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How an Icon Brought a Calvinist to Orthodoxy: A Journey to Orthodoxy
christianity.com ^ | Robert K. Arakaki

Posted on 08/30/2003 6:54:36 PM PDT by Destro

How an Icon Brought a Calvinist to Orthodoxy

By Robert K. Arakaki

A Journey to Orthodoxy

Conciliar Press - It was my first week at seminary. Walking down the hallway of the main dorm, I saw an icon of Christ on a student’s door. I thought: "An icon in an evangelical seminary?! What’s going on here?" Even more amazing was the fact that Jim’s background was the Assemblies of God, a Pentecostal denomination. When I left Hawaii in 1990 to study at Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary, I went with the purpose of preparing to become an evangelical seminary professor in a liberal United Church of Christ seminary. The UCC is one of the most liberal denominations, and I wanted to help bring the denomination back to its biblical roots. The last thing I expected was that I would become Orthodox.

Called by an Icon

After my first semester, I flew back to Hawaii for the winter break. While there, I was invited to a Bible study at Ss. Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Church. At the Bible study I kept looking across the table to the icons that were for sale. My eyes kept going back to this one particular icon of Christ holding the Bible in His hand. For the next several days I could not get that icon out of my mind.

I went back and bought the icon. When I bought it, I wasn’t thinking of becoming Orthodox. I bought it because I thought it was cool, and as a little gesture of rebellion against the heavily Reformed stance at Gordon-Conwell. However, I also felt a spiritual power in the icon that made me more aware of Christ’s presence in my life.

In my third year at seminary, I wrote a paper entitled, "The Icon and Evangelical Spirituality." In the paper I explored how the visual beauty of icons could enrich evangelical spirituality, which is often quite intellectual and austere. As I did my research, I knew that it was important that I understand the icon from the Orthodox standpoint and not impose a Protestant bias on my subject. Although I remained a Protestant evangelical after I had finished the paper, I now began to comprehend the Orthodox sacramental understanding of reality.

After I graduated from seminary, I went to Berkeley and began doctoral studies in comparative religion. While there, I attended Ss. Kyril and Methodios Bulgarian Orthodox Church, a small parish made up mostly of American converts. It was there that I saw Orthodoxy in action. I was deeply touched by the sight of fathers carrying their babies in their arms to take Holy Communion and fathers holding their children up so they could kiss the icons.

The Biblical Basis for Icons

After several years in Berkeley, I found myself back in Hawaii. Although I was quite interested in Orthodoxy, I also had some major reservations. One was the question: Is there a biblical basis for icons? And doesn’t the Orthodox practice of venerating icons violate the Ten Commandments, which forbid the worship of graven images? The other issue was John Calvin’s opposition to icons. I considered myself to be a Calvinist, and I had a very high regard for Calvin as a theologian and a Bible scholar. I tackled these two problems in the typical fashion of a graduate student: I wrote research papers.

In my research I found that there is indeed a biblical basis for icons. In the Book of Exodus, we find God giving Moses the Ten Commandments, which contain the prohibition against graven images (Exodus 20:4). In that same book, we also find God instructing Moses on the construction of the Tabernacle, including placing the golden cherubim over the Ark of the Covenant (Exodus 25:17–22). Furthermore, we find God instructing Moses to make images of the cherubim on the outer curtains of the Tabernacle and on the inner curtain leading into the Holy of Holies (Exodus 26:1, 31–33).

I found similar biblical precedents for icons in Solomon’s Temple. Images of the cherubim were worked into the Holy of Holies, carved on the two doors leading into the Holy of Holies, as well as on the outer walls around Solomon’s Temple (2 Chronicles 3:14; 1 Kings 6:29, 30, 31–35). What we see here stands in sharp contrast to the stark austerity of many Protestant churches today. Where many Protestant churches have four bare walls, the Old Testament place of worship was full of lavish visual details.

Toward the end of the Book of Ezekiel is a long, elaborate description of the new Temple. Like the Tabernacle of Moses and Solomon’s Temple, the new Temple has wall carvings of cherubim (Ezekiel 41:15–26). More specifically, the carvings of the cherubim had either human faces or the faces of lions. The description of human faces on the temple walls bears a striking resemblance to the icons in Orthodox churches today.

Recent archaeological excavations uncovered a first-century Jewish synagogue with pictures of biblical scenes on its walls. This means that when Jesus and His disciples attended the synagogue on the Sabbath, they did not see four bare walls, but visual reminders of biblical truths.

I was also struck by the fact that the concept of the image of God is crucial for theology. It is important to the Creation account and critical in understanding human nature (Genesis 1:27). This concept is also critical for the understanding of salvation. God saves us by the restoration of His image within us (Romans 8:29; 1 Corinthians 15:49). These are just a few mentions of the image of God in the Bible. All this led me to the conclusion that there is indeed a biblical basis for icons!

