The Holy Trinity | Icon Gold Foiled in Wooden frame with Glass | Size: 7" x 9,5" | Handcrafted
Quantity
- size: 7" x 9,5" ( 18 x 24 x 1 cm )
- icon in wooden frame with glass
- silver and gold foiled
- handcrafted
- Made in Russia
- size: 7" x 9,5" ( 18 x 24 x 1 cm )
- icon in wooden frame with glass
- silver and gold foiled
- handcrafted
- Made in Russia
A highly creative piece, Andrei Rublev’s Troitsa (Russian for Triune or Trinity) hails from the summit of a more-than-thousand-year-old iconographic tradition. As you might have surmised, it is a Trinitarian interpretation of Gen 18:1-16, the episode in which “three men” visit Abraham and Sarah and promise them a son.
While no Christian would ever formally deny the importance of the Trinity, it is always healthy to question whether this importance has the impact on our daily lives that it should. I once heard the story of a professor of Theology who asked his students: “If I were to tell you today that we have discovered new texts of the bible and of the Fathers of the Church that reveal that our One God is, in reality, two people and not three, how would you react? Would what change in your life?”
A highly creative piece, Andrei Rublev’s Troitsa (Russian for Triune or Trinity) hails from the summit of a more-than-thousand-year-old iconographic tradition. As you might have surmised, it is a Trinitarian interpretation of Gen 18:1-16, the episode in which “three men” visit Abraham and Sarah and promise them a son.
While no Christian would ever formally deny the importance of the Trinity, it is always healthy to question whether this importance has the impact on our daily lives that it should. I once heard the story of a professor of Theology who asked his students: “If I were to tell you today that we have discovered new texts of the bible and of the Fathers of the Church that reveal that our One God is, in reality, two people and not three, how would you react? Would what change in your life?”
Quantity
Exceptions may apply
Sacred Art
The Holy Trinity | Icon Gold Foiled in Wooden frame with Glass | Size: 7" x 9,5" | Handcrafted
The Holy Trinity | Icon Gold Foiled in Wooden frame with Glass | Size: 7" x 9,5" | Handcrafted
Quantity
Quantity
Exceptions may apply
Sacred Art
- size: 7" x 9,5" ( 18 x 24 x 1 cm )
- icon in wooden frame with glass
- silver and gold foiled
- handcrafted
- Made in Russia
- size: 7" x 9,5" ( 18 x 24 x 1 cm )
- icon in wooden frame with glass
- silver and gold foiled
- handcrafted
- Made in Russia
A highly creative piece, Andrei Rublev’s Troitsa (Russian for Triune or Trinity) hails from the summit of a more-than-thousand-year-old iconographic tradition. As you might have surmised, it is a Trinitarian interpretation of Gen 18:1-16, the episode in which “three men” visit Abraham and Sarah and promise them a son.
While no Christian would ever formally deny the importance of the Trinity, it is always healthy to question whether this importance has the impact on our daily lives that it should. I once heard the story of a professor of Theology who asked his students: “If I were to tell you today that we have discovered new texts of the bible and of the Fathers of the Church that reveal that our One God is, in reality, two people and not three, how would you react? Would what change in your life?”
A highly creative piece, Andrei Rublev’s Troitsa (Russian for Triune or Trinity) hails from the summit of a more-than-thousand-year-old iconographic tradition. As you might have surmised, it is a Trinitarian interpretation of Gen 18:1-16, the episode in which “three men” visit Abraham and Sarah and promise them a son.
While no Christian would ever formally deny the importance of the Trinity, it is always healthy to question whether this importance has the impact on our daily lives that it should. I once heard the story of a professor of Theology who asked his students: “If I were to tell you today that we have discovered new texts of the bible and of the Fathers of the Church that reveal that our One God is, in reality, two people and not three, how would you react? Would what change in your life?”