Hand gestures in icons

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ConstantineTG

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Is there a good source on the hand gestures in Icons? I know they are blessing gestures, which is why Bishops would bless with two hands instead of one. I just want more information on them and googling doesn’t produce useful results (maybe I’m using the wrong keywords).
 
Is there a good source on the hand gestures in Icons? I know they are blessing gestures, which is why Bishops would bless with two hands instead of one. I just want more information on them and googling doesn’t produce useful results (maybe I’m using the wrong keywords).
We use “The Icon: Window on the Kingdom” by Michel Quenot, and I have read that many like the book by Lossky: The Meaning of Icons.

Three gestures come to mind.

The blessing hand (towards a person or the Church) where the fingers spell Jesus Christ in Greek (IC XC). Turned out is the blessing of the Gospel, and turned in to the heart means The kingdom of God is within you. Then the orans is prayerful devotion to God.
 
Is there a good source on the hand gestures in Icons? I know they are blessing gestures, which is why Bishops would bless with two hands instead of one. I just want more information on them and googling doesn’t produce useful results (maybe I’m using the wrong keywords).
You may want to look at these:

Sacred Doorways: A Beginner’s Guide to Icons by Linette Martin

A Brush with God by Peter Pearson

Another Brush with God by Peter Pearson (Vol 2)

Hope this helps…
 
There is some variety in this! 🙂

The earliest form of priestly blessing is with the index and middle fingers extended, with the middle finger bent to the level of the index finger. This signifies the two Natures of Christ where the middle finger is His Divinity that “bent down the heavens” and became Man on earth. The other three fingers are joined together to represent the Holy Trinity.

This is probably the most ancient way of using the fingers to make the Sign of the Cross on oneself, the way the Old Believers still do it. I have several old Russian icons where saints (St Alexius the Man of God, St Anna of Kashin) are pointing to themselves with this formation of the hand and are doubtless (since they are not priests or bishops) making the Sign of the Cross on themselves.

The Greeks later developed the “Christogram” formation of the hand to reflect the letters of “IC XC” with the thumb crossing over the second to last finger and the “pinky” finger extended and curved like the middle finger.

It is interesting that the Old Believers reject that formation entirely as a “later innovation.”

There are now icons with lay persons extending their hands in an outward blessing gesture and the formation of the fingers of the hand for this (any layperson can do this for a “lay blessing”) is to use the same format for blessing oneself with three fingers, then extending the hand out and then raising the index finger as a kind of “pointer.”

I knew a quite zealous convert who used to bless everything and all the time with his hand in this way, which was perfectly legitimate.

We were in a doughnut shop having a late lunch one day when he began blessing his ham and cheese sandwich. As he did, a loud cry rang out behind us, “Vat a vanderfool boy you are!!” A wonderful Polish lady at the counter saw this and publicly announced her pleasure at his piety . . .

We went up to speak with her, she was beaming with a smile from ear to ear. My friend, however, told her he was Orthodox, to which she replied, “Zat eez OK!” 🙂

Alex
 
There is some variety in this! 🙂

The earliest form of priestly blessing is with the index and middle fingers extended, with the middle finger bent to the level of the index finger. This signifies the two Natures of Christ where the middle finger is His Divinity that “bent down the heavens” and became Man on earth. The other three fingers are joined together to represent the Holy Trinity.

This is probably the most ancient way of using the fingers to make the Sign of the Cross on oneself, the way the Old Believers still do it. I have several old Russian icons where saints (St Alexius the Man of God, St Anna of Kashin) are pointing to themselves with this formation of the hand and are doubtless (since they are not priests or bishops) making the Sign of the Cross on themselves.

The Greeks later developed the “Christogram” formation of the hand to reflect the letters of “IC XC” with the thumb crossing over the second to last finger and the “pinky” finger extended and curved like the middle finger.

It is interesting that the Old Believers reject that formation entirely as a “later innovation.”

There are now icons with lay persons extending their hands in an outward blessing gesture and the formation of the fingers of the hand for this (any layperson can do this for a “lay blessing”) is to use the same format for blessing oneself with three fingers, then extending the hand out and then raising the index finger as a kind of “pointer.”

I knew a quite zealous convert who used to bless everything and all the time with his hand in this way, which was perfectly legitimate.

We were in a doughnut shop having a late lunch one day when he began blessing his ham and cheese sandwich. As he did, a loud cry rang out behind us, “Vat a vanderfool boy you are!!” A wonderful Polish lady at the counter saw this and publicly announced her pleasure at his piety . . .

We went up to speak with her, she was beaming with a smile from ear to ear. My friend, however, told her he was Orthodox, to which she replied, “Zat eez OK!” 🙂

Alex
So when one does a “lay blessing” does he bless the item from right to left as a priest would or from left to right as one would do when crossing himself? I’m just curious as I’ve only ever seen this done at my parish when parents would bless their infants with the sign of the cross, and I never really payed particular attention to which direction they went.
 
So when one does a “lay blessing” does he bless the item from right to left as a priest would or from left to right as one would do when crossing himself? I’m just curious as I’ve only ever seen this done at my parish when parents would bless their infants with the sign of the cross, and I never really payed particular attention to which direction they went.
When doing a lay blessing of anything, you would go from left to right.

It is a very wholesome practice to bless our food etc. this way

Also, our home has been “hit” five times now with strange phenomena (loud knocking, voices etc.), and such blessings with Holy Water have been frequent . . .

Alex
 
Just a follow-up on this…

Whats the difference of this?

Image 1 has the pinkie extended. Image 2 doesn’t. Image 3 has the ring finger between the pinkie and the thumb.
Icons 1 and 3 show the same hand gesture, though it is hard to see that because icon 3 is an embroidered icon. That hand gesture is the ICXC gesture, the pointer finger is I, middle and pinky are bent to be the letter C, and the thumb crosses with the ring finger to make an X. So you are being blessed with the name of Jesus Christ.

Image 2 is also very common. The thumb, pinky, and ring finger touch together to symbolize the Holy Trinity, the pointer finger is straight to symbolize Christ’s divine nature, and the middle finger is bent to symbolize His human nature. This hand gesture is used by the Russian Old Believers to make the Sign of the Cross.

Both forms are used by clergy to give a blessing.
 
Icons 1 and 3 show the same hand gesture, though it is hard to see that because icon 3 is an embroidered icon. That hand gesture is the ICXC gesture, the pointer finger is I, middle and pinky are bent to be the letter C, and the thumb crosses with the ring finger to make an X. So you are being blessed with the name of Jesus Christ.

Image 2 is also very common. The thumb, pinky, and ring finger touch together to symbolize the Holy Trinity, the pointer finger is straight to symbolize Christ’s divine nature, and the middle finger is bent to symbolize His human nature. This hand gesture is used by the Russian Old Believers to make the Sign of the Cross.

Both forms are used by clergy to give a blessing.
Now that you mention it, I guess because the pinkie is not straight up, it does give the illusion that its not extended but well in fact it is.
 
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