Tony has put me onto five Orthodox blogs I didn't know before, but from a morning's dabbling in them, I think I can tell you they are all treats, each in its own way. I hope you'll enjoy this smorgasbord, as I am. The blogs are:
Petronia
Search and Rescue
Lord I have Cried Unto Thee
The Voice of Stefan
Ancient Christian Defender, where I found this fascinating video about the ruins of Sodom and Gomorrah. (It's 16 minutes long and worth the time!)
(This shape is thought to be a very eroded sphynx at Gomorrah.)
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Check These!
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 11:22 AM 0 comments
Labels: Biblical Archaeology, Blogs
Monday, January 12, 2009
The Church's One Foundation
“I believe in God, the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth, and of all things, visible and invisible.”
What makes us dare to suppose we can or ought to call the Creator of the whole Universe, “Father?” Why do we speak of Him as “Him”?
The simple answer is, because that is what Jesus taught us.
And why should we pay any heed to what Jesus taught us? For many reasons. Because He showed more profound wisdom than anyone else ever has, before or since. Because He showed love such as had never been heard of. Because He worked miracles. Especially, because He rose from the dead. That alone would have made Him a uniquely qualified spiritual master.
And how do we know He rose from the dead? Well, twelve very different men went into all the known world to tell us so – and sealed their testimony, almost to a man, with their blood. But that isn’t all they did. No, the most important thing they did, the thing above all else they passed on to the Church, is the ongoing, living presence of that same Lord Jesus. In the Church, we find Him still alive, not as a memory or principle or concept, but as a Person, still loving us with incomparable love, still teaching, still healing, still making wise, still rescuing people, still sanctifying and guiding and lighting the way. And in each of our hearts, too, we notice, even if only sporadically, this new, young, tender green plant, His life growing inside ours, gradually displacing ours. We have been given the Holy Spirit, in other words, in Holy Chrismation.
And that is how we know He is alive; we have been made eyewitnesses of His resurrection. We know Him, not only through the Apostles, but now, together with them, we have met Him and we walk with Him and we know Him, firsthand. This is the Treasure we have “in earthen vessels.” The Church herself has become the Holy Grail. This is how we know what we know. “But the anointing which you received from Him abides in you, and you have no need that any one should teach you; as His anointing teaches you about everything, and is true, and is no lie, just as it has taught you, abide in Him." (I John 2:27)
Apart from this heavenly anointing, I suppose we would be papists or Sola Scripturists.
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 8:51 AM 0 comments
Labels: Christian Life, Orthodoxy
Saturday, January 10, 2009
A Favorite Childhood Poem
LITTLE ORPHANT ANNIE
by: James Whitcomb Riley (1849-1916)
INSCRIBED WITH ALL FAITH AND AFFECTION
To all the little children: -- The happy ones; and sad ones;
The sober and the silent ones; the boisterous and glad ones;
The good ones -- Yes, the good ones, too; and all the lovely bad ones.
LITTLE Orphant Annie's come to our house to stay,
An' wash the cups an' saucers up, an' brush the crumbs away,
An' shoo the chickens off the porch, an' dust the hearth, an' sweep,
An' make the fire, an' bake the bread, an' earn her board-an'-keep;
An' all us other childern, when the supper-things is done,
We set around the kitchen fire an' has the mostest fun
A-list'nin' to the witch-tales 'at Annie tells about,
An' the Gobble-uns 'at gits you
Ef you
Don't
Watch
Out!
Wunst they wuz a little boy wouldn't say his prayers,--
An' when he went to bed at night, away up-stairs,
His Mammy heerd him holler, an' his Daddy heerd him bawl,
An' when they turn't the kivvers down, he wuzn't there at all!
An' they seeked him in the rafter-room, an' cubby-hole, an' press,
An' seeked him up the chimbly-flue, an' ever'-wheres, I guess;
But all they ever found wuz thist his pants an' roundabout*:--
An' the Gobble-uns 'll git you
Ef you
Don't
Watch
Out!
