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DAVID CRUMM: Icons Open New Religious Worlds

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  • DAVID CRUMM: Icons Open New Religious Worlds

    DAVID CRUMM: ICONS OPEN NEW RELIGIOUS WORLDS
    Free Press Columnist

    Detroit Free Press, MI
    Sept 9 2006

    Free lectures to be given on Tuesday

    This Madonna and child icon belongs to Bishop Nicholas Samra, a Melkite
    Catholic clergyman who visited St. John Armenian Church recently.

    Related articles:

    ~U If you go

    ~U Tell us what you think In our culture where image is everything,
    local Orthodox and Catholic leaders are planning to showcase some of
    the most powerful images human hands can create.

    They're icons, and it's no coincidence that this ancient term for
    sacred images also describes the little pictures on our computer
    screens. At first glance, icons are merely pictures, but both kinds
    of icons really are doorways to the forces hovering behind them.

    In computers, icons open software from e-mails to databases. In
    churches, icons are "visible images that open up the invisible world,"
    said the Rev. Garabed Kochakian, an iconographer and the pastor of
    St. John Armenian Apostolic Church in Southfield.

    "Icons are channels, like windows to God," added the Rev. Dimitrie
    Vincent, pastor of St. Thomas Albanian Orthodox Church in Farmington
    Hills. Like Kochakian, he is an artist as well as a priest.

    The two were among nine religious leaders who met recently at St.
    John to plan a joint icon showcase Tuesday at an Orthodox church
    in Livonia.

    "Icons really are symbols of what unites us as Christians," Vincent
    said last week.

    Catholics also are getting more interested in them, said Michael
    Hovey, an ecumenical adviser to Detroit Cardinal Adam Maida. "In the
    past year, I've visited at least 60 of our Catholic parishes and I'm
    impressed at the growing number that have icons," Hovey said.

    Dan McAfee, the director of Maida's office for Christian worship,
    said, "There was a time after our Second Vatican Council when people
    were eager to clear out everything in our churches that might seem
    extraneous. People removed lots of statues and paintings. But I think
    people are realizing that, in some cases, we may have gone too far."

    The growing fascination with these strangely flat-looking images of
    saints and biblical scenes may seem puzzling. The rest of the world's
    media are racing in other directions, like sending clips of movies
    to the tiny screens of cell phones.

    Antiquity is part of the allure of icons. Traditional Christian
    stories say that the gospel writer St. Luke also painted icons.

    Centuries-old tales of miracles surround many of them. But icons are
    much more than history lessons.

    After the meeting, Kochakian took guests to see a large icon that
    he designed for a wall of his church. It's a mosaic made of colored
    glass and gold leaf, showing St. Gregory the Illuminator, the first
    head of the Armenian Church about 1,700 years ago.

    As guests approached the mosaic, they saw a tall, bearded man in red
    robes standing before a snow-capped mountain in Armenia, holding a
    model of a church. Then, as guests moved closer, they could see a
    drama unfolding in the background. A fist seemed to emerge from the
    sky, wielding a flaming hammer.

    "In Armenian tradition, that's the hand of Christ emerging to strike
    the ground with a golden hammer to mark the location of our first
    cathedral," Kochakian said.

    There was more: The saint's eyes seemed to fix on viewers wherever
    they stood, silently asking what each one thought of these images.

    Such all-seeing eyes are the trademark of this sacred art, McAfee
    said. "As you approach an icon, you find that, as much as you look
    at the icon, the icon looks back out at you."

    The icon of St. Gregory was merely an arrangement of colored glass
    and yet the saint's eyes seemed alive with the question: So, what do
    you think of this spiritual world?

    Then, suddenly it dawned on at least this visitor: Our contemporary
    fascination with asking for each person's viewpoint on the spiritual
    world is really as ancient a practice as icons themselves.
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