Christ and the Holy Angels at the top of the dome of the new Holy Trinity Church in Pittsburgh, PA. In the dome, the heavenly realm, There is Christ holding the Bible. The book is closed. It is Judgement Day. On the altar he is holding an open Bible. The ring below the dome is between heaven and earth, this is occupied by icons of the prophets. Below the ring is the Earth. The icons there are scenes and persons from the bible.

April 10, 2013: Dr. George Kordis and his iconography team complete their work on the Pantokrator icon of Christ and the Holy Angels at the top of the dome

The Lower Dome. April 22, 2013: The Dr. George Kordis iconography team continues progress on figures in the lower dome iconography.

 

Please visit the Holy Trinity Website and You Tube Site for more on their efforts. Its well worth a few hours of interesting viewing.

Enjoy the Rest of your Sunday!

 

 

Saturday Lecture Series: Icons in the Eastern Orthodox Church

by coldwarrior ( 71 Comments › )
Filed under Academia, Art, Open thread, Orthodox Christianity, Religion, saturday lecture series at October 30th, 2010 - 8:30 am

The Transfiguration Icon

I have been asked several times to do a post on the meaning of the Icons in the Eastern Churches. Here is a rather detailed post on that subject. Please take your time and read if you are interested. I will do my best to answer any questions.

In the Eastern Orthodox Christian churches, we use icons instead of statues as the Roman Catholic Church uses. The Roman Catholic religious sculptures are well known and many are simply breathtaking, they are famous as well. The Pieta, instantly comes to mind as the best example of Rennaisance Catholic inspired sculpture. Today, we are going to explore the Eastern Orthodox version of the representation of the spiritual qualities of the saints and representations of actions and are not supposed to be realistic images. I stress that these are not ‘graven images’.

Without going into the Iconoclasms of the past. I offer the following excerpts from some websites (the learned here explain far better than i can) so that the Icons of the Eastern Orthodox churches are understood by our readers:

An icon is a pictorial replication and a spiritual representation of a saint, biblical scene or historical religious event. A held object, a style of dress, a color or scene in the background is duplicated so the identity is instantly recognizable, despite barriers of language, distance and time. The word is derived from the Greek “eikon,” which means to resemble. The icon seeks to reveal the divine through visible and familiar content. In this sense, the icon has been called “a meeting between heaven and earth”. For through them we receive a vision of the spiritual world. The stylized character of the icon shows man and nature restored to their original beauty as reflections of the celestial glory. Icons have played a role in Christianity since the days of the Apostles. St. Luke has traditionally been known as the first iconographer. An art form that has resisted change, modern icons have evolved very little. Today they still bear a strong resemblance to icons of the Byzantine period.

The veneration of the icon should not be misinterpreted as being made to the physical picture itself. These gestures pass over from the icon to the person depicted, thus the honor which is given to the icon passes over to the “prototype”, the person himself. As we venerate the icons, we are reminded of the high spiritual values and virtues of the holy ones depicted, and are encouraged to pursue those same values and virtues ourselves. In Orthodox tradition, icons are not intended to be realistic paintings of people and events, but rather are symbolic interpretations of the great spiritual qualities of the saints – such as sacrifice, humility, devotion, faith and love. Every element and detail in the icon, from color choice to hand position to the placement and size of secondary figures, has symbolic meaning based upon the Scriptures, the writings of the Fathers, and other theological sources. Thus the Holy Icons are one more piece of that which the Church calls Holy Tradition. They are truly the Gospel message in line, form and color.

QUESTION:

What is the significance of the placement of the fingers of the right hand I notice in icons of Christ and certain saints?

The fingers are arranged to form the following letters — IC XC — which are the first and last letters of “Jesus” and “Christ” in Greek.

Hence, the index finger points upward, forming an “I.” The middle finger is curved to form a “C.” The fourth finger crosses over the thumb to form an “X,” while the little finger is curved in a manner similar to that of the middle finger, thereby forming another “C.”