An' one time a little girl 'ud allus laugh an' grin,
An' make fun of ever' one, an' all her blood-an'-kin;
An' wunst, when they was "company," an' ole folks wuz there,
She mocked 'em an' shocked 'em, an' said she didn't care!
An' jist as she kicked her heels, an' turn't to run an' hide,
They wuz two great big Black Things a-standin' by her side,
An' they snatched her through the ceilin' 'fore she knowed what she's about!
An' the Gobble-uns 'll git you
Ef you
Don't
Watch
Out!
An' little Orphant Annie says, when the blaze is blue,
An' the lamp-wick sputters, an' the wind goes woo-oo!
An' you hear the crickets quit, an' the moon is gray,
An' the lightnin'-bugs in dew is all squenched away,--
You better mind yer parunts, an' yer teachurs fond an' dear,
An' churish them 'at loves you, an' dry the orphant's tear,
An' he'p the pore an' needy ones 'at clusters all about,
Er the Gobble-uns 'll git you
Ef you
Don't
Watch
Out!
*Roundabout: short, close-fitting jacket (18th Century)
"Little Orphant Annie" is reprinted from Complete Works. James Whitcomb Riley. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1916. http://www.poetry-archive.com/r/little_orphant_annie.html
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 9:08 AM 0 comments
Labels: Poems
Friday, January 9, 2009
"Thou...Who Camest into the World to Save Sinners...
...of whom I am the chief."
My mind tells me it's ridiculous for a whole roomful of people to be praying this prayer, let alone millions of us; everyone can't be the worst sinner in the world! Surely human beings aren't all that different from each other; we aren't uniquely evil. Chances are, says my mind, I am not all that much worse than most people.
But it sure feels like I am! It certainly seems that way. My heart disagrees with my mind. I don't see anybody else, not even pagans, failing at so many things, rudimentary, basic things, as I do.
So that's why that prayer is there. Nothing to do with false humility. Everything to do with pouring out to God what's on your heart.
And - another comfort - whoever wrote that prayer understood. The Church understands. How cool is that?
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 5:35 PM 1 comments
Labels: Christian Life
Thursday, January 8, 2009
And How Long Since You Called Your Mom?
(Note to Self)
Where is your birth certificate? The copy you ordered and received six months ago, because you couldn’t find your passport? More importantly, why don’t you KNOW where your birth certificate is? You still need it to get another passport, and time is creeping up on you. You can lay your finger on all sorts of junk – favorite poems, games, souvenirs – but when it comes to important things, what?
How do you manage to be holding something in your hand one minute and it’s lost the next, simply because you paid no attention?
When is the last time you ate a real lunch, something actually nutritious, instead of grabbing whatever was handy?
How can anybody with a heart condition become so absorbed in a marble run as to forget to take her heart medicine or brush her teeth or eat anything until the waves of nausea force her to?
Why are you still using your pizza stone for a cutting board? When your cutting board breaks, you are supposed to go out and buy another one. When your oven mitts develop holes, you are supposed to replace them. What’s with this make-do mentality? You aren’t that poor, at least not any more. Buy yourself some lingerie while you're at it; yours is disgraceful.
You have to stop start now. You can’t keep living in some fantasy world, all in your own head. You have to deal with the real world in a real way, not just pay the least possible attention when absolutely required. It requires all your attention, all your care. Come on, the real world is beautiful! Really, it is! It’s far more beautiful than your pretend one just because it’s real, for starters. It’s real, it has such rich meaning, it’s full of light and color and sound, and best of all, real, precious people. Why do you neglect your friends, fail to reply to e-mails, make yourself scarce and hard to relate to?
You have to be an adult again, tackle adult responsibilities, stay on top of things, make those appointments, get the cat to the vet, find that birth certificate (or pay for yet another one!), don’t forget to pay off your credit card until the interest builds up to more than the original charge, and do cook more than the same half dozen dinners over and over again. (Okay, so you’re out of ideas; there are zillions of recipes on the Internet.) Put away your Sudoku for a while, tear yourself away from the marbles, read your Civil War books only at bedtime, knit only while Demetrios is channel-surfing, come out of your perpetual playtime, start being fully functional, grow up! And walk away from your computer for the rest of today.
