H
HagiaSophia
Guest
Thank you all - this is really great - can someone tell me basically what are the differences between the various groups so that when you see one, you can kind of tell whether it is Slavic or Greek or Russian?
What are the rules ?This is a poor copy of the icon which does not follow the theological rules for iconography.
Not sure that is what the artist had in mind, we have many pictures of Our Lady, maybe we should only stick with one type.The color of Mary’s inner and outer robe are reversed for example and for Orthodox, this is akin to rewriting the Gospels according to your own interpretation.
I’m well aware of the fact that the original was stolen, since I have books on the story of the icon.Are you also aware that the original of the above icon was stolen from an Orthodox church in Crete in the 15th century before it later found its way to Rome?
Those two smaller pictures you posted seem to be different, can you explain why ?Note also the three stars on Mary’s outer robe, one on each shoulder and one above her forehead. These testify her ever-virginity, the fact the she was a virgin before, during, and after the birth of Christ.
John
There sure is a lot of different versions of this picture “Our Lady of Perpetual Help”
From my first post in this threadWhat are the rules ?
They are by different iconographers so they are not quite the same, but theologically they are identical.Those two smaller pictures you posted seem to be different, can you explain why ?
Since Orthodox consider icons as scripture for the illiterate, we take a rather more strict stand on how they are produced.I’m not bothered one way or the other, they’re all beautiful pictures. I’m not one of those people that worries about if I’ve crossed the t’s or dot the i’s.
Again, for Orthodox they are much more than this. They are vehicles of grace and as such are regarded as being holy. How many photographs of loved ones do you know that heal sick people, stream myhrr, bleed or even speak?And we need to remember we aren’t praying to a picture, they’re like photographs of our loved ones, only there to remind us sometimes.
None, but I don’t think it’s the pictures that heal, rather it is God and the faith we put in Him.How many photographs of loved ones do you know that heal sick people, stream myhrr, bleed or even speak?
John.
Hagia,can someone tell me basically what are the differences between the various groups so that when you see one, you can kind of tell whether it is Slavic or Greek or Russian?
John,From my first post in this thread
“Icons of Christ have him clothed in red with a blue cloak covering. Red dye was prohibitively expensive and only acessible to royalty or the very wealthy, while blue dye was very cheap and used by the common people. This represents Christ’s divine nature clothed in our humanity. Icons of Mary on the other hand show her clothed in blue with a red cloak covering. This represents her humanity as now being glorified, sharing in Christ’s divine nature.”
So depicting Mary with a red inner robe and blue outer robe is making quite a heretical statement according to the established tradition.