Ark of the Covenant – Intro

The first topic I’d like to discuss is the meaning behind the Ark of the Covenant. I’ve spent a fair amount of time studying how the Church views the Ark and thus I expect this will be a rather lengthy series of posts.

Few emblems in salvation history evoke the level of mystique borne by the Ark of the Covenant. The Ark is the “Holy Grail” of the Old Testament in a manner of speaking. While the Ark contained great power and served as the throne of God on earth in its day, it, as many of the other ancient emblems prior to the incarnation, served a typological role referencing its antitype further into the future. The Ark is most frequently related by the Church to the most holy Theotokos and ever virgin Mary, who is sometimes called the Ark of the New Covenant. It is this typological relationship that the present series explores.

It is clear from a review of the Scriptures, patristic literature, so-called apocryphal accounts, hymnology, festal celebrations, iconography, and other forms of tradition, that the Church’s expression of this typal relationship develops over the centuries. This series examines, as chronologically as possible, evidence from the life of the Church demonstrating the ways in which this typology is expressed, discussed, and understood and how the expression of the typology develops as the Church deepens its understanding.

In my next post, I’ll discuss how the Ark was viewed in Old Testament terms.

Introduction

Welcome to Parochianus. That’s meant to be a description of my place in the universe. I often recall Gag Halfrunt’s description of Zaphod Beeblebrox in The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, “he’s just this guy, you know?” Well, I’m just this guy. To be slightly more precise, I’m a parishioner, or parochianus in Latin. I might also be described as a husband, father, software engineer, manager of engineers, hiker, biker, or runner. Those words describe my relationships to other things in the universe. Biker describes my relationship with a piece of metal and rubber. Manager describes my relationship with the software engineers I work with during the day. Father describes my relationship with three very short people and two teenagers. Parochianus, on the other hand, describes my relationship with a far broader group of people, and in fact most accurately describes my place in the universe. It describes my relationship with those who are inside the Church and it describes my relationship with those who are outside the Church. Most importantly, it describes my relationship with God.

I’m not a priest or a deacon or even a reader, though I am a member of the “priesthood of all believers.” I may not be clergy, but I am something of an armchair theologian and amateur Latinist. I’m an Orthodox Christian who lives in the west and is by nature western. On this blog I hope to share a bit of that. I expect a large percentage of what I share will be research and reflections on Orthodoxy. But I wouldn’t be surprised if a bit of our Colorado mountains peak through, or a touch of family fun, or even reflections on herding cats. If any of those things interest you, welcome.