| |
Far
Left Panel |
Left
Middle Panel |
Right
Middle Panel |
Far
Right Panel |
| In
stained glass |
GREATER |
LOVE |
HATH |
NO
MAN |
 |
IhS |
Artist:
Yvonne
Williams
Size:
64 sq. ft.
Description:
The
"Chancel Window", as it's called,
is the first stained-glass window you notice
as you enter the church. This window depicts
the Last Supper, since, of course, the Last
Supper is the central and focal point of Christian
Worship. The Last Supper usually shows Jesus
seated at a rectangular table with his disciples,
but this could not be done in a window which
had four fairly narrow panels. That is why
you see a somewhat circular table with "Greater
Love Hath No Man" written around its
border. Jesus is breaking the bread with His
twelve disciples.
On
the table are two inscriptions. On the left
is Alpha and Omega (the beginning and the
end). On the right are the letters IhS
which represent the first three letters (iota,
eta, sigma) of the Greek spelling of Jesus
(Iesous or ).
In Greek the long e or eta is often transliterated
with an h.
Note:
The IhS symbol is not to be confused with
the Greek letters
(Iota Chi Theta Upsilon Sigma) which spell
the word ichthys (or ichthus) meaning fish.
These letters form an acrostic for the words:
Iesous (Jesus), CHristos (Christ), THeou
(God), Uiou (Son), Soter (Savior). (CH
and TH are each one letter in Greek.) "Jesus
Christ, Son of God, Savior." It's where
we get the fish symbol from. [Rev. Hugh
Reid]
Above
the table itself are four medallions. From
left to right, these are:
|
|
|
|
|
Healing |
Scene
at The Cross |
Blessing
the Children |
Prodigal
Son |
Above
these four medalions are three smaller medallions.
On the left you see an open Bible with Alpha
and Omega again. In the centre, just below
the two Cherubs at the very top, is the descending
dove. And on the right, is the burning bush.
"The
open Bible was the symbol of the Congregationalist
Church; the burning bush, the symbol of the
Presbyterian Church; and the descending dove,
the symbol of the Methodist Church which came
together to become the United Church in 1925.
These three symbols, together with the Alpha
and Omega (Jesus Christ in whom is our unity)
are also featured on the United Church Crest.
Being that Kingsway-Lambton is a former Methodist
Congregation, I can understand why the Methodist
Symbol would have been given the centre position."
[Rev. Hugh Reid]
It
is interesting, if you look at the small medallions
at the bottom of the window, you will see
figures from nature: leaves and flowers; a
tortoise and a hare (in the centre); and a
fish and a dove (in the corners). These images
all indicate that God's love is given not
only to human beings but to all of His living
creatures. The tortoise and hare combination
(the slow and the fast) is a merismus meaning
everyone. The fish and the dove is another
merismus meaning everyone. "With the
four you have a pretty good allusion to Genesis
1:20–25 with the creatures of the sea
and air and those that creep along the ground
and the wild animals...making the point that
God's love in Jesus Christ is given not only
to human beings...but to all creation. A merismus,
by the way, is a common figure of Hebrew poetry
and ancient rhetoric where a contrasting couplet
is used to mean a whole: body and blood, east
and west, heaven and sheol, tortoise
and hare, etc." [Rev. Hugh Reid]
Notes:
This
was the second window to be donated to the
Church; the East Transept window being the
first.
This
window was given by a fund started by the
Senior Choir, assisted by the Junior Choir,
the Women's Association and the Sunday School.
Finally a gift by the Session made it possible
to install and dedicate this window.
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