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 11:40 AM 3 comments
Labels: Personal
Wednesday, January 7, 2009
Decorations Down
The Twelve Days of Christmas having concluded yesterday, I'm taking down the decorations today. Tree ornaments lovingly wrapped and boxed and put away, tree out the door, leaving a trail of pine needles to be swept, the wreath from the door hung on its nail in the attic and covered with an old cloth, the nutcrackers replaced in their boxes, the candles in the windows likewise, the stockings from the hearth folded and put away, mine and my husband's, the cats', my grandparents', my dad's...
And the lighted ceramic wreath Dad painted (with lots of help) last year, his last known work of art, unplugged and folded in tissue paper and put away.
And this year, for the first time, I'm glad. It feels like some sort of relief.
All that remains is the bayberry candle because William Weedon recommended them (sort of) and thought they smelled like Christmas. Not particularly, to me; I don't have the same associations. Still, I am enjoying that candle!
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 2:03 PM 0 comments
Labels: Personal
When Evidence Isn't Proof
Vada came over the other day for tea, and was telling us about a time she was in quite a bit of pain, years ago, “And I had to take aspirin for three months, but you know, it paid off, because the pain went away, finally!”
Demetrios laughed and said, “In three months, lots of ailments go away, all by themselves, with or without aspirin!”
Vada had fallen into the logical fallacy known as post hoc propter hoc, which is the false assumption that since B (getting well) follows A (taking medicine), B was caused by A. Just because the pain disappeared after she had taken aspirin does not necessarily mean the aspirin had anything to do with it.
We had another example of what evidence doesn’t prove when Demetrios recently noticed that a certain male Red-bellied Woodpecker loves to sit in exactly the same spot on our neighbors’ house every single morning. We thought it very curious. At last, I said, “This cries out for a story, to explain such peculiar behavior! Let us make up an explanation. The bird is retarded and rejected by all the others of his species, which is why he just sits there alone. Or some jealous gnome has cast a spell on him that can only be broken if a termite kisses him. (What was the gnome jealous about?) Or the house holds some special charm for him; or perhaps it's something mundane, like a spot of warmth right there? Or he’s really only a toy bird, wishing, like the Velveteen Rabbit, he were real.” Our story-making was put to an end when the neighbor, with a laugh, told us it was indeed a fake bird, mounted there to scare away real woodpeckers, but that’s beside the point. The point is, we made up stories to account for the phenomenon. And we could imagine telling one of these magical stories to a grandchild, concluding with, “And the proof of it, if you’ll look out the window, is right there, for in that very same spot, the Woodpecker still sits, to this day!”
It would have been “proof” of nothing.
Which brings me, via the scenic route, to my real point, which is, it’s like that with biblical archaeology. Here’s the city of Jericho (just for one example), and its ancient walls have fallen down – outward from the city. So believers among Christians and Jews have jumped on this as proof of the biblical story of Joshua’s conquest told in Joshua 6. I mean, it wouldn't do, would it, to have found those walls still standing?
More skeptical people have pointed out that ‘tain’t necessarily so. It could be that somebody in ancient days found those walls having already so curiously fallen flat, and outwards, and this somebody (Israelites) made up a story to account for the peculiarity, the same way Demetrios and I made up stories to account for the woodpecker. “And here’s the proof; to this very day you can still see those walls…”
It just isn’t necessarily so! Christians, if they wish to be clear thinkers, ought to acknowledge this.
On the other hand, if you think the story in the Bible isn’t what happened, then what did? You still need to account for the evidence and explain why your story is any better than the Joshua story. Usually these sorts of attempts end up less believable, by far, than what you are trying to explain away.
