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I. IMAGES IN THE OLD TESTAMENT
The First Commandment would seem absolutely to forbid the making of any kind of representation of men, animals, or even plants:
Thou shalt not have strange
gods before me. Thou shalt not make to thyself a graven thing, nor the
likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or in the earth beneath,
nor of those things that are in the waters under the earth. Thou shalt
not adore them, nor serve them (Exodus 20:3-5).
It is of course obvious
that the emphasis of this law is in the first and last clauses -- "no
strange gods", "thou shalt not adore them". Still any one who reads it
might see in the other words too an absolute command. The people are
not only told not to adore images nor serve them; they are not even to
make any graven thing or the likeness, it would seem, of anything at
all. One could understand so far-reaching a command at that time. If
they made statues or pictures, they probably would end by adoring them.
How likely they were to set up a graven thing as a strange god is shown
by the story of the golden calf at the very time that the ten words
were promulgated. In distinction to the nations around, Israel was to
worship an unseen God, there was to be no danger of the Israelites
falling into the kind of religion of Egypt or Babylon. This law
obtained certainly as far as images of God are concerned. Any attempt
to represent the God of Israel graphically (it seems that the golden
calf had this meaning -- Exodus 32:5) is always put down as being
abominable idolatry.
But, except for one late
period, we notice that the commandment was never understood as an
absolute and universal prohibition of any kind of image. Throughout the
Old Testament there are instances of representations of living things,
not in any way worshipped, but used lawfully, even ordered by the law
as ornaments of the tabernacle and temple. The many cases of idolatry
and various deflexions from the Law which the prophets denounce are
not, of course, cases in point. It is the statues made and used with
the full approval of the authorities which show that the words, "Thou
shalt not make to thyself any graven image", were not understood
absolutely and literally. It may be that the Hebrew translated "graven
image" had a technical sense that meant more than a statue, and
included the idea of "idol"; though this does not explain the
difficulty of the next phrase. In any case it is certain that there
were "likenesses of that which is in the sky above and on earth below
and in the waters" in the orthodox Jewish cult. Whatever one may
understand the mysterious ephod and theraphim to have been, there was
the brazen serpent (Numbers 21:9), not destroyed till Ezechias did so
(2 Kings 18:4), there were carved and moulded garlands of fruit and
flowers and trees (Numbers 8:4; 1 Kings 6:18; 7:36); the king's throne
rested on carved lions (1 Kings 10:19-20), Iions and bulls supported
the basins in the temple (1 Kings 7:25, 29). Especially there are the
cherubim, great carved figures of beasts (Ezekiel 1:5; 10:20, where
they are called beasts), that stood over the ark of the covenant
(Exodus 25:18-22; 1 Kings 6:23-8; 8:6-7, etc.). But, except for the
human heads of the cherubim (Ezekiel 41:19, Exodus 25:20, the
references to them when combined seem to point irresistibly to some
such figures as the Assyrian winged bulls with human heads), we read
nothing of statues of men in the lawful cult of the Old Testament. In
this point at least the Jew seems to have understood the commandment to
forbid the making of such statues, though even this is not clear in the
earlier periods. The ephod was certainly once a statue of human form
(Judges 8:27; 17:5; 1 Samuel 19:13, etc.), and what were the theraphim
(Judges 17:5)? Both were used in orthodox worship.
During the Machabean
period, however, there was a strong feeling against any kind of
representation of living things. Josephus tells the story of Herod the
Great: "Certain things were done by Herod against the law for which he
was accused by Judas and Matthias. For the king made and set up over
the great gate of the temple a sacred and very precious great golden
eagle. But it is forbidden in the law to those who wish to live
according to its precepts to think of setting up images, or to assist
any one to consecrate figures of living things. Therefore those wise
men ordered the eagle to be destroyed" ("Antiq. Jud.", 1. XVII, c. vi,
2). So also in "De bello Jud.", 1. l, c. xxxiii (xxi), 2, he says: "It
is unlawful to have in thetemple images or pictures or any
representation of a living thing", and in his "Life": "that I might
persuade them to destroy utterly the house built by Herod the tetrarch,
because it had images of living things (soon morphas) since our laws
forbid us to make such things" (Jos. vita, 12). The Jews at the risk of
their lives persuaded Pilate to remove the statues of Caesar set up
among the standards of the army in Jerusalem ["Ant. Jud.", 1. XVIII, c.
iii (iv), 1, De bell. Jud., ix (xiv), 2-3]; they implored Vitellius not
even to carry such statues through their land [ibid., c. v (vii), 3].
It is well known how fiercely they resisted various attempts to set up
idols of false gods in the temple (see JERUSALEM, II); though this
would be an abomination to them even apart from their general horror of
images of any kind. So it became the general conviction that Jews abhor
any kind of statue or image. Tacitus says: "The Jews worship one God in
their minds only. They hold those to be profane who make images of the
gods with corruptible materials in the likeness of man, for he is
supreme and eternal, neither changeable nor mortal. Therefore they
allow no images (simulacra) in their cities or temples" (Hist., V, iv).
