VOCATIONS

19-SEP-2004

From   Byzantine Metropolitan Church of Pittsburgh
Vocation Program 2004
[click icon to expand]
Vocation Icon "I Have Chosen You"
"I Have Chosen You"
An Iconographers Reflection
The icon "I Have Chosen You" portrays many aspects of discerning
a spiritual vocation. The title comes from the words of Jesus in the
Gospel of John: `You did not choose me, but I chose you and
appointed you that you should go and bear fruit and that your fruit
should abide" (15:16). In the icon, Christ is shown in dialogue with a
man and a woman, representatives of all who are invited to serve
through ordination or religious life. Both individuals are moving out of
the world, symbolized by the woman partially in the border, towards
Christ. The scroll in Our Lord's hand represents His teachings. An
angel, holding a scroll that reads "discernment," guides and protects
those contemplating the request of the Lord.

The entire scene takes place on desolate ground. A single tree,
symbolic of vitality, breaks the barren landscape. This setting reveals
several more characteristics of discerning a vocation. First, it takes
place outdoors, in a place without walls, symbolic of the Church not
being an earthly institution of buildings and structures but a new life in Christ. Second, as Jesus saw
Nathaniel under the fig tree and called Him to discipleship (John 1:48), Jesus intimately knows those
whom He calls. Third, the tree's lower branch connects the man and woman to the trunk, representing
the vocations as the branches of Christ's vine (John 15:5).

An individual does not choose to serve Christ. but rather is chosen by Him specifically for His service.
One is called to blossom and bear fruit through the grace received in ordination or religious life, and not
to be fruitless and cut off by the Divine Gardner (John 15:2).

Icon by the hand of Iconographer Raymond J. Mastroberte

Coming:  Prayer for Vocations