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 11:15 AM 1 comments
Labels: Biblical Archaeology
Two Days, Two Ways
... to be an Idiot
Some kinds of bloopers are merely annoying and/or embarrassing, as when you lock yourself out of your car or discover, at the check-out, that you didn’t put your wallet back into your handbag. And some mistakes, like getting drunk, are fun for a while and you do them on purpose, but afterwards is when you know for sure they were really stupid. I’ve done one of each in the past two days.
I pulled that latter sort of a stunt a couple of nights ago – without even benefit of alcohol. You see, my new toys arrived and I’m addicted to them already. Yes, I spent way more money than I like to admit on stuff to construct a marble run. You know, build a contraption, drop a marble into the top of it and it rolls down its course, preferably doing all sorts of amusing things along the way, such as toppling dominos, turning a millwheel, rolling over chimes, ringing a bell, swirling around in the funnel. The set consists of special, interlocking, wooden blocks with various shapes of channels carved into them, plus tracks as in a train set, plus a bag of marbles.
So I was fascinated, entranced, challenged. I had bought not one, but two such sets, plus various accessory gadgets, and I set out to use every single track and block and gizmo in the most complex set-up possible. Naturally, that requires some learning, some testing, a lot of thinking; in other words, a lot of fun.
I began after supper. When I noticed the clock, it was midnight already. Okay, okay, so I’ll go to bed, I said to myself, right after I figure out this one more thing.
Next time I remembered to check the clock, it said 3:30. No use going to bed now; there wouldn’t be enough time to be worth it. I kept working until Demetrios got up, at 6:30, and came looking for me. I prepared his breakfast, kissed him goodbye, and kept right on working. Until time to cook supper again, 5:00.
That’s when I realized I had not only been awake some 36 hours, I had also spent most of that time, all night and all day, standing up! (The contraption was on the dining room table, and had quickly grown too tall to work on sitting down.)
I limped upstairs immediately after supper, soaked my sore body in a hot bath, and slept 12 hours.
Two days later, my feet have recovered, but my back is still sore. And the cats have knocked down the tower I had built.
What if I had been that absorbed in God, to stand all night (which I’m frankly shocked is even possible for me) praying, let alone all day, and never even notice the time passing?
The second blooper was of the embarrassing sort. I happened to glance out my window toward the next door neighbors’ house. There was white smoke pouring out of the back of it. Neither of their two cars was there, so I knew nobody was home. Well, what would you have done? What should you do? Here are your choices:
- Nothing; it’s none of your business.
- Go over there to check things out a bit before raising an alarm.
- Call 911 immediately; every second counts.
The correct answer is (2). Go over there. Take your phone with you.
But I chose (3) because here was my chance to be a hero. Furthermore, it was pouring rain and I didn't want to go out in it. In other words, I acted from passions, which always have a way of clouding our judgment, mocking us, making us look ridiculous.
The lady at the other end of the emergency line made me go over there anyway, but it was too late. The fire trucks arrived at the same time I did, and the police too. Only to discover that the “smoke” was hot air venting from the neighbors’ clothes dryer and turning to steam in the cold air outside.
The only good thing is, the neighbors really weren’t home, so they didn’t know anything about it until that evening, when I told them.
Hint from Helen: Steam is white. Smoke from a fire is likely to be gray or black.
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 9:23 AM 7 comments
Labels: Personal
Thursday, January 1, 2009
Hope
Every new year, it seems, begins with memories and hope. We think back over the year ending, and we face the new year with hope.
For me, the memories this year are mainly of New Years Eves past, rather than of 2008, a year I’d rather forget. Instead, I looked around the little group of friends with whom we celebrated, and wondered how many other years we have celebrated with these same people, raising our glasses in a toast, singing a verse of “Auld Lange Syne,” sometimes acting silly and sometimes, like this year, thinking it’s silly to be so silly and we’d rather not, cutting the Vasilopita (St. Basil’s Bread), seeing whose piece contains the lucky coin – and finding it a wee bit harder, each year, to summon the will to stay up late enough to see the new year in? We used to go to big parties together; now we meet in each other’s homes. How many of our birthdays have we celebrated in between those Auld Lange Synes we’ve shared, how many engagement parties and weddings and baptisms and funerals and name days have we lived through together? It seems to me that New Years Eves are like mileposts along a country lane that somewhere en route gradually turned into a super highway.
