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frjohnmorris
Guest
What I wrote is standard Orthodox theology. I have never, ever, heard or read any other. The Deacon represents an angel. The orarion (stole) that the Deacon wears represents his wings. Icons of the Archangels Michael and Gabriel are placed on the doors used by the Deacon to leave and enter the Altar. The Priest represents Christ. Orthodox iconography never represents the Father, because He did not take flesh as the Son did. It is true that the Priest serves in the parish as a representative of the Bishop. The whole symbolic meaning of the Liturgy as a commemoration of Christ offering Himself is destroyed if the Priest is taken of as a representative of God the Father. The cuffs that the Priest wears symbolizes that he offers the unbloody sacrifice not by his own power or authority, but by letting Christ use His hands.Father,
I know that this is not the topic of the thread…but I couldn’t help noticing that you speak of the priest as a “representative” of Jesus when offering the divine sacrifice. This is most certainly the Catholic understanding, and I am very glad to hear it articulated by an Orthodox priest. Other Orthodox Christians on this board in the past have maintained that such terminology is Catholic/latin and foreign to Orthodoxy. I have been told that for the Orthodox the priest represents the Father and the deacon Christ, but I never understood why it has to be one way or the other - both priest and deacon represent Christ in the Latin Tradition. To my mind “representative” is another way of saying “vicar”, and I have been told by other Orthodox that the Catholic teaching that bishops are vicars of Christ cannot be accepted by them because Christ never left His Church…but the teaching that the bishop acts as Christ’s vicar in no way implies that.![]()
Archpriest John W. Morris