It is this uncompromising
attitude in the late Jewish history, together with the apparently
obvious meaning of the First Commandment, that are responsible for the
common idea that Jews had no images. We have seen that this idea must
be modified for earlier ages. Nor does it by any means obtain as a
universal principle in later times. In spite of the iconoclastic ideas
of the Jews of Palestine described by Josephus, in spite of their
horror of anything of the nature of an idol in their temple, Jews,
especially in the Diaspora, made no difficulty about embellishing their
monuments with paintings even of the human form. There are a number of
Jewish catacombs and cemeteries decorated with paintings representing
birds, beasts, fishes, men, and women. At Gamart, North of Carthage, is
one whose tombs are adorned with carved ornaments of garlands and human
figures; in one of the caves are pictures of a horseman and of another
person holding a whip under a tree, another at Rome in the Vigna
Randanini by the Appian Way has a painted ceiling of birds, fishes, and
little winged human figures around a centerpiece representing a woman,
evidently a Victory, crowning a small figure. At Palmyra is a Jewish
funeral chamber painted throughout with winged female figures holding
up round portraits, above is a picture, quite in the late Roman style,
of Achilles and the daughters of Lycomedes (d. 515). Many other
examples of carved figures on sarcophagi, wall paintings, and
geometrical ornaments, all in the manner of Pompeian decoration and the
Christian catacombs, but from Jewish cemeteries, show that, in spite of
their exclusive religion, the Jews in the first Christian centuries had
submitted to the artistic influence of their Roman neighbours. So that
in this matter when Christians began to decorate their catacombs with
holy pictures they did not thereby sever themselves from the custom of
their Jewish forefathers.
II. CHRISTIAN IMAGES BEFORE THE EIGHTH CENTURY
Two questions that
obviously must be kept apart are those of the use of sacred images and
of the reverence paid to them. That Christians from the very beginning
adorned their catacombs with paintings of Christ, of the saints, of
scenes from the Bible and allegorical groups is too obvious and too
well known for it to be necessary to insist upon the fact. The
catacombs are the cradle of all Christian art. Since their discovery in
the sixteenth century -- on 31 May, 1578, an accident revealed part of
the catacomb in the Via Salaria -- and the investigation of their
contents that has gone on steadily ever since, we are able to
reconstruct an exact idea of the paintings that adorned them. That the
first Christians had any sort of prejudice against images, pictures, or
statues is a myth (defended amongst others by Erasmus) that has been
abundantly dispelled by all students of Christian archaeology. The idea
that they must have feared the danger of idolatry among their new
converts is disproved in the simplest way by the pictures even statues,
that remain from the first centuries. Even the Jewish Christians had no
reason to be prejudiced against pictures, as we have seen; still less
had the Gentile communities any such feeling. They accepted the art of
their time and used it, as well as a poor and persecuted community
could, to express their religious ideas. Roman pagan cemeteries and
Jewish catacombs already showed the way; Christians followed these
examples with natural modifications. From the second half of the first
century to the time of Constantine they buried their dead and
celebrated their rites in these underground chambers. The old pagan
sarcophagi had been carved with figures of gods, garlands of flowers,
and symbolic ornament; pagan cemeteries, rooms, and temples had been
painted with scenes from mythology. The Christian sarcophagi were
ornamented with indifferent or symbolic designs -- palms, peacocks,
vines, with the chi-rho monogram (long before Constantine), with
bas-reliefs of Christ as the Good Shepherd, or seated between figures
of saints, and sometimes, as in the famous one of Julius Bassus with
elaborate scenes from the New Testament. And the catacombs were covered
with paintings. There are other decorations such as garlands, ribands,
stars landscapes, vines-no doubt in many cases having a symbolic
meaning.
One sees with some surprise
motives from mythology now employed in a Christian sense (Psyche, Eros
winged Victories, Orpheus), and evidently used as a type of our Lord.
Certain scenes from the Old Testament that have an evident application
to His life and Church recur constantly: Daniel in the lions' den, Noah
and his ark, Samson carrying away the gates Jonas, Moses striking the
rock. Scenes from the New Testament are very common too, the Nativity
and arrival of the Wise Men, our Lord's baptism, the miracle of the
loaves and fishes, the marriage feast at Cana, Lazarus, and Christ
teaching the Apostles. There are also purely typical figures, the woman
praying with uplifted hands representing the Church, harts drinking
from a fountain that springs from a chi-rho monogram, and sheep. And
there are especially pictures of Christ as the Good Shepherd, as
lawgiver, as a child in His mother's arms, of His head alone in a
circle, of our Lady alone, of St. Peter and St. Paul -- pictures that
are not scenes of historic events, but, like the statues in our modern
churches, just memorials of Christ and His saints. In the catacombs
there is little that can be described as sculpture; there are few
statues for a very simple reason. Statues are much more difficult to
make, and cost much more than wall-paintings. But there was no
principle against them. Eusebius describes very ancient statues at
Caesarea Philippi representing Christ and the woman He healed there
("Hist. eccl.", VII, 18: Matthew 9:20-2). The earliest sarcophagi had
bas-reliefs. As soon as the Church came out of the catacombs, became
richer, had no fear of persecution, the same people who had painted
their caves began to make statues of the same subjects. The famous
statue of the Good Shepherd in the Lateran Museum was made as early as
the beginning of the third century, the statues of Hippolytus and of
St. Peter date from the end of the same century. The principle was
quite simple. The first Christians were accustomed to see statues of
emperors, of pagan gods and heroes, as well as pagan wall-paintings. So
they made paintings of their religion, and, as soon as they could
afford them, statues of their Lord and of their heroes, without the
remotest fear or suspicion of idolatry.