In Christ,

Father John Matusiak
OCA Communications Director

The following is a very interesting read:

Color Symbolism

In iconography there are two distinct categories of colors. First there is white, red, green and blue, used to express life, purity, peace and goodness. The second category of colors is black, brown, grey and yellow, and they are used to express danger and impurity. Christian beliefs follow the thought of Dionysus the Aeropagite who distinguishes three types of symbols: noble, middle and base.

What do colors represent in iconography?

White: is the color that represents eternal life and purity.

Blue: represents celestial beings, God’s dwelling place, the sky.

Red: symbolizes activity. In Hebrew thought, red represents life. We find it mentioned in several books of the Old Testament: in the Second Book of Samuel, Saul dressed the daughters of Israel in red garments: “O daughters of Israel, weep over Saul, who clothed you in scarlet, with luxury…” (2 Samuel 1:24). In Proverbs we find that the perfect wife wears red, in the book of Jermiah, Jerusalem beautifies herself in a red garment. The martyr’s clothes are red, the clothing of the seraphims are red also. Red is also the color that depicts health, fire and the Last Judgment.

Purple: purple is the symbol of royalty, wealth, power, and priestly dignity. In the book of Daniel we learn that the king dressed himself in purple, and in the Psalms it is mentioned that the king and the queen are robed in purple.

Green: in the Holy Scriptures, green represents nature and vegetation, and it is thus representative of growth and fertility. It is mentioned in the Song of Songs and the Book of Jeremiah. In iconography it is used for the robes of martyrs and prophets.

Brown: represents density and lack of radiance. Brown is composed of red, blue, green and black, and it is used to depict soil, rocks and buildings. It is also used as a symbol of poverty and renunciation for the dark garments of monks and ascetics.

Black: represents absence of life; it symbolizes a void. It is the opposite of white. While white represents the fullness of life, black represents the lack of it. Monks and Great Schema monks wear black garments, as a symbol of their renunciation of all that is material.

Yellow: representing sadness is used in the icon of the Savior being placed in the tomb. In Deuteronomy it is mentioned as a sign of misfortune, bad harvest and blight.

Creation of an Icon

In iconography an icon is not painted, but written. The process of writing an icon is long and tedious. Many hours, weeks, sometimes months are spent in the creation of an icon, depending of course on the size and complexity of it. A Russian monk remarked once that “…icons are not civil paintings. They are not for museums. They are not decorations. They are a reflection of God that has become man. Icons carry the real feeling and teachings of Orthodoxy.”

The iconographer does not have the right to change an icon just to be different and creative. As we mentioned earlier, the creation of an icon is not the painter’s own work. He is more like a co-author. In the Painter’s Manual, preserved on Mount Athos, the master advises him who aspires to become an icon painter to pray before the icon of Christ and that of the Mother of God, because the art of painting comes from God, who alone can guide the painter’s hand to give form to the mysteries of God.

Preparation to work on an icon is similar to the preparation for going to church: with prayers and fasting. Painting an icon is a liturgical work. Preparing to paint an icon is like preparing for Liturgy. Always start with prayer. The following is the iconographer’s prayer: “O Divine Lord of all that exists, You have illumined the Apostle and Evangelist Luke with Your Most Holy Spirit, thereby enabling him to represent the most Holy Mother, the one who held You in her arms and said: `the Grace of Him Who has been born of me is spread throughout the world. Enlighten and direct our souls, our hearts and our spirits. Guide the hands of your unworthy servant, so that we may worthily and perfectly portray your icon, that of Your Holy Mother and of all the saints, for the glory and adornment of Your Holy Church. Forgive our sins and the sins of those who will venerate these icons, and who, standing devoutly before them, give homage those they represent. Protect them from all evil and instruct them with good counsel. This we ask through the prayers of the Most Holy Theotokos, the Apostle Luke, and all the saints, now and ever and unto ages of ages.”