What About Calvin?

But what about John Calvin? I had the greatest respect for Calvin, who is highly regarded among Protestants for his Bible commentaries and is one of the foundational theologians of the Protestant Reformation. I couldn’t lightly dismiss Calvin’s iconoclasm. I needed good reasons, biblical and theological, for rejecting Calvin’s opposition to icons.

My research yielded several surprises. One was the astonishing discovery that nowhere in his Institutes did Calvin deal with verses that describe the use of images in the Old Testament Tabernacle and the new Temple. This is a very significant omission.

Another significant weakness is Calvin’s understanding of church history. Calvin assumed that for the first five hundred years of Christianity, the churches were devoid of images, and that it was only with the decline of doctrinal purity that images began to appear in churches. However, Calvin ignored Eusebius’s History of the Church, written in the fourth century, which mentions colored portraits of Christ and the Apostles (7:18). This, despite the fact that Calvin knew of and even cited Eusebius in his Institutes!

Another weakness is the fact that Calvin nowhere countered the classic theological defense put forward by John of Damascus: The biblical injunction against images was based on the fact that God the Father cannot be depicted in visual form. However, because God the Son took on human nature in His Incarnation, it is possible to depict the Son in icons.

I was surprised to find that Calvin’s arguments were nowhere as strong as I had thought. Calvin did not take into account all the biblical evidence, he got his church history wrong, and he failed to respond to the classical theological defense. In other words, Calvin’s iconoclasm was flawed on biblical, theological, and historical grounds.

In my journey to Orthodoxy, there were other issues I needed to address, but the issue of the icon was the tip of the iceberg. I focused on the icon because I thought that it was the most vulnerable point of Orthodoxy. To my surprise, it was much stronger than I had ever anticipated. My questions about icons were like the Titanic hitting the iceberg. What looked like a tiny piece of ice was much bigger under the surface and quite capable of sinking the big ship. In time my Protestant theology fell apart and I became convinced that the Orthodox Church was right when it claimed to have the fullness of the Faith.

I was received into the Orthodox Church on the Sunday of Orthodoxy in 1999. On this Sunday the Orthodox Church celebrates the restoration of the icons and the defeat of the iconoclasts at the Seventh Ecumenical Council in AD 787. On this day, the faithful proclaim, "This is the faith that has established the universe." It certainly established the faith of this Calvinist, as the result of the powerful witness of one small icon!

Robert Arakaki is currently writing his dissertation on religion and politics in Southeast Asia at the University of Hawaii at Manoa. He attends Saints Constantine and Helen Greek Orthodox Cathedral of the Pacific in Honolulu, Hawaii.


TOPICS: Evangelical Christian; General Discusssion; Mainline Protestant; Orthodox Christian; Theology
KEYWORDS: orthodoxy
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To: drstevej
I realise that the point of the Barney cover was probably to satirise the trivailisation of Christmas into a materialistic greed-fest. But the artists who created the cover is entirely ignorant of the Christian tradition that he's manipulating. He understands the Virgin & Child image as something purely decorative or sentimental. He has enirely overlooked the underlying theology, because a theology of images is not part of his tradition. Lacking an iconographic tradition of his own, he (and you, I'm afraid) appropriates a tradition he doesn't understand, offending even though he meant to convey a moral point.
201 posted on 09/03/2003 10:52:58 PM PDT by Romulus
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To: MarMema
Hodgetria means "she who shows the way".

I know.

202 posted on 09/03/2003 10:55:43 PM PDT by Romulus
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To: George W. Bush
Thanks for your commentary.
203 posted on 09/03/2003 10:59:50 PM PDT by drstevej
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To: Romulus
Leonid Ouspensky's The Meaning of Icons suggests that it's the Platytera icon -- the Theotokos of the Sign, and related types, including the Theotokos with Christ Enthroned -- are more concerned with Mary as the one who held God in her womb.

In the Orthodox church all icons of the Theotokos represent either the salvation available to man, or the Theotokos as the image of the church, in that she carried Christ within her.

The Virgin of the Sign is a visual representation of Holy Scripture - "The Lord will give you a sign: behold, a virgin will conceive and bear a son..." (Isaiah 7:14)

204 posted on 09/03/2003 11:00:33 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: Romulus
I don't know the author or intent of the person who did the cover but I see your point. Certainly a theology of images is not a part of my tradition.
205 posted on 09/03/2003 11:02:16 PM PDT by drstevej
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To: drstevej
Yes, "integrity". In the sense of a principled devotion to consistency and unadulterated wholeness.
206 posted on 09/03/2003 11:03:51 PM PDT by Romulus
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To: Romulus
***In the sense of a principled devotion to consistency and unadulterated wholeness.***

I am consistent with my convictions/tradition here. I am not consistent with your convictions/tradition.