The idea that the Church of
the first centuries was in any way prejudiced against pictures and
statues is the most impossible fiction. After Constantine (306-37)
there was of course an enormous development of every kind. Instead of
burrowing catacombs Christians began to build splendid basilicas. They
adorned them with costly mosaics, carving, and statues. But there was
no new principle. The mosaics represented more artistically and richly
the motives that had been painted on the walls of the old caves, the
larger statues continue the tradition begun by carved sarcophagi and
little lead and glass ornaments. From that time to the Iconoclast
Persecution holy images are in possession all over the Christian world.
St. Ambrose (d. 397) describes in a letter how St. Paul appeared to him
one night, and he recognized him by the likeness to his pictures (Ep.
ii, in P. L., XVII, 821). St. Augustine (d. 430) refers several times
to pictures of our Lord and the saints in churches (e.g. "De cons.
Evang.", x in P. L., XXXIV, 1049; "Contra Faust. Man.", xxii 73, in P.
L., XLII, 446); he says that some people even adore them ("De mor.
eccl. cath.", xxxiv, P. L., XXXII, 1342). St. Jerome (d. 420) also
writes of pictures of the Apostles as well-known ornaments of churches
(In Ionam, iv). St. Paulinus of Nola (d. 431) paid for mosaics
representing Biblical scenes and saints in the churches of his city,
and then wrote a poem describing them (P. L., LXI, 884). Gregory of
Tours (d. 594) says that a Frankish lady, who built a church of St.
Stephen, showed the artists who painted its walls how they should
represent the saints out of a book (Hist. Franc., II, 17, P. L., LXXI,
215). In the East St. Basil (d. 379), preaching about St. Barlaam,
calls upon painters to do the saint more honour by making pictures of
him than he himself can do by words ("Or. in S. Barlaam", in P. G.,
XXXI). St. Nilus in the fifth century blames a friend for wishing to
decorate a church with profane ornaments, and exhorts him to replace
these by scenes from Scripture (Epist. IV, 56). St. Cyril of Alexandria
(d. 444) was so great a defender of icons that his opponents accused
him of idolatry (for all this see Schwarzlose, "Der Bilderstreit" i,
3-15). St. Gregory the Great (d. 604) was always a great defender of
holy pictures (see below).
We notice, however, in the
first centuries a certain reluctance to express the pain and
humiliation of the Passion of Christ. Whether to spare the
susceptibility of new converts, or as a natural reaction from the
condition of a persecuted sect, Christ is generally represented as
splendid and triumphant. There are pictures of His Passion even in the
catacombs (e.g.,the crowning of thorns in the Catacomb of Praetextatus
on the Appian way) but the favourite representation is either the Good
Shepherd (by far the most frequent) or Christ showing His power,
raising Lazarus, working some other miracle, standing among His
Apostles, seated in glory. There are no pictures of the Crucifixion
except the mock-crucifix scratched by some pagan soldier in the
Palatine barracks. In the first basilicas also the type of the
triumphant Christ remains the normal one. The curve of the apse
(concha) over the altar is regularly filled with a mosaic representing
the reign of Christ in some symbolic group. Our Lord sits on a throne,
dressed in the tunica talaris and pallium, holding a book in His left
hand, with the right lifted up. This is the type that is found in
countless basilicas in East and West from the fourth century to the
seventh. The group around him varies. Sometimes it is saints, apostles
or angels (St. Pudentiana, Sts. Cosmas and Damian, St. Paul at Rome,
St. Vitalis, St. Michael); often on either side of Christ are purely
symbolic figures, lambs, harts, palms, cities, the symbols of the
evangelists (S. Apollinare in Classe; the chapel of Galla Placidia at
Ravenna). A typical example of this tradition was the concha-mosaic of
old St. Peter's at Rome (destroyed in the sixteenth century). Here
Christ is enthroned in the centre in the usual form, bearded, with a
nimbus, in tunic and pallium, holding a book in the left hand, blessing
with the right. Under His feet four streams arise (the rivers of Eden,
Genesis 2:10) from which two stags drink (Ps. xli, 2). On either side
of Christ are St. Peter and St. Paul, beyond each a palm tree; the
background is sprinkled with stars while above rays of light and a hand
issuing from under a small cross suggest God the Father. Below is a
frieze in which lambs come out from little cities at either end (marked
Hierusalem and Betliem) towards an Agnus Dei on a hill, from which
again flow four streams. Behind the Agnus Dei is a throne with a cross,
behind the lambs is a row of trees. Figures of a pope (Innocent III,
1198-1216) and an emperor preceding the processions of lambs were added
later; but the essential plan of this mosaic (often restored) dates
from the fourth century.
Although representations of
the Crucifixion do not occur till later, the cross, as the symbol of
Christianity, dates from the very beginning. Justin Martyr (d. 165)
describes it in a way that already implies its use as a symbol (Dial.
cum Tryph., 91). He says that the cross is providentially represented
in every kind of natural object: the sails of a ship, a plough, tools,
even the human body (Apol. I, 55). According to Tertullian (d. about
240), Christians were known as "worshippers of the cross" (Apol., xv).
