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Thursday, February 16, 2006

coal

The Seraph could not touch the fire's coal with his fingers, but just brought it close to Isaiah's mouth: the Seraph did not hold it, Isaiah did not consume it, but us our Lord has allowed to do both.

St Ephraim the Syrian

5 comments:

thomasw said...

interesting post. that passage in isaiah has alway been magical and I think at times i comprehend it and at other times that i am utterly deluded in what i think. i'd like to hear more of gloss on this passge by you:)

matthew christopher davidson said...

That's a great quote. I mean, the Eucharist is so visible in the type of Isaiah 6 it's almost ridiculous. But it's nice to see that St. Ephraim thinks so too.

James said...

It wasn't so obvious in my former delusion ... then after being chrismated, I read it and went, whoa! That is obvious.

Heiko Schlieper made (wrote?) an icon (apparently the first) of this scene in a church in Edmonton.

Matthew Francis said...

There is an amazing and newly translated hymn by St. Ephraim in the new SVTQ. It's on the meaning of paganism, and is brillant. Ephraim is awesome! A few years ago Krista and I went over to David Goa's and sat around his fire and he read us the whole life of St. Ephraim, including how he'd been imprisoned in early life for stealing a cow, and later the part where he stole the books of a famous heretic by sweet talking his land-lady, glued all the pages together with 'fish-glue,' and then sneakily returned the book. Ha! And then later when he started working for the government and invented a sort of 'social safety net' for the ancient world like free public healthcare. All that and a poet as well...

Matthew Francis said...

Yes, Heiko did indeed develop a composite image of the Isaiah 6 vision for the West wall of St. George the Victory Bearer. I believe there were some elements from various Serbian monasteries as prototypes that he wove together.