
Early Christian Attitudes toward Images

Ecclesiasticus II: Orthodox Icons, Saints, Feasts and Prayer
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The
religion of Christ is the revelation, by Him, of the truth. And this truth
is the knowledge of the true God and of the spiritual world. But the spiritual
world is not what men used to—and still do—call “spiritual.”
Christ calls His religion “new wine” and “bread that cometh down
from Heaven.” The Apostle Paul says, “Therefore, if any man be in Christ,
he is a new creation. The old things have passed away: behold, all things
have become new.”
In a religion like this, one that makes the believer into a “new
man,” everything is “new.” So, too, the art that gradually took form out
of the spirit of this religion, and which it invented to express its Mystery,
is a “new” art, one not like any other, just as the religion of Christ
is not like any other, in spite of what some may say who have eyes only
for certain meaningless externals.
The architecture of this religion, its music, its painting, its
sacred poetry, insofar as they make use of material media, nourish the
souls of the faithful with spirit. The works produced in these media are
like steps that lead them from earth up to heaven, from this earthly and
temporary state to that which is heavenly and eternal: This takes place
so far as is possible with human nature.
For this reason, the arts of the Church are anagogical, that
is, they elevate natural phenomena and submit them to “the beautiful transformation.”
They are also called “liturgical” arts, because through them man tastes
the essence of the liturgy by which God is worshipped and through which
man becomes like unto the Heavenly Hosts and perceives immortal life.
Ecclesiastical liturgical painting, the painting of worship, took
its form above all from Byzantium, where it remained the mystical Ark
of Christ’s religion and was called hagiographia or sacred painting.
As with the other arts of the Church, the purpose of hagiographia is
not to give pleasure to our carnal sense of sight, but to transform it
into a spiritual sense, so that in the visible things of this world we
may see what surpasses this world.
Hence this art is not theatrically illusionistic. Illusionistic
art came into being in Italy during the so-called Renaissance, because
this art was the expression of a Christianity which, deformed by philosophy,
had become a materialistic, worldly form of knowledge, and of the Western
Church, which had become a worldly system. And just as theology followed
along behind the philosophy of the ancients—so, too, the painting which
expressed this theology followed along behind the art of the ancient idolators.
The period is well named Renaissance, since, to tell the truth, it was
no more than a rebirth of the ancient carnal mode of thought that had
been the pagan world’s.
But just as those theologians were wading around in the slimy swamp
waters of philosophy, and were in no position to taste and understand
the clear fresh water of the Gospel, “drawn up to life eternal,” so, too,
the painters who brought about the Renaissance were in no position to
understand the mystical profundity of Eastern liturgical iconography,
the sacred art of Byzantium. And just as the theologians thought that
they could perfect Christ’s religion with philosophy, since for them it
seemed too simple, they being in no position to penetrate into the depths
of that divine simplicity: just so, the painters thought that they were
perfecting liturgical art, more simply called Byzantine, by making it
“more natural.”
So they set to work, copying what was natural—faces, clothes, buildings,
landscapes, all as they appear naturally—making an iconography with the
same rationalism that the theologians wanted to make theology with. But
the kind of theology you can get out of rationalism is exactly the kind
of religious iconography you can get out of copying nature.
This is why their works have no Mystery, nor any real spiritual
character. You understand that you have before you some men masquerading
as saints—not real saints. Look at the various pictures of the Mother
of God. “Madonnas” who pose hypocritically, and those in tears, weeping,
which are even falser yet! Corpses and idols for shallow men! Our people,
who for centuries have received a great and profound nurture from Christ’s
religion, even though outwardly they seem uneducated, call a woman who
pretends to be respectable but who is really not, a Frankopanayhia,
a “Frankish Virgin,” thus making a clear distinction between the “Frankish
Virgin” and the true Virgin, the Mother of Christ our God,
the austere Odogitria, Her “more precious than the Cherubim, and
beyond compare more glorious than the Seraphim.’’ In other words, in the
simplest way possible they make a neat, sharp distinction between the
art of the world and the art belonging to worship.
Western religious painters who wanted to depict the supernatural
visions of religion took as models certain natural phenomena—clouds, sunsets,
the moon, the sun with its beams. With these they tried to portray the
heavenly glory and the world of immortality, calling certain things ‘‘spiritual”
which are merely sentimental, emotional, not spiritual at all.
In vain, however. Because the blessedness of the other life is
not a continuation of the emotional happiness of this world, neither does
it have any relation to the satisfaction the senses enjoy in this life.
The Apostle Paul, talking about the good things of the blessedness to
come, says that they are such that “eye hath not seen, and ear hath not
heard, neither have entered into the heart of man.”
How, then, can that world, which lies beyond everything a man can
grasp with his senses—how can that world be portrayed by an art that is
“natural” and that appeals to the senses? How can you paint “what surpasses
nature and surpasses sense”?
Certainly, man will take elements from the perceptible world, “for
the senses’ sake,” but to be able to express “what surpasses sense” he
must dematerialize these elements, he must lift them to a higher plane,
he must transmute them from what is carnal into what is spiritual, just
as faith transmutes man’s feelings, making them, from carnal, into spiritual.
“I saw,” says St. John of the Ladder, “some men given over with passion
to carnal love, and when they received the Light and took the way of Christ,
this fierce carnal passion was changed inside them, with divine grace.
into a great love for the Lord.”
Thus, even the material elements which Byzantine iconography took
from the world of sense were supernaturally transmuted into spiritualities,
and since they had passed through the pure soul of a man who lived according
to Christ, like gold through a refiner’s fire, they express, as far as
is possible for a man who wears a material body, that which the Apostle
Paul spoke of, “which eye hath not seen, neither hath entered into the
heart of man.”
The beauty of liturgical art is not a carnal beauty, but a spiritual
beauty. That is why whoever judges this art by worldly standards says
that the figures in Byzantine sacred painting are ugly and repellent,
while for one of the faithful they possess the beauty of the spirit, which
is called “the beautiful transformation.”
The Apostle Paul says. “We (who preach the Gospel and live according
to Christ ) are ... a sweet savour of Christ unto them that are saved
and unto them that perish. Unto them that have within them the small of
death (of flesh), we smell of death; and unto them that have within them
the smell of life, we smell of life.”
And the blessed and hallowed St. John of the Ladder says, “There
was an ascetic who, whenever he happened to see a beautiful person, whether
man or woman, would glorify the Creator of that person with all his heart,
and from a mere glance his love for God would spring afresh and he would
pour out on his account a fountain of tears. And one marveled, seeing
this happen, that for this man what would cause the soul of another to
stink had become a reason for crowns and an ascent above nature. Whoever
perceives beauty in this fashion is already incorruptible, even before
the dead shall rise in the common Resurrection,”
“Be
ye not conformed to this world, but be ye transformed by the renewing
of your mind . . .“ (Rom. xii. 2)
From Word
Magazine
Publication of the Antiochian Orthodox
Christian Archdiocese of North America
September 1964
pp. 5-6
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