Both simple crosses and the chi-rho monogram are common ornaments of
catacombs; combined with palm branches, lambs and other symbols they
form an obvious symbol of Christ. After Constantine the cross, made
splendid with gold and gems, was set up triumphantly as the standard of
the conquering Faith. A late catacomb painting represents a cross
richly jewelled and adorned with flowers. Constantine's Labarum at the
battle of the Milvian Bridge (312), and the story of the finding of the
True Cross by St. Helen, gave a fresh impulse to its worship. It
appears (without a figure) above the image of Christ in the apsidal
mosaic of St. Pudentiana at Rome, in His nimbus constantly, in some
prominent place on an altar or throne (as the symbol of Christ), in
nearly all mosaics above the apse or in the chief place of the first
basilicas (St. Paul at Rome, ibid., 183, St. Vitalis at Ravenna). In
Galla Placidia's chapel at Ravenna Christ (as the Good Shepherd with
His sheep) holds a great cross in His left hand. The cross had a
special place as an object of worship. It was the chief outward sign of
the Faith, was treated with more reverence than any picture "worship of
the cross" (staurolatreia) was a special thing distinct from
image-worship, so that we find the milder Iconoclasts in after years
making an exception for the cross, still treating it with reverence,
while they destroyed pictures. A common argument of the image
worshippers to their opponents was that since the latter too worshipped
the cross they were inconsistent in refusing to worship other images
(see ICONOCLASM).
The cross further gained an
important place in the consciousness of Christians from its use in
ritual functions. To make the sign of the cross with the hand soon
became the common form of professing the Faith or invoking a blessing.
The Canons of Hippolytus tell the Christian: "Sign thy forehead with
the sign of the cross in order to defeat Satan and to glory in thy
Faith" (c. xxix; cf. Tertullian, "Adv. Marc.", III, 22). People prayed
with extended arms to represent a cross (Origen, "Hom. in Exod.", iii,
3, Tertullian, "de Orat.", 14). So also to make the sign of the cross
over a person or thing became the usual gesture of blessing,
consecrating, exorcising (Lactantius, Divine Institutes IV:27), actual
material crosses adorned the vessels used in the Liturgy, a cross was
brought in procession and placed on the altar during Mass. The First
Roman Ordo (sixth century) alludes to the cross-bearers (cruces
portantes) in a procession. As soon as people began to represent scenes
from the Passion they naturally included the chief event, and so we
have the earliest pictures and carvings of the Crucifixion. The first
mentions ofcrucifixes are in the sixth century. A traveller in the
reign of Justinian notices one he saw in a church at Gaza in the West,
Venantius Fortunatus saw a palla embroidered with a picture of the
Crucifixion at Tours, and Gregory of Tours refers to a crucifix at
Narbonne. For a long time Christ on the cross was always represented
alive. The oldest crucifixes known are those on the wooden doors of St.
Sabina at Rome and an ivory carving in the British Museum. Both are of
the fifth century. A Syriac manuscript of the sixth century contains a
mimature representing the scene of the crucifixion. There are other
such representations down to the seventh century, after which it
becomes the usual custom to add the figure of our Lord to crosses; the
crucifix is in possession everywhere.
The conclusion then is that
the principle of adorning chapels and churches with pictures dates from
the very earliest Christian times: centuries before the Iconoclast
troubles they were in use throughout Christendom. So also all the old
Christian Churches in East and West use holy pictures constantly. The
only difference is that even before Iconoclasm there was in the East a
certain prejudice against solid statues. This has been accentuated
since the time of the Iconoclast heresy (see below, section 5). But
there are traces of it before; it is shared by the old schismatical
(Nestorian and Monophysite Churches that broke away long before
Iconoclasm. The principle in the East was not universally accepted. The
emperors set up their statues at Constantinople without blame; statues
of religious purpose existed in the East before the eighth century (see
for instance the marble Good Shepherds from Thrace, Athens, and Sparta,
the Madonna and Child from Saloniki, but they are much rarer than in
the West. Images in the East were generally flat; paintings, mosaics,
bas-reliefs. The most zealous Eastern defenders of the holy icons seem
to have felt that, however justifiable such flat representations may
be, there is something about a solid statue that makes it suspiciously
like an idol.
THE VENERATION OF IMAGES
Distinct from the admission
of images is the question of the way they are treated. What signs of
reverence, if any, did the first Christians give to the images in their
catacombs and churches? For the first period we have no information.
