It was early Sunday morning, March 13, 2011, the Sunday that churches in the Orthodox tradition would be celebrating the Triumph of Orthodoxy, the Seventh Ecumenical Council that formally addressed the iconoclast controversy in the Church and officially affirmed the use of icons in worship. (For more about the history and theology involved in Triumph of Orthodoxy, see my post from yesterday.)
Of course, in our Nazarene congregation (Protestant, Wesleyan, Holiness) I may have been the only one who noticed. In many ways it was stretching our liturgical muscles just to recognize it as the first Sunday of Lent. It wasn’t the first time our congregation had observed the Lenten season, but for many of our people Lent is something relatively new rather than an old and welcome friend. (Imagine that, Lent is new!)
I was in our video booth, working on preparing the visuals for use in our worship that morning. I’ve been re-reading Leonid Ouspensky’s Theology of the Icon and I found myself thinking through our use of imagery in worship. I was struck by how far from our Protestant iconoclastic roots many of our churches have come. There was a day when using pictures along with our worship would have scandalized our theological forebears. Now I rarely visit a church that doesn’t have some way of projecting words, pictures and videos onto a wall or screen for congregants to see.
Somehow I doubt St John of Damascus had any idea how thoroughly Orthodoxy would one day triumph.
Or has it?