|
The Icon of the Nativity of the Mother of God September 8th (3/03)
A Meditation by Mary Grace Ritchey |
|
| Scriptural
Readings Vespers
|
Genesis 28: 10-17 Ezechiel 43: 27 to 44: 4 Proverbs 9: 1-11
|
| Divine Liturgy |
Phillipians 2: 5-11 Luke 10: 38-42 and 11:27-28.
|
| Troparion
|
"Your
nativity, O Mother of God, heralded joy to the whole universe,
for from you rose the Sun of Justice, Christ our God, taking
away the curse, He imparted the blessings, and by abolishing
death, He gave us everlasting life."
|
| Kontakion |
Through your holy birth, O Immaculate One, Joachim and Anne were delivered from the shame of childlessness, and Adam and Eve from the corruption of death. Your people, redeemed from the debt of their sins, cry out to you to honor your birth: "The barren one gives birth to the Mother of God the Sustainer of our life!"
|
|
When
I was a young mother and Archbishop Joseph Raya was our pastor I
remember that he told me to teach my children to respect things. At the time I thought it was just practical advice. I
never thought of it as spiritual advice.
But during the years I have said the Trisagion prayers it
finally hit me that in that prayer we say that the Holy Spirit
is "present in all places and filling all things".
All creation, things as well as persons, have the
potential of being the vehicle by which man touches God and God touches
man. This is the
theology of the icon as well as the sacrament.
(See Ephesians 1: 10; Col 1: 16-20, 23; John 12: 32-some
translations use the word "things"). In
the Eastern Church the Church Year begins on September 1. So the Church cycle of feasts begins at the beginning of the
story of how God became man, through the faithful and most pure
Virgin Mary. In
order to understand the icon one will continually encounter
certain words and symbols:
The
doctrine of the incarnation of Christ, the fact that Christ has
two natures, and the fact that mankind is made in the image and
likeness of God are basic reasons used in the defense of the use
of icons made by St. John of Damascus.
God became man, "the
Word was made flesh and dwelt among us...we have beheld His
glory...I am the light of the world;
he who follows me will not walk in darkness but will have
the light of life" (John
1:14; 8: 12).
Because God became man the world is no longer in darkness
but is penetrated by the light of Christ.
Therefore matter is changed, recreated, and becomes in
the icon and in the sacraments the means of the presence of
Christ on earth, giving all creation the potential to reveal
Christ to us. Furthermore,
Christ's human nature is the model from which mankind is made
and thus is our human potential by the powerful gift of the Holy
Spirit. The
artist and the photographer know that light is everything.
Light reveals a certain truth about the situation
depicted and its awesomeness.
Light strikes an object and spreads its revelation to the
objects surrounding it. According
to St. Bonaventure "light
had a sacred character. Light
participates somehow in the properties of God; it rises above
matter and space, multiplies itself, and spreads out over all
being...light played a predominant role in the stained glass
windows of Gothic cathedrals...light makes colors shine and thus
gives them life...unites itself to colors by penetrating
them...becoming one with them...For this reason, certain
theologians have seen light as a symbol of the Holy Spirit
descending into the Virgin Mary."
(The Icon, Image of the Invisible by Egon Sendler;
p.168.) The
birth of the Theotokos (God bearer) on September 8 is the
beginning of the act of incarnation and our salvation through
Jesus Christ. Note
that the beginning of the Church Year is the Nativity of Mary
and the end of the Church Year is her Falling Asleep (August
15). The Troparion
of the feast sums up what has been said: "Your nativity, O Mother of God, heralded joy to the whole universe, for from you rose the Sun of Justice, Christ our God, taking away the curse, He imparted the blessings, and by abolishing death, He gave us everlasting life." (Prayers for Publicans, p.46)
|
|
|
|
The
icon shows St. Anne reclining on a couch attended by women.
In the foreground is the Midwife preparing to wash the
child Mary. Joachim
is often shown in the icon but not in all icons of the Nativity.
By the sixteenth century some icons also show a scene in
which Joachim and Anne are caressing their infant.
According to the apocryphal book the Protevangelium of
St. James, the name "Mary" or "Miriam" was
given by the Angel when he announced to Joachim and Anne they
would have the child they had prayed for.
Only one other Old Testament person bore the name Mary or
Miriam, the sister of Moses and Aaron.
Mary means "hope".
Miriam was the "hope" of the liberation of the
Israelites because she saved Moses who would become liberator
and savior of her people Israel as found in the book of Exodus
2:4-8. Like the
Nativity of John the Baptist and the birth of Isaac from the
sterile Sarah, the Nativity of the Mother of God was considered
to be a prefiguring of the Resurrection.
"But the Nativity of the Mother of God is more than
a figure, for in the person of St. Anna-a woman freed from her
sterility to bring into the world a Virgin who would give birth
to God incarnate-it is our nature which ceases to be sterile in
order to start bearing the fruits of grace."
(The Meaning of Icons by Vladimir Lossky and Leonid
Ouspensky, p. 146.) The
largest figure in the icon is St. Anne and in some icons, St.
Joachim who are the focus of the icon.
If Adam and Eve are the parents of fallen humanity then
Joachim and Ann are grandparents of God's
"re-creation". In
his book, Theotokos, Archbishop Raya tell us that the Western
Church sets aside Sept. 12 to honor the name of Mary.