There are so few references to images at all in the earliest Christian
literature that we should hardly have suspected their ubiquitous
presence were they not actually there in the catacombs as the most
convincing argument. But these catacomb paintings tell us nothing about
how they were treated. We may take it for granted, on the one hand,
that the first Christians understood quite well that paintings may not
have any share in the adoration due to God alone. Their monotheism,
their insistence on the fact that they serve only one almighty unseen
God, their horror of the idolatry of their nieghbours, the torture and
death that their martyrs suffered rather than lay a grain of incense
before the statue of the emperor's numen are enough to convince us that
they were not setting up rows of idols of their own. On the other hand,
the place of honour they give to their symbols and pictures, the care
with which they decorate them argue that they treated representations
of their most sacred beliefs with at least decent reverence. It is from
this reverence that the whole tradition of venerating holy images
gradually and naturally developed. After the time of Constantine it is
still mainly by conjecture that we are able to deduce the way these
images were treated. The etiquette of the Byzantine court gradually
evolved elaborate forms of respect, not only for the person of Ceesar
but even for his statues and symbols. Philostorgius (who was an
Iconoclast long before the eighth century) says that in the fourth
century the Christian Roman citizens in the East offered gifts,
incense, and even prayers, to the statues of the emperor (Hist. eccl.,
II, 17). It would be natural that people who bowed to, kissed, incensed
the imperial eagles and images of Caesar (with no suspicion of anything
like idolatry), who paid elaborate reverence to an empty throne as his
symbol, should give the same signs to the cross, the images of Christ,
and the altar. So in the first Byzantine centuries there grew up
traditions of respect that gradually became fixed, as does all
ceremonial. Such practices spread in some measure to Rome and the West,
but their home was the Court at Constantinople. Long afterwards the
Frankish bishops in the eighth century were still unable to understand
forms that in the East were natural and obvious, but to Germans seemed
degrading and servile (Synod of Frankfort, 794; see ICONOCLASM IV). It
IS significant too that, although Rome and Constantinople agree
entirely as to the principle of honouring holy images with signs of
reverence, the descendants of the subjects of the Eastern emperor still
go far beyond us in the use of such signs.
The development was then a
question of genera fashion rather than of principle. To the Byzantine
Christian of the fifth and sixth centuries prostrations, kisses,
incense were the natural ways of showing honour to any one; he was used
to such things, even applied to his civil and social superiors; he was
accustomed to treat symbols in the same way, giving them relative
honour that was obviously meant really for their prototypes. And so he
carried his normal habits with him into church. Tradition, the
conservative instinct that in ecclesiastical matters always insists or
custom, gradually stereotyped such practices till they were written
down as rubrics and became part of the ritual. Nor is there any
suspicion that the people who were unconsciously evolving this ritual,
confused the image with its prototype or forgot that to God only
supreme homage is due. The forms they used were as natural to them as
saluting a flag is to us.
At the same time one must
admit that just before the Iconoclast outbreak things had gone very far
in the direction of image-worship. Even then it is inconceivable that
any one, except perhaps the most grossly stupid peasant, could have
thought that an image could hear prayers, or do anything for us. And
yet the way in which some people treated their holy icons argues more
than the merely relative honour that Catholics are taught to observe
towards them. In the first place images had multiplied to an enormous
extent everywhere, the walls of churches were covered inside from floor
to roof with icons, scenes from the Bible, allegorical groups. (An
example of this is S. Maria Antiqua, built in the seventh century in
the Roman Forum, with its systematic arrangement of paintings covering
the whole church. Icons, especially in the East, were taken on journeys
as a protection, they marched at the head of armies, and presided at
the races in the hippodrome; they hung in a place of honour in every
room, over every shop; they covered cups, garments, furniture, rings;
wherever a possible space was found, it was filled with a picture of
Christ, our Lady, or a saint. It is difficult to understand exactly
what those Byzantine Christians of the seventh and eighth centuries
thought about them. The icon seems to have been in some sort the
channel through which the saint was approached; it has an almost
sacramental virtue in arousing sentiments of faith, love and so on, in
those who gazed upon it; through and by the icon God worked miracles,
the icon even seems to have had a kind of personality of its own,
inasmuch as certain pictures were specially efficacious for certain
graces. Icons were crowned with garlands, incensed, kissed. Lamps
burned before them, hymns were sung in their honour. They were applied
to sick persons by contact, set out in the path of a fire or flood to
stop it by a sort of magic. In many prayers of this time the natural
inference from the words would be that the actual picture is addressed.
If so much reverence was
paid to ordinary images "made with hands", how much more was given to
the miraculous ones "not made with hands" (eikones acheiropoietai). Of
these there were many that had descended miraculously from heaven, or
-- like the most famous of all at Edessa -- had been produced by our
Lord Himself by impressing His face on a cloth. (The story of the
Edessa picture is the Eastern form of our Veronica legend). The Emperor
Michael II (820-9), in his letter to Louis the Pious, describes the
excesses of the image worshippers:
They have removed the holy
cross from the churches and replaced it by images before which they
burn incense.... They sing psalms before these images, prostrate
themselves before them, implore their help. Many dress up images in
linen garments and choose them as godparents for their children. Others
who become monks, forsaking the old tradition -- according to which the
hair that is cut off is received by some distinguished person -- let it
fall into the hands of some image. Some priests scrape the paint off
images, mix it with the consecrated bread and wine and give it to the
faithful. Others place the body of the Lord in the hands of images from
which it is taken by the communicants. Others again, despising the
churches, celebrate Divine Service in private houses, using an image as
an altar (Mansi, XIV, 417-22).
These are the words of a
bitter Iconoclast, and should, no doubt, be received with caution.