But the main thing that struck me this year was that everybody in the whole world, or virtually everybody, celebrates the New Year with hope.
It isn’t necessarily hope in the profound, existential sense, but we all hope more trivial things. We know we will die, but we hope not this year. We hope for happiness and say, “Happy New Year!” We hope for success in our careers, for prosperity, for peace, for pleasant things to happen and not sorrowful ones. We hope for fun.
Some of us will die in 2009, others will face assorted tragedies, heartbreaks, losses, and yet we hope. I look back at group photos of our family and think such things as, “There are Barbara and Daniel before they had children, before they ever knew Madison and Elizabeth would exist. There are Katherine and Mark with a year-old Kelly, all innocently unaware that a couple of short years later, they would be surprised by twin boys. There’s Wendy, never imagining what would befall her… there’s Grace, oh, but she probably already knew she and Aaron were going to be married…” We do not know the future, but somehow, without any foundation for it, we nevertheless all hope. And this seems appropriate and right. Why is that? Is it because the human spirit just plain needs hope? Or is it perhaps because there is really no feasible alternative?
As for hope in the more profound, existential sense, I don’t know where that comes from, either, except from Christ. I don’t know how or in what non-believers find any ultimate hope. Equally, I don’t know how most believers do! That’s because I’ve noticed, as I go along, that every god except the True God is some form of a tyrant. There is a crocodile god somewhere who requires initiates into his cult to have their backs horribly cut up, so that when they heal, they look forever after like the crocodile’s own back. There are volcano gods, such as Madame Pele in Hawai’i, who will extinguish you in fire and smoke if you offend her. There are several alleged Christian gods, imposters, like the one who demands absolute obedience or he consigns you to hell forever. Or the one who, like the volcano gods, demands the sacrifice of a virgin to appease his wrath, except now a merely human virgin is not enough; only a theandric virgin will do (one who is both god and man). The idea that this god himself provides the virgin, in fact condescends to come and himself be that virgin – this is supposed to make it acceptable that he is so monstrous as to demand all these tortures and horrors in the first place to satiate his wrath or satisfy his alleged justice. (That concept of justice, of course, has nothing to do with the true Christian God, or with true justice, either.) From what do believers in these tryant-gods derive any ultimate hope?
So far as I know, the True and living God, and He alone, can give us this kind of hope – and so much more! Because in Him, what is it you ever yearned for that you do not already have? Did you hope for resurrection and life? You have already met Life and the Source of all Life: “I am the resurrection and the life.” You already participate in His immortality. Did you hope for love? You have met Love, face to face, and He is more wonderful than you could ever have hoped. You have met True Love and the very Source of True Love. Did you hope for forgiveness and the chance to start over again with a clean slate? Done! Did you desperately hope you could someday change from who you are? You already experience, even if only sometimes and partially, the beginnings of a whole, radical inner make-over. Did you hope for true and indestructible joy? You have found Him, found both Joy and the Source of all Joy. All the things your soul could have hoped for, you already have, albeit in infant form, here and now. This is what St. Paul means when he says, “Faith is the being of things hoped for, and the obviousness of things unseen.” (Hebrews 11:1)
Like a fruit tree bearing blossoms in Spring, we already carry these hoped-for things around within us, and that is what gives us the confident hope that one day, the blossoms will give way to the mature fruit. That is what allows us to believe that ultimately, the new kind of Life we have been given will be prove endless, the Love we now struggle to live will find no more obstacles, the Newness already gestating in us will culminate in radiant, god-like beauty.