He also says that the early writers and Fathers of the
Church translated "Miriam" to mean " the
enlightened one", "the light giver" but St.
Bernard of Clairvaux gives the name to mean "Star of the
Sea." He says
we should call upon Mary when we are "battered to and fro
by the gales and storms of this life's ocean" and if
"waves of pride or ambition or slander or envy toss
you...if billows of anger or avarice ... or the enormity of your
sins troubles you... if the dread of judgment appalls you, if
you begin to slip into the deep of despondency, in the pit of
despair, think of Mary".
(p. 86) One of the verses of the Acathist to Mary is
"Hail O Star who manifest the Sun." (Byzantine Daily Worship p.969) The
feast of the Nativity of Mary is connected to the feast of
Saints Joachim and Anne on Sept. 9 and the feast of the
Maternity of Anne on Dec. 9. The
icon of Joachim and Anne embracing at the city gates is based on
the story told in the Protevangelium of James and The Gospel of
the Birth of Mary, apocryphal books used by the Eastern Church.
These books have influenced the subject matter of icons
and also liturgical prayers of the feasts.
In the first chapter of Matthew a genealogy of Jesus
Christ is given ending with Joseph, the husband of Mary and
foster father of Jesus. The
first verse says that Jesus is "son of David and son of
Abraham." This
is important because the prophecies concerning the Messiah
reveal that the Christ would be a descendant of King David (see
Psalm 132:11; Isaiah
11: 1-2, 10; Jeremiah
23.5-6 and 33: 15-16). The
Gospel of the Birth of Mary begins:
"The blessed and ever glorious Virgin Mary, sprang
from the royal race and family of David, was born in the city of
Nazareth, and educated in the Temple of the Lord."
It is in this book that we learn that her father's name
is Joachim who is from Nazareth in Gallilee, and her mother's
name is Anna who was from the town of Bethlehem. Her parents were fairly wealthy and generous.
They divided their substance into three parts, one part
for the Temple and its staff; one part for strangers and the
poor; and the third part was for the use of their household.
For about twenty years Anna prayed for a child and vowed
to dedicate that child to the service of the Lord if God favors
her prayer. When
Joachim goes to Jerusalem to bring his yearly offering, the high
priest rejects his offering saying it would not be acceptable to
God. He cites
Scripture: "Cursed
is every one who shall not beget a male in Israel"(p. The
LOST BOOKS OF THE
BIBLE and the forgotten books of EDEN, World Bible Publishers,
Inc. p.18). He says
Joachim should not give offerings to God until he has a child. The
Protevangelion says that Joachim then goes into the wilderness
and fasts forty days and nights saying" I will not go down
either to eat or drink, till the Lord my God shall look down
upon me, but prayer shall be my meat and drink."
Anna, too, is distressed about her barrenness when she
sees a sparrow's nest. She accuses herself because all of creation is fruitful but
she is not. Without
children there was no hope of giving birth to the Messiah.
Then the Angel appears to Joachim and Anna separately
telling them that the Lord has heard their prayers.
The Gospel of the Birth of Mary says the Angel tells
Joachim that he shall have a daughter and call her
"Mary". The
angel then tells him that Mary shall be devoted to the Lord from
infancy "and be filled with the Holy Ghost from her
mother's womb" and "while yet a virgin, in a way
unparalleled, bring forth the Son of the most High God, who
shall be called Jesus, and, according to the significance of his
name, be the Savior of all nations."
The angel foretells that when Joachim comes to the golden
gate of Jerusalem that Anna shall be there watching for him.
The icon of Joachim and Anna embracing at the golden gate
of Jerusalem speaks to us this story. The
Genesis reading for the feast of the Nativity of the Theotokos
focuses on the vision of Jacob, son of Isaac, son of Abraham.
At Bethel he sees in a dream a ladder set up on earth and
the top reaching into heaven with the angels of God ascending
and descending on it. The
title "Jacobs Ladder" is often applied to the
Theotokos because she was the means by which God incarnate was
made present to His people, living with and redeeming mankind
and all things. From
the Acathist to Mary we read "Hail O Celestial Ladder by
whom God came down; hail O Bridge leading earthly ones to
heaven!" (BDW
p.969). The
reading from Ezechiel focuses on Mary as ever virgin: "This gate shall remain shut; it shall not be opened,
and no one shall enter by it; for the Lord, the God of Israel,
has entered by it: therefore
it shall remain shut." (44:2).
The Acathist reads:
"Hail, O Lady, unique gateway through whom the Lord
alone has passed!" (BDW p.961) Proverbs
focuses on gaining wisdom by listening to instruction and
pondering on it and then acting in righteousness, justice and
equity. Gaining Christ is the focus, and not doing evil, for Christ
is the Wisdom and Word of the Father.
Proverbs coincides with the Epistle and Gospel readings. The Epistle read for the feast tells us to have the mind of Christ, extreme humility. The Gospel tells us to focus on Christ and not to let daily duties deter us. The Gospel ends with "Blessed, rather, are those who hear the word of God and keep it." This returns us to the Divine Plan: salvation for all. We honor Mary not only for who she is, Mother of the Lord, but for her total dedication to the will of God. |
Return to the Main Melkite Eparchy Page