Nevertheless most of the practices described by the emperor can be
established by other and quite unimpeachable evidence. For instance,
St. Theodore of the Studion writes to congratulate an official of the
court for having chosen a holy icon as godfather for his son (P.G.,
XCIX 962-3). Such excesses as these explain in part at least the
Iconoclast reaction of the eighth century. And the Iconoclast storm
produced at least one good result: the Seventh Ecumenical Synod (Nicaea
II, 787), which, while defending the holy images, explained the kind of
worship that may lawfully and reasonably be given to them and
discountenanced all extravagances. A curious story, that illustrates
the length to which the worship of images had gone by the eighth
century, is told in the "New Garden" (Neon Paradeision -- Pratum
Spirituo ale) of a monk of Jerusalem, John Moschus (d. 619). This work
was long attributed to Sophronius of Jerusalem. In it the author tells
the story of an old monk at Jerusalem who was much tormented by
temptations of the flesh. At last the devil promised him peace on
condition that he would cease to honour his picture of our Lady He
promised, kept his word, and then began to suffer temptations against
faith. He consulted his abbot who told him that he had better suffer
the former evil (apparently even give way to the temptation) "rather
than cease to worship our Lord and God Jesus Christ with His mother".
On the other hand, in Rome
especially, we find the position of holy images explained soberly and
reasonably. They are the books of the ignorant. This idea is a
favourite one of St. Gregory the Great (d. 604). He writes to an
Iconoclast bishop, Serenus of Marseilles, who had destroyed the images
in his diocese: "Not without reason has antiquity allowed the stories
of saints to be painted in holy places. And we indeed entirely praise
thee for not allowing them to be adored, but we blame thee for breaking
them. For it is one thing to adore an image, it is quite another thing
to learn from the appearance of a picture what we must adore. What
books are to those who can read, that is a picture to the ignorant who
look at it; in a picture even the unlearned may see what example they
should follow; in a picture they who know no letters may vet read.
Hence, for barbarians especially a picture takes the place of a book"
(Ep. ix, 105, in P. L., LXXVII, 1027). But in the East, too, there were
people who shared this more sober Western view.Anastasius, Bishop of
Theopolis (d. 609), who was a friend of St. Gregory and translated his
"Regula pastoralis" into Greek, expresses himself in almost the same
way and makes the distinction between proskynesis and latreia that
became so famous in Iconoclast times: "We worship (proskynoumen) men
and the holy angels; we do not adore (latreuomen) them. Moses says:
Thou shalt worship thy God and Him only shalt thou adore. Behold,
before the word 'adore' he puts 'only', but not before the word
'worship', because it is lawful to worship [creatures], since worship
is only giving special honour (times emphasis), but it is not lawful to
adore them nor by any means to give them prayers of adoration
(proseuxasthai)" (Schwarzlose, op. cit., 24).
ENEMIES OF IMAGE-WORSHIP BEFORE ICONOCLASM
Long before the outbreak in
the eighth century there were isolated cases of persons who feared the
ever-growing cult of images and saw in it danger of a return to the old
idolatry. We need hardly quote in this connection the invectives of the
Apostolic Fathers against idols (Athenagoras "Legatio Pro Christ.",
xv-xvii; Theophilus, "Ad Autolycum" II; Minucius Felix, "Octavius",
xxvii; Arnobius, "Disp. adv. Gentes"; Tertullian, "De Idololatria", I;
Cyprian, "De idolorum vanitate"), in which they denounce not only the
worship but even the manufacture and possession of such images. These
texts all regard idols, that is, images made to be adored. But canon
xxxvi of the Synod of Elvira is important. This was a general synod of
the Church of Spain held, apparently about the year 300, in a city near
Granada. It made many severe laws against Christians who relapsed into
idolatry, heresy, or sins against the Sixth Commandment. The canon
reads: "It is ordained (Placuit) that Pictures are not to be in
churches, so that that which is worshipped and adored shall not be
painted on walls." The meaning of the canon has been much discussed.
Some have thought it was only a precaution against possible profanation
by pagans who might go into a church. Others see in it a law against
pictures on principle. In any case the canon can have produced but a
slight effect even in Spain, where there were holy pictures in the
fourth century as in other countries. But it is interesting to see that
just at the end of the first period there were some bishops who
disapproved of the growing cult of images. Eusebius of Caesarea (d.
340), the Father of Church History, must be counted among the enemies
of icons. In several Places in his history he shows his dislike of
them. They are a "heathen custom" (ethnike synetheia Hist. eccl., VII,
18); he wrote many arguments to persuade Constantine's sister
Constantia not to keep a statue of our Lord (see Mansi XIII, 169). A
contemporary bishop, Asterius of Amasia, also tried to oppose the
spreading tendency. In a sermon on the parable of the rich man and
Lazarus he says: "Do not Paint pictures of Christ he humbled himself
enough by becoming man." (Combefis, "Auctar. nov.", I, "Hom. iv in Div.
et Laz."). Epiphanius of Salamis (d. 403) tore down a curtain in a
church in Palestine because it had a picture of Christ or a saint. The
Arian Philostorgius (fifth century) too was a forerunner of the
Iconoclasts (Hist. Eccl., II, 12; VII, 3), as also the Bishop of
Marseilles (Serenus), to whom St. Gregory the Great wrote his defence
of pictures (see above). Lastly we may mention that in at least one
province of the Church (Central Syria) Christian art developed to great
perfection while it systematically rejected all representation of the
human figure. These exceptions are few compared with the steadily
increasing influence of images and their worship all over Christendom,
but they serve to show that the holy icons did not win their place
entirely without opposition, and they represent a thin stream of
opposition as the antecedent of the virulent Iconoclasm of the eighth
century.
