Thanks that sounds like a nice icon corner.Basil 320 said:I use the Church Altar and Icon Screen as a model. MP to the left, XP to the right, patron saint to the left of MP (Russian style is to the right of XP), cross in the middle, angels on either side, Bible in the middle, prayer books to the left of the Bible, other saints and icons of feasts on the left wall; (there's no wall to the right).
I seem to remember a thread that I read awhile back that had a lot of pics people put up one was from I believe Schultz and he even had pics of his icon corner at work. I've been trying to find that one with no success.Salpy said:If you click on the "icon corner" tag, below, you may find some threads that are helpful.
Ha thats it! Thanks so much. ;DSalpy said:Is this what you were looking for?
http://www.orthodoxchristianity.net/forum/index.php/topic,12467.msg213248.html#msg213248
Beautiful Icons!scamandrius said:This was mine at my old residence. I've got a new arrangement but no photos yet. Hope this is helpful to you.
http://picasaweb.google.com/astyanax5/Icons#5363331985453509618
I flipped through some of your other photos. Do you live in Kansas?scamandrius said:http://picasaweb.google.com/astyanax5/Icons#5363331985453509618
nicescamandrius said:This was mine at my old residence. I've got a new arrangement but no photos yet. Hope this is helpful to you.
http://picasaweb.google.com/astyanax5/Icons#5363331985453509618
Isn't the church there Western rite?scamandrius said:Now I do, at least for another month and then I'm going back to Omaha.
Synaxis of the Holy Angels, the Holy Apostles, Sts. John the Forerunner and Baptist, Cecilia, Seraphim of Sarov, Herman of Alaska, Nicholas (whose memory we celebrate this day), and the Three Holy Hierarchs (John Chrysostom, Basil, Gregory Nazianzus). There are also icons of our Lord, the Mother of God, "Extreme Humility," a crucifix, the Transfiguration, the Resurrection, the Holy Trinity (Hospitality of Abraham), and an Asian Mother of God seated with the infant Lord.Altar Server said:Thats amazing. What Saints' icons do you have there?
I know many Orthodox people that have converted the sheds in their backyards into chapels and filled them to the brim with such "artifacts."augustin717 said:These are all nice&dandy, but, traditionally, Orthodox laity-overwhelmingly peasant, illiterate and poor-never had such a cornucopia of religious artifacts.
Last I checked, I (and everyone here most likely) am not a) a peasant, b) illiterate and c) poor.augustin717 said:These are all nice&dandy, but, traditionally, Orthodox laity-overwhelmingly peasant, illiterate and poor-never had such a cornucopia of religious artifacts.
Indeed, many icon corners for them only included one icon and a simple lamp (not as fancy as the ones many have now)augustin717 said:These are all nice&dandy, but, traditionally, Orthodox laity-overwhelmingly peasant, illiterate and poor-never had such a cornucopia of religious artifacts.
Perhaps I am just being argumentative myself or reading into your initial post. I honestly took it to mean that those of us who spend the time and money to beautify our homes with an icon corner are being "extravagent" or somesuch.augustin717 said:What makes you think anybody is judging you/
I'm not really judging you, neither am I following you.
I don't agree with you. My grandmother, although she can read, in her icon corner has more icons, crosses, books and other stuff than there are in many of the American Parishes (from what I can see in the pictures on the net).augustin717 said:These are all nice&dandy, but, traditionally, Orthodox laity-overwhelmingly peasant, illiterate and poor-never had such a cornucopia of religious artifacts.
Fine, whatever. I was letting people here into a private part of my life, because I have been blessed by the other pictures that people have posted. I wanted to share something real. I'm sorry that I don't have all of your authentic culturally Orthodox credentials as an American convert. I rely on my priest for guidance, and he explained to me that having an icon corner is traditional practice and beneficial for my soul.augustin717 said:It's hard for many to understand what I'm saying:you'd have to have experienced Orthodoxy as lived out in a traditional setting, where it is the majority religion and not just one of the many options available on the religious market as it often happens in the USA.
Have you seen Blessed Elder Cleopa's cell at Sihastria Monastery? It is filled with icons and not just in the corner. I'd say he was pretty authentic. I don't see why having a lot of icons isn't authentic.augustin717 said:To each his own, but I still think that there is still something more authentic in what I've experienced there. But that, perhaps, has more to do with the fact that there were no aesthetickal concerns involved, not much choice involved, not much awareness about it, just a custom followed out of a most blessed inertia, rather than with the number of the icons, in itself, I would say.
Very beautiful. Who is the Saint in the middle between Christ and the Theotokos?Alveus Lacuna said:
Now THATS lots of Icons. :laugh:Andrew21091 said:Have you seen Blessed Elder Cleopa's cell at Sihastria Monastery? It is filled with icons and not just in the corner. I'd say he was pretty authentic. I don't see why having a lot of icons isn't authentic.augustin717 said:To each his own, but I still think that there is still something more authentic in what I've experienced there. But that, perhaps, has more to do with the fact that there were no aesthetickal concerns involved, not much choice involved, not much awareness about it, just a custom followed out of a most blessed inertia, rather than with the number of the icons, in itself, I would say.
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