In the Name of the Father, the Son and the
Holy Ghost.
There are two icons of Transfiguration that
bring us two mutually completing messages. The one, by the hand of Saint
Andrew Rublev, and the other one by Theophane the Greek.
The icon of Rublev is all splendour; Christ
appears to us in glory; the disciples are taken - as the Gospel tells us
- with fear; they prostrate themselves, they loose awareness of where
they are and what is happening.
The icon of Theophane is less brilliant,
but it conveys us another message: not only of the fact that on the day
of Transfiguration Christ appeared to His disciples all shining, all
transfixed by the glory of His own Godhead; but it shows us how the rays
of this light, the divine light, the very Divinity of God pouring itself
out reaches His flesh, reaches His clothes, and beyond that touches all
that is this mountain of the Transfiguration. And when a ray of light
touches a stone or a rock, or a flower, they begin to shine in reply, as
it were, to shine with eternal light; they commune to it but not
passively; they receive it at the very heart of their being and become
capable of shining themselves with eternal light; not to perfection yet,
because perfection will be reached when God shall be all in all, at the
end of time, but to the extent to which each creature of God can receive
this grace, commune to God, and shine with the splendour of God Himself.
And on this day of the Transfiguration
perhaps is it particularly joyful that we were able to consecrate to God
in a new way Ian and his wife. In an old manuscript of the Gospel we are
told that Christ was asked one day, ‘When shall the Kingdom of God
come?’, and His reply was, ‘The Kingdom has already come when two are no
longer two but one’. What has happened today to Ian is something that
has happened within the Kingdom which God has established by His grace,
His indwelling presence, His power in the lives of Ian and Sasha. The
grace of God that has come to the mountain, and to the disciples, and to
all things created, has been poured today abundantly upon the handmaid
of God Sasha, as well as upon the servant of God Ian.
But becoming a deacon is to become a
servant, in the same terms in which Christ Himself calls Himself The
Servant, in the same way in which we read in the prophecy of Isaiah, at
the end of the 52nd and in the 53rd chapter the
vision of the Servant of God Who gives His life for others, Who takes
upon Himself the burden of others, and indeed - Who dies for others. And
this death is something which we must accept if we want to serve
faithfully every day of our life. Because it is not the death of the
body; it is a death to one's own self; it’s a renunciation to be
self-sufficient, to live for nothing but one's own self and those whom
one loves; it's the acceptance of the way of Christ: If one wishes to
follow Me, let him renounce himself - turn away from himself, look
elsewhere, towards God and towards his neighbour who is whoever is in
need of him: Let him take up his cross and follow Me...
And this command would be so frightening if
we did not know that the Lord has trod this path Himself before us; and
that when He says to us ‘Follow’, He means it, He makes it quite clear
to us that He has gone all the way, and He will never ask of us what He
has not done Himself.
And more than this: He walked along this
road, that brought Him to Calvary; upon the Cross He overcame evil, He
overcame Satan, He overcame death, He laid waste the realm of death
itself. And when we follow Him, we follow after One Who has already
conquered. But there is a great deal to do still: to love with all one’s
heart, and all one’s mind, and all one’s strength, and indeed, from
within all one's frailly both God and the neighbour and serve them;
serve them faithfully, responsibly, lovingly. A deacon is one whom the
laity, that is the people of God sends into God's realm to represent
them; the nave is the realm of history, the place where we all stand,
struggle, and become; the sanctuary is the place where God dwells; and
to cross the threshold between the two can be done only with and in
Christ. But once a man has become a deacon and serves at the altar, it
is the whole laity he represents; he remains a layman in the realm of
the sacred; he represents all of us; he is there before God in the name
of the whole Church.
Let us pray that God grant him and his wife
faithfulness, a true love of the Lord, and a true love of all those
people who are in need of God, or simply in need of human warmth, human
love, human attention. May the grace of God be upon him; and it is such
a joy for a Bishop to pronounce, to declare in one of the prayers that
it is not in the laying on of his hands, but in the grace of God that
comes from above that the ordination is done. Let us rejoice that God
has been in our midst, acting with power, with love, with tenderness and
making one more person, one more family the sharers of His sacrificial,
but victorious love.
We will in a moment do two things: we will
bless the fruit because on the day of Transfiguration, as depicted to us
in the icon of Theophane, all things are filled with divine grace; and
then, we will sing ‘mnogaya leta’, asking God to give a long life of
faithful service, of devotion to Ian and his wife, and make them grow
from strength to strength, from glory to glory, until they become to all
those who will ever meet them a revelation of what a love of God
received, accepted, integrated can make of a family and make of a man.
Amen.