IMAGES AFTER ICONOCLASM (Coronation of Images)
After the storm of the
eighth and ninth centuries (see ICONOCLASM), the Church throughout the
world settled down again in secure possession of her images. Since
their triumphant return on the Feast of Orthodoxy in 842, their
position has not again been questioned by any of the old Churches. Only
now the situation has become more clearly defined. The Seventh General
Council (Nicaea II, 787) had laid down the principles, established the
theological basis, restrained the abuses of image-worship. That council
was accepted by the great Church of the five patriarchates as equal to
the other six. Without accepting its decrees no one could be a member
of that church, no one can today be Catholic or Orthodox. Images and
their cult had become an integral part of the Faith Iconoclasm was now
definitely a heresy condemned by the Church as much as Arianism or
Nestorianism. The situation was not changed by the Great Schism of the
ninth and eleventh centuries. Both sides still maintain the same
principles in this matter; both equally revere as an oecumenical synod
the last council in which they met in unison before the final calamity.
The Orthodox agree to all that Catholics say (see next Paragraph) as to
the principle of venerating images. So do the old. Eastern schismatical
Churches. Although they broke away long before Iconoclasm and Nicaea II
they took with them then the principles we maintain -- sufficient
evidence that those principles were not new in 787. Nestorians,
Armenians, Jacobites, Copts, and Abyssinians fill their churches with
holy icons, bow to them, incense them, kiss them, just as do the
Orthodox.
But there is a difference
not of principle but of practice between East and West, to which we
have already alluded. Especially since Iconoclasm, the East dislikes
solid statues. Perhaps they are too reminiscent of the old Greek gods.
At all events, the Eastern icon (whether Orthodox, Nestorian or
Monophysite) is always flat -- a painting, mosaic, bas-relief. Some of
the less intelligent Easterns even seem to see a question of principle
in this and explain the difference between a holy icon, such as a
Christian man should venerate, and a detestable idol, in the simplest
and crudest way: "icons are flat, idols are solid." However, that is a
view that has never been suggested by their Church officially, she has
never made this a ground of complaint against Latins, but admits it to
be (as of course it is) simply a difference of fashion orhabit, and she
recognizes that we are justified by the Second Council of Nicaea in the
honour we pay to our statues just as she is in the far more elaborate
reverence she pays to her flat icons.
In the West the exuberant
use of statues and pictures during the Middle Ages is well known and
may be seen in any cathedral in which Protestant zeal has not destroyed
the carving. In the East it is enough to go into any Orthodox Church to
see the crowd of holy icons that cover the walls, that gleam right
across the church from the iconostasis. And the churches of the Eastern
sects that have no iconostasis show as many pictures in other places.
As specimens of exceedingly beautiful and curious icons painted after
the Iconoclast troubles at Constantinople, we may mention the mosaics
of the Kahrie-Jami (the old "Monastery in the Country", Moue tes
choras) near the Adrianople gate. The Turks by some accident have
spared these mosaics in turning the church into a mosque. They were put
up by order of Andronicus II (1282-1328), they cover the whole church
within, representing complete cycles of the events of our Lord's life,
images of Him, His mother, and various saints; and still show in the
desecrated building an example of the splendid pomp with which the
later Byzantine Church carried out the principles of the Second Nicaean
Council.
In both East and West the
reverence we pay to images has crystallized into formal ritual. In the
Latin Rite the priest is commanded to bow to the cross in the sacristy
before he leaves it to say Mass ("Ritus servandus" in the Missal, II,
1); he bows again profoundly "to the altar or the image of the crucifix
placed upon it" when he begins Mass (ibid., II, 2); he begins incensing
the altar by incensing the crucifix on it (IV, 4), and bows to it every
time he passes it (ibid.); he also incenses any relics or images of
saints that may be on the altar (ibid.). In the same way many such
commands throughout our rubrics show that always a reverence is to be
paid to the cross or images of saints whenever we approach them. The
Byzantine Rite shows if possible even more reverence for the holy
icons. They must be arranged according to a systematic scheme across
the screen between the choir and the altar that from this fact is
called iconostasis eikonostasis, "picture-stand"); before these
pictures, lamps are kept always burning. Among them on either side of
the royal door, are those of our Lord and His Mother. As part of the
ritual the celebrant and the deacon before they go in to vest bow
profoundly before these and say certain fixed prayers: "We worship
(proskynoumen) Thine immaculate image, O Christ" etc. ("Euchologion",
Venice, 1898, p. 35); and they too throughout their services are
constantly told to pay reverence to the holy icons. Images then were in
possession and received worship all over Christendom without question
till the Protestant Reformers, true to their principle of falling back
on the Bible only, and finding nothing about them in the New Testament,
sought in the Old Law rules that were never meant for the New Church
and discovered in the First Commandment (which they called the second)
a command not even to make any graven image. Their successors have
gradually tempered the severity of this, as of many other of the
original principles of their founders. Calvinists keep the rule of
admitting no statues, not even a cross, fairly exactly still. Lutherans
have statues and crucifixes. In Anglican churches one may find any
principle at work, from that of a bare cross to a perfect plethora of
statues and pictures.
