{"version":1,"type":"rich","provider_name":"Libsyn","provider_url":"https:\/\/www.libsyn.com","height":90,"width":600,"title":"Homily: Matter, Incarnation, and the Art of Communion","description":"  Homily for the Sunday of Orthodoxy   On the Sunday of Orthodoxy, the Church celebrates more than the restoration of icons in 843; she proclaims the full implications of the Incarnation. Drawing from St. John of Damascus, St. Theodore the Studite, Genesis, and the theology of beauty, this homily explores how Christ restores not only matter, but humanity\u2019s creative vocation. In Him, we are not merely icons \u2014 we are iconographers, shaping our marriages, friendships, and parishes into visible proclamations of the Gospel.   ---   The Restoration of the Image \u2014 and the Hands That Shape It   Today we celebrate the restoration of the holy icons.   In the year 843, after years of persecution and confusion, the Church once again lifted up the images of Christ, His Mother, and the saints. The Church proclaimed that icons are not idols. They are not violations of the commandments. They are proclamations of the Gospel of salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ.   But if we reduce this feast to a historical victory or a doctrinal correction, we miss its depth.   The Sunday of Orthodoxy is not only about winning a theological argument or correcting decades of injustices.   It is about restoring something in humanity itself. We were made in the image and likeness of God.&amp;nbsp; Our image is corrupted not just by sin, but by a particular way of missing the mark: bad theology.&amp;nbsp; This isn\u2019t just about the suitability of having icons in worship; it\u2019s about us and our role in the Great Restoration.   I. Matter and the Incarnation   [You see,] Iconoclasm was not merely about pictures. It was about mediation.   Can matter reveal God? Can created things proclaim the uncreated? [And especially this:] Can human hands shape something that participates in divine glory?   On the first two questions, St. John of Damascus, answered with stunning clarity:   \u201cI do not worship matter; I worship the Creator of matter who became matter for my sake.\u201d   And again:   \u201cWhen the Invisible One becomes visible in the flesh, you may then depict the likeness of Him who was seen.\u201d   The Incarnation changes everything.   If Christ truly assumed flesh \u2014 if He entered matter \u2014 if He allowed Himself to be seen and touched \u2014   then matter is not a barrier to communion. It becomes a vehicle of it.   St. Theodore the Studite pressed this further. To reject the icon, he argued, is to weaken the confession that Christ truly became man. If He can be described in words, He can be depicted in color.   We know that;\u201cthe honor given to the image passes to the prototype.\u201d The icon does not trap Christ in wood and paint; it confesses that He truly entered history.   The restoration of the icons is the restoration of the Incarnation\u2019s full implications.   II. Genesis: The First Iconography   But to understand this feast completely, we must go back to Genesis.   In the beginning, God creates. He speaks, and the world comes into being. And again and again we hear: \u201cIt is good.\u201d And finally: \u201cIt is very good.\u201d   Creation is not neutral. It is beautiful. It reveals without containing. And in its beauty, it points beyond itself.   Creation itself is iconographic.   And humanity is made in the image and likeness of God.&amp;nbsp; And here I don\u2019t mean as an icon of Him.&amp;nbsp; We are going deeper into the mystery.   Adam is placed in the garden not merely as a spectator, but as a cultivator. He names. He tends. He shapes.   He receives creation from God and participates in its ordering.   Humanity\u2019s vocation was always creative \u2014 not to rival God, but to cooperate with Him.   Sin distorted that vocation.    Instead of shaping toward communion and moving things to greater grace, we grow thorns and thistles.&amp;nbsp; Creation groans in travail.&amp;nbsp; And in our fallenness we forget the beauty of creation and turn it into an instrument to satisfy our own desires.&amp;nbsp; [We exercise the power poorly, without grace.]   Some think that this misunderstanding came about as a result of the enlightenment or of capitalism.&amp;nbsp;   Today we are reminded that the temptation to pervert our role in creation is much, much, older \u2013 iconoclasm was just another in a long line of perversity and deception.   Iconoclasm is not only the smashing of panels. It is the denial that creation \u2014 and humanity \u2014 can [and should] bear glory.   