St. Paul’s own analogy in verses such as 2 Corinthians 1:22, and 5:5, is that the Holy Spirit in our hearts is like a deposit, a down payment, or what our grandparents called earnest money. “You were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise,” says St. Paul, “which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, to the praise of His glory.” (Ephesians 1:13-14)
Now hope does not disappoint us, because the love of God has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit who was given to us. (Romans 5:5)
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 3:04 PM 0 comments
Labels: Christian Life
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Lutheran Icons?
Pastor Rick Stuckwisch wrote this in the Lutheran journal, Gottesdienst, and Pr. Peterson reprinted it over at "Cyberstones". (For non-Lutherans, let me clarify that “the Verba” is Lutheran-speak for Christ’s words, “This is My Body…”, etc. and “This is My Blood…”, etc.)
Besides being charming, this little piece makes me think Lutherans have icons, too; it’s just that theirs are verbal rather than painted. But they still venerate ‘em.
As Father Grobien intoned the Verba, I could hear clearly and distinctly the voice of his youngest daughter, two-year-old Amelia, chanting with him from the congregation: word-for-word, note-for-note, in almost flawless unison. I had not heard her do this previously, but I am told that she commonly does the same thing along with me, when I chant the Verba (as is our practice at every Divine Service).
To hear Amelia's beautiful young voice gloriously lifting up the Words of her Lord along with her pastor, I was poignantly reminded of this further benefit and blessing of chanting those Words. Not only does the intonation of the Verba honor them and elevate them with the peculiar dignity that belongs to them by right above all other Words; it also more deeply implants the Verba in the hearts and minds of the Lord's people, both young and old.
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 8:59 AM 6 comments
Labels: Other Faiths
And We Beheld His Glory: Postscript
For the Apostles to say, "We beheld His glory" is not problematic for most people. They either did or thought they did, so that's easy to understand. What gives people pause is when we, today, say the same thing: "We beheld His glory." What? Gimme a break; it's two thousand years later!
And yet, it is true. I don't have any words to explain how this can be. I don't think there are any. Oh, yes, countless books have been written, countless sermons preached, about the sacraments, which, provided all else is properly in place, are our major encounter with Him. But nothing can explain how this can be; that's why in Orthodoxy, we call the sacraments "the mysteries."
But what the Apostles set out to do is to pass down through all generations of us, their very own relationship with the Risen Lord, a relationship transcending time and place, a relationship of joint being, of mutual indwelling accomplished by a supernatural kind of love. (Yes, I call it supernatural when it is infinite, unconditional, and includes even your enemies!) It is a relationship, in short, of communion they seek to share with us. Listen to how St. John the Evangelist describes this objective of the Apostles:
That which we have seen and heard we proclaim also to you, so that you may have communion with us; and truly our communion is with the Father and with His Son Jesus Christ. (I John 1:3)
And a practicing Orthodox Christian (at least) can testify that, by the power of the Holy Spirit, the holy Apostles did not fail in this mission. We do, however imperfectly, still participate in that very same relationship, that communion, with one another and with the living Christ, that the Apostles had and still have. In scripture, in the mysteries, in fasting and other ascetical struggle (for the pure in heart shall see God), in prayer, in one another, in countless ways, we still encounter Him. We still behold His glory, day by day.
Hang out for a while in a well-functioning Orthodox parish, with an open mind and an open heart, and try living jointly with them the Christian life they share, and after a while or perhaps quite soon, gradually or suddenly, the Holy Spirit will disclose the risen Lord to you, too. You will find Him still very much here, not as a thought or concept or theology or philosophy or emotion or principle or memory, but as a living Person, the most wonderful human being ever, truly human yet truly God, all-glorious, and by that glory, able to transfigure you and me.
"Seek and ye shall find, knock, and it shall be opened to you."
Let ev'ry heart
prepare Him room.
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 6:55 AM 1 comments
Labels: Orthodoxy
Tuesday, December 30, 2008
Points to Ponder
Mary Joy has posted the conversion story of Anjali, a former Hindu in her parish. You can read it there (and see a video of Anjali's recent baptism there, too) so I am not going to reprint the whole thing. But these little snippets especially jumped out at me, partly because I went through a Hindu stage just before I became Orthodox, and partly because they articulate so well some of my own observations. The emphases are mine.