The materials used to create an icon are of several kinds. The most widely used is wood. The wood has to be hard and non-resinous, such as birch, lime or cypress. In most wood panels two wedges of hard wood are inserted horizontally in the back to prevent warping. The surface of the wood panel is then covered with a sheet of linen that is glued to the wood and on top of it are applied many layers of gesso. (Gesso is a special mixture of plaster and glue that when it hardens it is very strong.) In general seven layers of gesso are applied, and each layer is sanded after it has dried. Because the drying process can take a while, it may take a week or more to prepare the surface of one icon before painting can begin. The final sanding is very important; the surface must remain silky smooth.

Please read the rest here

Some Icons are shown hereAnd here .

More:

APOLOGIA OF ST JOHN DAMASCENE AGAINST THOSE WHO DECRY HOLY IMAGES.

The Orthodox Church’s View of ‘Islam’

by coldwarrior ( 230 Comments › )
Filed under Christianity, History, Islam, Koran, Religion at October 22nd, 2010 - 11:30 am

The Orthodox Church’s approach to Islam is very simple and is very well spelled out by St John of Damascus (St John the Damascene for the Catholics).  St John was patriarch of Damascus in the 700’s and is the single most important writer in Orthodoxy. He witnessed the rise of Islam first hand and identified what Islam is, a movement brought forward by a false prophet. St John continues in his encyclopedic work “The Font of Knowledge”. “Concerning Heresy”  is contained in this book, in the section On Heresies, he dedicates a portion to the Heresy of the Ishmaelites, being the first apologetic work against Islam by a Christian. :

There is also the superstition of the Ishmaelites which to this day prevails and keeps people in error, being a forerunner of the Antichrist. They are descended from Ishmael, [who] was born to Abraham of Agar, and for this reason they are called both Agarenes and Ishmaelites. They are also called Saracens, which is derived from Sarras kenoi, or destitute of Sara, because of what Agar said to the angel: ‘Sara hath sent me away destitute.’ These used to be idolaters and worshiped the morning star and Aphrodite, whom in their own language they called Khabár, which means great.  And so down to the time of Heraclius they were very great idolaters. From that time to the present a false prophet named Mohammed has appeared in their midst. This man, after having chanced upon the Old and New Testaments and likewise, it seems, having conversed with an Arian monk, devised his own heresy. Then, having insinuated himself into the good graces of the people by a show of seeming piety, he gave out that a certain book had been sent down to him from heaven. He had set down some ridiculous compositions in this book of his and he gave it to them as an object of veneration….

that the book came down to him while he was asleep. Then we jokingly say to them that, as long as he received the book in his sleep and did not actually sense the operation, then the popular adage applies to him which runs: You’re spinning me dreams.

Please read the rest and peruse this valuable website, Orthodoxinfo center:

I also invite you to please read this Definitive Reply to Islam (the author’s name had to be withheld)

I wish to note that Orthodoxy reserves this dim view for Islam alone.  Other religions are respected by Orthodoxy.  Islam is not respected, because it is not  seen as a religion.

It is the view of the Orthodox church that Islam was brought forward by a false prophet, Mohamed.  His religious movement is heretical to Christianity and is based upon the ‘dreams’ of a sociopath. The Eastern Churches had the unfortunate luck to have Islam as a neighbor. The fight against in the East continues in Russia and Serbia and has been going on since the inception of the rantings of a false prophet. As a practicing Orthodox I proudly agree whole heatedly with these assessments of Islam.

Islam Delenda Est.

Rebuild St. Nicholas CHURCH at Ground Zero, Not a Mosque

by 1389AD ( 186 Comments › )
Filed under Christianity, Islamic Invasion, Republican Party, September 11, Terrorism, Tranzis at August 13th, 2010 - 7:04 pm

Rebuilding has been blocked for nearly nine years. Where’s the outrage?

Amid all the brouhaha about the intentions of our Muslim enemies to build a monument to terrorism at Ground Zero in New York City, we seem to have forgotten about rebuilding the little Orthodox Christian church that was destroyed in the same attack.

