but the truth is: i would not want to start narrating them the story behind the painting, because, it's party-time and i would not want to divert our moods in giving them a rather serious lecture about it, instead, i would always tell them that i am going to suffice their thirst for explanation in due time. and i figure out that now is the time to do a little story telling of the tale behind this icon painting.

and so, to answer their inquiries, this image and its explanation will once and for all uncloud their minds. (to you my guests-turned-blogger-friends who browse and read this blog, this is in so far what i can say about the icon that you have been wondrously asking me about during those times in the refectory.
The icon is called "Hospitality of Abraham" or "the Old Testament Trinity".
This icon was painted by a Russian monk Andrew Rublev who lived in the early 15th century and is believed to be the representation of the Holy Trinity revealed in Old Testament times.
It depicts chapter 18 of Genesis.
..."Yahweh appeared to him at the Oak of Mamre while he was sitting by the entrance of the tent during the hottest part of the day. He looked up, and there he saw three men standing near him. As soon as he saw them he ran from the entrance of the tent to meet them, and bowed to the ground. 'My lord', he said, 'I beg you, if I find favor with you, kindly do not pass your servant by. A little water shall be brought; you shall wash your feet and lie down under the tree. Let me fetch a little bread and you shall refresh yourselves before going further. That is why you have come in your servant's direction.' They replied, ' Do as you say.' Abraham hastened to the tent to find Sarah. 'Hurry', he said. 'Knead three bushels of flour andn make loaves.' Then running to the cattle Abraham took a fine and tender calf and gave it to the servant, who hurried to prepare it. Then taking cream, milk and the calf he had prepared, he laid all before them, and they ate while he remained standing near them under the tree. 'Where is your wife sarah?' they asked him. 'She's in the tent,' he replied. Then his guest said, 'I shall visit you again next year without fail, and your wife will then have a son.' Sarah was listening at the entrance of the tent behind him. Now Abraham and Sarah were old, well on in years, and Sarah had ceased to have her monthly periods. So Sarah laughed to herself, thinking, 'Now that I am past the age of childbearing, and my husband is an old man, is pleasure to come my way again!' This came to be as the Lord said and in the Spring Sarah bore Isaac." The Three who appeared to Abraham are distinct, yet also referred to as "The Lord," in the singular. Is this interpretation of God to be understood as three yet one, Father, Son and Holy Spirit?
With line and paint, Rublev details the simplicity, nobility and sacredness of the event in Genesis 18 in a way unsurpassed. Because the three guests portrayed in the icon are angels, each alike, each a little different they reveal something of the mystery of the Godhead: one in substance, undivided and yet distinct. Many have tried to determine which angel is supposed to represent the father, which the Son, which the Holy Spirit. Rublev does not say, probably on purpose, to allow viewers to contemplate the icon to be still and know the wonder of God, transcendent yet also with us.
In the contour of the three figures one notices a large CIRCLE, a reminder of God's eternity and unity. In the placement of the angels' heads and bodies one sees the outline of a Cross, the sign of redemption by Jesus Christ. One also finds several triangles in the icon, the most common symbol of the Holy Trinity. These shapes may not be immediately apparent, but gradually emerge, adding to the general effect of tranquility conveyed in this masterpiece of sacred art.
Evident too in the icon are a tent, a tree, a desert rock, and a vessel with the head of the sacrificial lamb, referring again to the Genesis account of the scene. The simple objects present in the icon recall that God came and comes to His people in seemingly ordinary circumstances and places, yet also in veiled and mystic ways.
On some images of Spring inside my cloistral world:

sleeping giant

living water

pond-in-a-fountain

goldfish

more goldfish

more goldfish enjoying the no-snow water
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