I am absolutely thrilled with the icon. Fr. Serafim built on my first few halting ideas and developed a powerful image with many layers of meaning. The delivered icon is far more than I imagined when I first commissioned the work. I pray that this work will witness to the ever-presence of our Lord and Saviour in the lives of every saint within His Church.
— Æthelwold
I was delighted to play a small part in the commissioning of this icon. When Æthelwold brought the icon into the parish to be blessed, I had the opportunity to observe a number of people’s reactions to it.
The first reaction was generally to exclaim about the detail and emotions evident in the faces of Ss Cuthbert and Æthelwold. The hand of this iconographer captures so much more light and shade, so many more emotions than we generally see on Byzantine-style icons. But soon people’s eyes begin to wander across the scene as they unpack layer upon layer of meaning.
The setting by the sea, framed by islands, recalls the coast of the Farne Islands, which leads one to think of the encaved hermitages of Cuthbert and the hermit Æthelwold. But I also think it resembles the coastline that Fr. Serafim sees every day from his Monastery on Mull Island.
The haloes that surround Cuthbert and Æthelwold reveal the heavenly glory illumining the nous of every baptised and faithful Christian (2 Corinthians 4:6).
Ss Cuthbert and Æthelwold stand harmoniously holding the Gospel. Æthelwold gestures reverently toward Cuthbert. The peace and harmony between the men remind me of Jesus’ words, “Where two are gathered in my name, there am I” (Matthew 18:20).
St Cuthbert, in response, is gesturing toward the Gospel Book. For in the words of the Gospel we receive Jesus into our minds and our hearts. “He who has the Son has life” (1 John 5:12).
The Gospel Book stands upright, pointing into the heavens, and our gaze cannot help but rise heaven-wards, where, beyond the view of the naked eye, we are shown the heavenly Jesus, fulfilling His promise, “Surely I am with you always unto the very end of the age” (Matthew 28:20).
Jesus’ visage is arresting and fierce, commanding our attention, and reminding us of St. John’s encounter with the risen Lord (Revelation 1:12–16). As C.S. Lewis once wrote, “It’s not like He’s a tame lion.”
Yet despite the fierceness of His visage, His right hand extends to us the sign of peace. “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled” (John 14:27).
In his left hand, He holds the Book of Life (Revelation 20:12), the ultimate, original and complete “Lives of the Saints” clutched close to his heart, where they are forever safe in the embrace of their heavenly Saviour.
As we gaze upon His glory, may you and I “see the True Light, receive the Heavenly Spirit and find the True Faith.” For then, your name and mine will be found to have been inscribed in that book eternally being held in the embrace of our fierce but merciful Saviour.
— Fr. Geoff