In the 9th Century, the Church instituted a
yearly remembrance for this, the first Sunday of Great Lent. That celebration
is known as the Triumph of Orthodoxy and commemorates the restoration of the
holy icons to the Church after two periods of iconoclasm.
We might wonder why this event is remembered as the Triumph
of Orthodoxy when the Church has seen and known countless Saints and miracles
throughout its history. But perhaps it should not surprise us given that from
the very beginning, the concept of image has been central to our human
existence.
In the beginning, God created the Heavens and the Earth. He
created all the plants and animals which fill our world, but He did not bestow
His image and likeness on any of those things. Upon man alone, God bestowed His
image, making man the first icon of God. Man, by his sin, distorted this image.
The Great Canon of Saint Andrew of Crete that
we celebrated over the first four days of this past week describes the image of
God as buried like the lost coin in one of Jesus’ parables. In other places he
refers to this image as being darkened, neglected, or even lost. But he is
quick to ask the Lord to rescue him from his unfortunate state. “I have buried
with passions the beauty of the original image, O Saviour. But seek and find
it, like the lost coin.”
So what does it take to restore an image? The more beautiful
the image, the more important it is that the image be restored with care, with
attention, and with skill. We must first assess what damage has taken place,
and we must carefully consider what must be done to remedy the damage. A
restorer must have all the skills of the original artist, knowing the
materials, the techniques, and the style of the artist, in addition to knowing
all the techniques and materials to deal with the many forms of damage there
are to the image. Someone who is lacking in any of these areas might at best be
able to improve on the current state of the image, or even bring it close to
what it originally was, but they will never be able to make the image like new.
At worst, they might even further disfigure the image.
We know from the culture around us how we can disfigure this
image. We see that even when people are well-intentioned, they seek self-help
remedies and empty spiritual practices in the attempt to be better people. They
don’t even acknowledge the image of God within themselves, but seek to craft an
image of goodness on their own. Worse, yet, we might make idols of our own
selves, worshiping only our own lusts and sinful pleasures. In these we will
only find condemnation.
On the contrary, we see in the Old Testament many examples of those who valued the image
of God within themselves, who sought after God, who loved Him with all their
hearts, and with God’s help improved the tarnished state of this image within
themselves. In this morning’s epistle, we get a summary of some of those
people: “Gideon and Barak and Samson and Jephthah, also of David and Samuel and
the prophets: who through faith subdued kingdoms, worked righteousness,
obtained promises, stopped the mouths of lions, quenched the violence of fire,
escaped the edge of the sword, out of weakness were made strong, became valiant
in battle, turned to flight the armies of the aliens. Women received their dead
raised to life again. Others were tortured, not accepting deliverance, that
they might obtain a better resurrection. Still others had trial of mockings and
scourgings, yes, and of chains and imprisonment. They were stoned, they were
sawn in two, were tempted, were slain with the sword. They wandered about in
sheepskins and goatskins, being destitute, afflicted, tormented- of whom the
world was not worthy. They wandered in deserts and mountains, in dens and caves
of the earth.” These are examples of how we can follow God, how we can obey his
commandments even to the point of suffering for His sake in doing so. While all
are made in the image of God, such examples show more of the likeness to God
which is so often lost, buried, and disfigured.
And yet despite their love of God, despite their labors and
pains for Him, Saint Paul
says that “all these, having obtained a good testimony through faith, did not
receive the promise, God having provided something better for us, that they
should not be made perfect apart from us.” They were not perfected in this
image for the image was still marred in a way that no man could repair on his
own.
And so, in the fullness of time, Our Lord, the fashioner of
this image came to restore the image Himself. No one else could restore this
image to its former glory but God Himself. And so God became man and perfected
this image. It was not sufficient that God should send prophets or great men to
restore the image. And so to maintain as the heretics did that Christ was not
fully God would be to say that the image of God in man has not been restored or
perfected because the Creator, the great artist has remained distant from His
work. Likewise, we cannot agree that Christ was not fully man; as without
entering into His work, how could He refashion and restore it? By becoming man,
our Lord sanctified all creation, but in particular, He took on His own image
and perfected it, making it shine with a glory that it hadn’t even possessed in
the garden of Eden.
But He did not stop with assuming our flesh. After ascending
into the Heavens and being enthroned as both God and man at the right hand of
God the Father, He sent forth the Holy Spirit to come and abide in us to
transform and restore each of us to the former glory of that lost image. But this restoration does not
come easy to us. With the help of God, we must identify the damage that has
been done within ourselves. We must turn those things, as well as the defects
that only God knows, over to Him for Him to repair. This is why things like the
examination of our conscience, the confession of our sins, the prayer of Saint
Ephraim and services like the Great Penitential Canon are so important to our
spiritual lives. They are the means by
which we identify where we are in need of restoration so that we can ask God to
take away the damaged areas of our life and ask Him to fill those worn away
places with His glorious image.
We must also cooperate with the repairs through
participation in the Holy Mysteries, through repentance from our sins, through
prayer, fasting, and alms-giving. All of these things are the materials, the
tools, and the techniques of the Restorer of the Divine image within us. As
Saint Andrew says “emulate the righteous and avoid following sinners, and
regain Christ’s grace by prayers, fasts, purity and reverence.
The icon of Christ is a silent witness, a testimony to the
truth that God became man in the person of Jesus Christ and dwelt among us.
That He made human flesh capable of bearing the Divine within itself, that by
the harmony of His Divine and Human wills we might likewise be able to align
our will with God’s. The icons of the saints witness to the truth that the Holy
Spirit given to us in our Baptism and Chrismation works within us, and that if
we work with God, He will transform us and return us to the image of God. The
icons are important not because they are pretty but because they show us the
gospel, and they remind us of the goal of the Christian life – to be
transfigured as Christ was transfigured, that the light of Christ may shine
through us and show the image and likeness of God to the world that all may
desire to come to receive this light for themselves.