Why should my integrity be measured by your yardstick?
207 posted on 09/03/2003 11:05:39 PM PDT by drstevej
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To: Romulus
isn't that funny?

I am so used to being caricatured with dinosaurs in the Orthodox church, that I saw it as poking fun at our Orthodox slowness to change, clinging to antiquity, etc.

208 posted on 09/03/2003 11:07:31 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema
***I am so used to being caricatured with dinosaurs in the Orthodox church, that I saw it as poking fun at our Orthodox slowness to change, clinging to antiquity, etc.***

Never thought of that connotation.
209 posted on 09/03/2003 11:09:25 PM PDT by drstevej
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To: Romulus; drstevej
Just FYI, quite some many months ago, in the wee hours of the night, on a very obscure thread with some mormons, Steve and I had a discussion about icons.

And he is "cool" about them.

Now if he registered for the iconoclast association of america since then, I can't say. We'd have to get hold of one of their membership rosters to check...

210 posted on 09/03/2003 11:13:08 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema
I wonder if those cats even know such a thing as the Orthodox Church even exists.
211 posted on 09/03/2003 11:13:28 PM PDT by Romulus
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To: drstevej
So what's the listing of articles for that particular month?
212 posted on 09/03/2003 11:15:30 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema
I had forgotten that discussion. Not many LDS around lately.
213 posted on 09/03/2003 11:18:56 PM PDT by drstevej
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To: drstevej
Why should my integrity be measured by your yardstick?

Again you misunderstand me, further emphasising our lack of a common vocabulary. I do not mean "integrity" in a moral sense, but in the existential sense. I'm speaking of integrity in the literal sense of perfect wholeness -- as a mode of being, wholly consistent and without any latent contradictions. When I suggest that your post lacked integrity I meant that it was poorly thought through and doesn't bear scrutiny -- not that it's immoral.

Integity in the existential sense is an absolute quality, and not subject to measurement by my or anyone else's "yardstick." It's an either/or category.

214 posted on 09/03/2003 11:22:18 PM PDT by Romulus
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To: MarMema
***So what's the listing of articles for that particular month? ***


#138 November/December 1994
Special Christmas Issue (Madonna with Barney)
CARTOON: I'm sorry Mary, but I didn't have time to put up a tree—besides, we don't even live here by Sisson
INTERVIEW: Ole Anthony The terror of televangelists
ARTICLE: The Ministerial "What I Should Have Said/What I Said" What stinks in here? by Scot Marvin
ARTICLE: A Typical Christmas Card Newsletter Doesn't it occur to people that no one cares? By Richard Wilkinson
INTERVIEW: Maria Muldaur Pumpernickel Christianity
CARTOON: The End of the Sermon Is Near! (man carrying sign in church)
ARTICLE: Barney Agonistes Oh Barney! My Barney! by Darrel Spenst
ARTICLE: Bible Heroes: Boaz It's no fun being an illegal alien by Scot A. Marvin
ARTICLE: Fosdick Was Dead (A Christianity Carol) Have we learned nothing? by Robert Price
CARTOON: "It's my father...the Pastor…he's always pushing for an antecdote." (baby on psychiatrist's couch) by Jonny Hawkins
ARTICLE: Girls Not Allowed Inside the Promise Keepers Sweat Lodge by Doug LeBlanc
ARTICLE: Icons and Tigers and Bears, Oh My! Are icons dangerous or sacred? By Doug Peterson
ARTICLE: Fifteen Dollars I had picked up a girl of the night by Rex Downie, Jr.
DOOR DARE: We've been getting some strange requests lately by Dan Pegoda
LOSER OF THE MONTH: R-rated gospel Reverend, I'm Available
BACK DOOR: The Secret Self. The secret self is where Jesus is
215 posted on 09/03/2003 11:24:40 PM PDT by drstevej
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To: Romulus
Like Humpty Dumpty had integrity once....before the fall, that is.
216 posted on 09/03/2003 11:25:56 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: drstevej
Well there ya go! An article on icons and another on Barney.
Put em together and you get....the cover.
217 posted on 09/03/2003 11:27:20 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: Romulus
***ain you misunderstand me, further emphasising our lack of a common vocabulary.***

Yep.

***When I suggest that your post lacked integrity I meant that it was poorly thought through and doesn't bear scrutiny -- not that it's immoral.***

Well, that's better. [sigh]
218 posted on 09/03/2003 11:27:25 PM PDT by drstevej
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To: drstevej
Well, that's better. [sigh]

Better for you, but Humpty has never been the same.

219 posted on 09/03/2003 11:29:20 PM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema
I don't have the issue but the article on icons might be interesting. The Door is not always predictable on their take on a topic.

BTW, the issue on Robert Tilton was great! And the picture on the front with him as the Joker was priceless.
220 posted on 09/03/2003 11:29:46 PM PDT by drstevej
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