- An unconscious denial of the power of the Holy Spirit, to either think the Holy Spirit has checked out, is too mysterious to know His workings, or to reduce His workings to only babbling, despite Jesus' promise to send the Holy Spirit who would lead to all truth, these seem like strange beliefs for people who really have faith in Christ and the Bible to believe.
- At the Orthodox church, it wasn't like a memorial service for someone who had passed on to the next world, it was worship - worship the way Hindus worship, truly believing that God was present, singing to God, not about him, not singing to ourselves, not singing for fellowship, not worshiping his idea, but actually presenting worship as a sacrifice within the presence of God. - and not being casual in his presence, but having a sense of holiness and respect - not because people wanted to be goody-two-shoes, but because if you actually believe that God is present, you'll be alert, rather than coming up with excuses about how God shouldn't care about this or that or the other, but naturally wanting to do your best in the presence of God out of love and respect and acknowledgment of his holiness. I don't know...I guess I felt like, as much as I liked the Protestant church (the minister was great!), I felt they were talking about something, about learning about something, whereas at the Orthodox Church actually had it present.
- So maybe Hindus do in the dark what Christians do in the light? While fumbling and some wrong perceptions can be experienced,... once you turn the light on, you realize - wait a minute! I thought I knew how this whole room was set up and how everything worked, but in reality, now I see it is different! Some is the same, but now I can go about things the way they were intended. Now, I no longer hold an elephant's trunk thinking it's a snake and once in a while wondering what else there is to it - now the lights are on, and I can see that wow! There is an elephant in the room! Such is the differing result of humans striving for truth in our spiritual darkness, vs. what happens when God himself bringing us the truth with his light.
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 10:47 AM 0 comments
Labels: Orthodoxy, Other Faiths
Monday, December 29, 2008
Seeing is Believing (and Vice-Versa?)
And the Word was made flesh, and dwelt among us, (and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father,) full of grace and truth. (John 1:14)
Authentic Christianity does not begin with syllogisms seeking to prove the existence of some sort of Divine Being (Whom subsequent chapters will "prove" is the Christian God). Neither does it begin with arguments, inescapably circular, for why Holy Scripture is the ultimate authority, the font, definition, and norm of Truth. (Don't people who think Holy Scripture is this ever wonder why, if this is so, Jesus never wrote a single chapter of Scripture to leave behind when He ascended into Heaven?) Real Christianity is not a philosophy, a science, or a concept.
No, Christianity begins with, And we beheld His glory! It begins with that which we have seen, and heard, and handled - culminating with the Resurrection, but starting on the first Christmas. The Infinite One takes on finite flesh (and makes it infinite); the Formless One takes the form of an infant; the Eternal One manifests Himself in time. And we beheld His glory.
But to behold His glory, to see what is before us, requires that our eyes be open, our inner as well as our outer eyes. That's what Fr. Stephen writes about in this blog post, entitled, "What We Do Not See":
One of the most striking features of the Gospels is the frequent response of the Disciples after the resurrection of Christ: doubt. I have always been sympathetic to the doubts and hesitations that afflicted their lives during the ministry of Christ. The disciples are almost endearing in their inability to grasp what Christ is all about. However, the same inability to grasp things after the resurrection seems to carry with it all kinds of difficulties. What was it about the resurrection that the disciples could not or did not believe? A man dies and is buried. Then he is not buried and is not a walking corpse but manifests an entirely new form of existence. Call it resurrection or what have you - but apparently Christ had mentioned this coming reality more than once before it happened. What was the problem?
The problem seems to go to the very heart of things both then and now. Had the resurrection belonged to the classification of events that everyone can see, measure, study, and reach “scientific” agreement, there would surely have been no trouble. But the resurrection does not belong to some general classification. It is sui generis, its own classification.
