Thursday 16 April 2009

St Sophia - Constantinople - Heaven on Earth.
















I was unprepared for the magnificent splendour of St Sophia when I visited the Cathedral a few years ago. On entering the Basilica without looking to either left or right I made straight for the centre of the building. It was crowded with sight seers, but on gazing upwards all else was dwarfed into insignificance.
A sea of translucent glory pours forth from high in the roof of the vast rotunda. The giant cupola, which must weigh megatons, is totally without any sense of weight or heaviness. The expansiveness of light and space, perfect proportions and harmony give the worshipper an experience of God's infinity.
When Prince Vladimir of Russia sent messengers to Constantinople as part of his programme of comparing the different religions, they returned full of ecstasy and joy.
They reported of how when they were participating in the Liturgy at St Sophia they no longer knew whether they were on earth or in heaven.
The current building was originally constructed as a church between A.D. 532 and 537 on the orders of the Byzantine Emperor Justinian. It was in fact the third Church of the Holy Wisdom to occupy the site (the previous two had both been destroyed by riots).
The great Church, even in its present devasted and reduced state, still manifests the presence of the Triune God revealed in Jesus Christ.

In 1453, Constantinople was conquored by the Ottoman Turks and Sultan Mehmed II ordered the building to be converted into a mosque. The bells, altar, iconostasis, and sacrificial vessels were removed, and many of the mosaics were eventually plastered over. The Islamic features - such as the mihrab, the minbar , and the four minarets outside - were added over the course of its history under the Ottomans. It remained as a mosque until 1935, when it was converted into a museum by the Republic of Turkey.


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