III. The Icon as Transfigured Humanity   Leonid Ouspensky reminds us that the icon is not simply religious art. It is dogma in color. It expresses the Church\u2019s lived experience of salvation. The icon does not portray humanity as it appears in fallen naturalism [there are no shadows], but as it is restored and transfigured in Christ.   The elongated figures. The stillness. The inverted perspective. These are not stylistic quirks. They proclaim something: Man is not closed in on himself.&amp;nbsp; He is opened toward eternity.vThe icon reveals humanity healed.   The restoration of icons in 843 was not merely permission to paint. It was the declaration that man, in Christ, may once again shape matter toward glory.   IV. Beauty That Forms Vision   We have spoken often about beauty. Beauty is not decoration. It is goodness and truth made visible.   The Church building is not a neutral space. It is a reordered world. The dome lifts our eyes. The iconostasis teaches hierarchy without domination. The chant trains our breath and disciplines our attention.   Beauty heals perception.&amp;nbsp; Iconoclasm was not only doctrinal confusion. It was blindness. Orthodoxy restores sight.   V. The Turn: You Are an Iconographer   But now we must go deeper.   The Sunday of Orthodoxy is not only about painted panels. It is about restored humanity. As a member of the royal priesthood, made in the image and likeness of God; &amp;nbsp;You are a subcreator [Tolkein). You are an iconographer.   In Genesis, God creates \u2014 and then entrusts creation to man. Humanity was made not only to reflect glory, but to cultivate and shape the world so that it reveals and glorifies God more clearly.   Christ restores that vocation to you, His royal priesthood.   If He is the true Image of the Father, and if we are renewed in His likeness through Christ, then our creative capacity is healed.   And this means, most especially, our relationships.&amp;nbsp; Only a few of us have the eye and hand to be iconographers in the classic sense [I don\u2019t], but all of us are called to paint, as it were, our love with the people around us.   Every word is a brushstroke. Every graceful silence lays background color. Every act of patience draws a line. Every act of pride distorts proportion.   We are painting our marriages. We are composing our friendships. We are shaping the soul of our parish.   The question is not whether we are iconographers; whether we are artists.   The question is what we are painting; what we are creating.   Marriage   Marriage is not two finished icons placed side by side.   It is collaborative iconography.   Patience becomes the background wash. Forbearance outlines the figures. Forgiveness restores the light when shadows creep in.   An icon must have proportion and balance.   So must a marriage.   If one insists always on being right, the lines warp. If resentment lingers, the colors darken.   But when humility returns again and again, the image clarifies.   Friendship   Friendship is also creative labor.   We shape one another through attention and restraint.   Do we magnify one another\u2019s anger? Or soften it? Do we sharpen cynicism? Or cultivate gratitude?   True friendship paints with gentleness.   Patience lays the foundation. Forbearance preserves harmony. Grace keeps the symmetry intact.   When two friends bear one another quietly, Christ becomes visible between them.   Parish   We have a lot of art here, but a parish is not a museum of icons.   It is a workshop.   Every unseen act of service adds gold leaf. Every quiet forgiveness restores damaged color. Every refusal to gossip preserves the symmetry of grace.   The beauty of a parish is not first in its architecture.   It is in the patience of its people.   Conclusion   St. John of Damascus defended matter. St. Theodore defended the Incarnation. Ouspensky reminds us that the icon reveals man transfigured.   The Sunday of Orthodoxy proclaims that in Christ, humanity\u2019s creative vocation is restored.   Matter can bear glory. Human hands can proclaim truth. Relationships can reveal Christ.   In Christ, our sight is healed. In Christ, our hands are healed.   The only question remaining is this: What are we painting?   Amen.  &amp;nbsp; ","author_name":"OrthoAnalytika","author_url":"http:\/\/orthoanalytika.libsyn.com","html":"<iframe title=\"Libsyn Player\" style=\"border: none\" src=\"\/\/html5-player.libsyn.com\/embed\/episode\/id\/40271220\/height\/90\/theme\/custom\/thumbnail\/yes\/direction\/forward\/render-playlist\/no\/custom-color\/88AA3C\/\" height=\"90\" width=\"600\" scrolling=\"no\"  allowfullscreen webkitallowfullscreen mozallowfullscreen oallowfullscreen msallowfullscreen><\/iframe>","thumbnail_url":"https:\/\/assets.libsyn.com\/secure\/item\/40271220"}