George Demos: REBUILD THE CHURCH AT GROUND ZERO, NOT A MOSQUE

H/T: Sparta

St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church silhouetted against the Twin Towers

Brookhaven, NY- George Demos, the Conservative Republican Candidate for Congress in New York’s First Congressional District issued the following statement on the proposed mosque amid the sacred ruins of Ground Zero and expressed outrage at our own government’s refusal to rebuild the only house of worship that was actually destroyed on September 11th- the St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church.

George Demos said:

“On September 11, 2001, over 3,000 Americans, including 168 residents of our community in Suffolk County, were taken from us by the evil acts of Islamic extremists bent on destroying our freedoms. Amid the thick smoke and choking ashes of that fateful day, the St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church was reduced to dust.

Since 1922, St. Nicholas Church had stood as a quiet sanctuary of prayer and reflection amidst the tumultuous and bustling crossroads of commerce. For nine years the Port Authority of New York/New Jersey has used bureaucratic obstacles and false promises to hinder the rebuilding of the St. Nicholas Church. This must end and it must end now.

What an outrage that our government has put roadblocks in the path of its own citizens trying rebuild their beloved Church destroyed by Islamic extremists, while Saudi Arabia, a nation that prohibits people from even wearing a Cross or the Star of David, now provokes the families of those who lost loved ones by apparently funneling money to build a mosque at the same location.

As our Congressman, I will always remember that our Constitutional freedom of religion starts with respecting our own sacred Judeo-Christian heritage. Now is the time for the Port Authority to stop hiding behind its bureaucracy and to facilitate the rebuilding of the St. Nicholas Church that was taken from us on that quiet September morning nearly a decade ago.”

Local bureaucrats block rebuilding the church, but smooth the way for a mosque

I suppose that’s what passes for “freedom of religion” these days! How sadly ironic, considering that there is no greater enemy of freedom of religion than Islam. Islam unjustly avails itself of Constitutional protections by calling itself a religion, but it is not a religion in any recognizable sense of the word. Islam is instead an expansionist, totalitarian political ideology that, much like Nazism and Communism, seeks to rid the world of everything but itself.

Evidently, that’s just fine with the tranzi-progressive/jihadist alliance that is currently running the show in New York City. The New York/New Jersey Port Authority bureaucrats are refusing to budge, and, with few exceptions, the local politicians are doing nothing to get justice for the St. Nicholas congregation and other Orthodox Christians who have the right to worship and to commemmorate the dead in a church on this site.

This story ran in the New York Times over a year ago, and still nothing has been done.

NYT: Church’s Troubles Typify Ground Zero Delays

Thumbnail photo of St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church at Ground Zero, just before its destruction
Photo by Eric O’Connell
St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church on Sept. 11, 2001, minutes before it was crushed by the falling south tower. Seven years later, the Port Authority and the church have failed to agree on a land swap needed for rebuilding.

By CHARLES V. BAGLI
Published: July 3, 2008

The story of the tiny St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church and its efforts to rebuild after the collapse of the World Trade Center is one of well-intentioned promises that led to endless negotiations, design disputes, delays and mounting costs.

It is, in other words, a microcosm of the seven-year, $16 billion, problem-plagued effort to reconstruct the entire trade center site.

Within a month of the attack on the trade center, Archbishop Demetrios, primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in America, pledged that the four-story church would rise “on the same sacred spot as a symbol of determined faith.” Gov. George E. Pataki agreed.

But today, the church exists only on blueprints. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the agency overseeing reconstruction, has not finalized the exchange of land needed to provide the congregation with a new home near ground zero. Until that deal is completed, the authority cannot proceed with building the southern foundation wall for the entire site, and cannot draw up designs for a bomb screening center for buses and trucks that would go under the new church.

Read the rest.


More information here:

Church Website: St. Nicholas Church in New York City


Also see:

Article on New York Daily News blog:
GOP Hopeful George Demos: Rebuild Church At Ground Zero, Not Mosque

New York Daily News email address:
voicers@edit.nydailynews.com