There are many who want to speak about the resurrection as if it were a car wreck down at the corner drugstore. Whatever it was (is), it is very much more, even, indeed, something completely different - not like anything else.
And it is here, that the continuing problem of vision is made manifest. Orthodox Christian writers are wont to utter things like, “God will save the world through beauty” (Dostoevsky), or “Icons will save the world” (recently in First Things) all of which makes some people want to run out and complain. But at their heart, such statements are trying to say something about the nature of the resurrection and its action in our world.
The resurrection of Christ is something completely new. It is a manifestation of God unlike anything we have ever known. It is Truth made manifest in the flesh - not the truth to be found in an average living man. I am 55 and I look very unlike what I did at 10. I look decidedly unlike what I will in another 100 years (you probably wouldn’t like to see that). Thus we never see anything in an eternal state. But the resurrection is just that. It does not belong exactly to the classification of “things created,” for it is the “uncreated” before our eyes.
And thus the Church paints the things that pertain to the resurrection (including the saints) in an iconic fashion - not like portraiture or the “truth” that generally lies before our eyes. Icons paint the Truth as it appears to eyes that behold the resurrection. By the same token, the Church does not write about the resurrection in the way we write about other things, for the resurrection is not one of the other things but a thing that is unlike anything else. Thus the Fathers of the Church said that “icons do with color what Scripture does with words.”
And both have something to do with vision. The Gospel tells us: “Blessed are the pure in heart, for they shall see God.” I am not pure in heart but I think I may have encountered such a person. At the least I have read stories about such persons and I know that such persons see what I cannot and they see in a manner that as yet I do not.
But this goes to the point of salvation. Salvation is not how to get people like me (or like you) into some place safe from the fires of hell. That is a transportation problem at best, or a legal problem, at worst. The point of salvation is how to change people like me (and you). It is about changing us such that seeing the resurrection becomes possible. In order to see the resurrection and those things that pertain to it - one must somehow participate in the resurrection. The vision that is birthed in our hearts at Holy Baptism is the vision born of the resurrection of Christ. He is the “true light” whom we behold in the Holy Eucharist.
In this sense, God will indeed save the world through Beauty. The problem is that so few if any of us have ever seen Beauty. Had you truly seen Beauty, then you would not disagree with the statement. It’s obvious character would be, well, obvious. That people want to argue with it (or with icons) only means that they do not or cannot see. And neither do I, most of the time.
If I could see as I am meant to see then my eyes would not see enemies nor the like. Not that others might not intend to be my enemies or want evil for me - but there are eyes that see beyond all of that and see the Truth of a person. Had I the eyes to see, love would not be an insurmountable problem but as tangible as the Resurrection itself.
And so we have celebrated the Feast of the Lord’s Nativity. Every heart must prepare Him room. More than that, every heart should beg to see the Beauty, to read the Icon of the Gospel of the Nativity, to see what daily escapes our vision and leaves us blind - leading the blind.
Kyrie, eleison!
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 10:06 PM 1 comments
Christmas Pictures
I hope you are all having a wonderful celebration of the twelve days of Christmas.
We spent from Christmas Eve through the weekend with children and grandchildren, dividing our time between Erin and her family (Jeff and Sydney) and Mark and his family (Katherine, Kelly, Ryan, and Connor) and we had a wonderful, relaxing time. As Demetrios says, those little children are "a delight all day long!"
Here are a few pictures. As always, you can click to enlarge.
Green Eyes: Sydney with "Fancy Nancy"

Sydney in Her New House

Play-Doh Fun. Demetrios intervenes to show Jeff how an alligator's tail should be formed.
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 8:26 AM 2 comments
Christmas Pictures II
Watching Television

Gag Gift! Demetrios Models Slippers Made from Poise Pads! (Join two by putting sticky sides together, wrap a third around top, add glitter, glue on decorative buttons or stickers)

Christmas Portrait of my Kendall Grandchildren: (L-R) Ryan, Kelly, Connor
Posted by Anastasia Theodoridis at 8:03 AM 0 comments