The coronation of images is
an example of an old and obvious symbolic sign of honour that has
become a fixed rite. The Greek pagans offered golden crowns to their
idols as specially worthy gifts. St. Irenæus (d. 202) already notices
that certain Christian heretics (the Carpocratian Gnostics) crown their
images. He disapproves of the practice, though it seems that part of
his dislike at any rate is because they crown statues of Christ
alongside of those of Pythagoras, Plato, and Aristotle ("Adv. omn.
haer.", I, xxv). The offering of crowns to adorn images became a common
practice in the Eastern Churches. In itself it would mean no more than
adding such additional splendour to the icon as might also be given by
a handsome gold frame. Then the affixing of the crown naturally
attracted to itself a certain amount of ritual, and the crown itself,
like all things dedicated to the use of the Church, was blessed before
it was affixed.
At Rome, too, a ceremony
evolved out of this pious practice. A famous case is the coronation of
the picture of our Lady in St. Mary Major. Clement VIII (1592-1605)
presented crowns (one for our Lord and one for His Mother, both of whom
are represented in the picture) to adorn it; so also did succeeding
popes. These crowns were lost and Gregory XVI (1831-46) determined to
replace them. On 15 August, 1837 surrounded by cardinals and prelates,
he brought crowns, blessed them with a prayer composed for the
occasion, sprinkled them with holy water, and incensed them. The
"Regina Coeli" having been sung he affixed the crowns to the picture,
saying the form -- "Sicuti per manus nostras coronaris m terris, ita a
te gloria et honore coronari mereamur in coelis" -- for our Lord, and a
similar form (per te a Jesu Christo Filio tuo . . .) for our Lady.
There was another collect, the Te Deum, a last collect, and then High
Mass coram Pontifice. The same day the pope issued a Brief (Coelistis
Regina) about the rite. The crowns are to be kept by the canons of St.
Mary Major. The ceremonial used on that occasion became a standard for
similar functions.
The Chapter of St. Peter
have a right to crown statues and pictures of our Lady since the
seventeenth century. A certain Count Alexander Sforza-Pallavicini of
Piacenza set aside a sum of money to pay for crowns to be used for this
purpose. The first case was in 1631, when the chapter, on 27 August,
crowned a famous picture, "Santa Maria della febbre", in one of the
sacristies of St. Peter. The count paid the expenses. Soon after, at
his death, by his will (dated 3 July, 1636) he left considerable
property to the chapter with the condition that they should spend the
revenue on crowning famous pictures and statues of our Lady. They have
done so since. The procedure is that a bishop may apply to the chapter
to crown an image in his diocese. The canons consider his petition; if
they approve it they have a crown made and send one of their number to
carry out the ceremony. Sometimes the pope himself has crowned images
for the chapter. In 1815 Pius VII did so at Savona, and again in 1816
at Galloro near Castel Gandolfo. A list of images so crowned down to
1792 was published in that year at Rome (Raccolta delle immagini della
btma Vergine ornate della corona d'oro). The chapter has an "Ordo
servandus in tradendis coronis aureis quae donantur a Rmo Capitulo S.
Petri de Urbe sacris imaginibus B.M.V." -- apparently in manuscript
only. The rite is almost exactly that used by Gregory XVI in 1837.
THE PRINCIPLES OF IMAGE-WORSHIP
Lastly something must be
said about Catholic principles concerning the worship of sacred images.
The Latin Cultus sacrarum imaginum may quite well be translated (as it
always was in the past) "worship of holy images", and
"image-worshipper" is a convenient term for cultor imaginum --
eikonodoulos, as opposed to eikonoklastes (image-breaker). Worship by
no means implies only the supreme adoration that may be given only to
God. It is a general word denoting some more or less high degree of
reverence and honour, an acknowledgment of worth, like the German
Verehrung ("with my body I thee worship") in the marriage service;
English city companies are "worshipful", a magistrate is "Your
worship", and so on. We need not then hesitate to speak of our worship
of images; though no doubt we shall often be called upon to explain the
term.
We note in the first place
that the First Commandment (except inasmuch as it forbids adoration and
service of images) does not affect us at all. The Old Law -- including
the ten commandments -- as far as it only promulgates natural law is of
course eternal. No possible circumstances can ever abrogate, for
instance the Fifth, Sixth, and Seventh Commandments. On the other hand,
as far as it is positive law, it was once for all abrogated by the
promulgation of the Gospel (Romans 8:1-2; Galatians 3:23-5, etc.; Acts
15:28-9). Christians are not bound to circumcise, to abstain from
levitically unclean food and so on. The Third Commandment that ordered
the Jews to keep Saturday holy is a typical case of a positive law
abrogated and replaced by another by the Christian Church. So in the
First Commandment we must distinguish the clauses -- "Thou shalt not
have strange gods before me", "Thou shall not adore them nor serve
them" -- which are eternal natural law (prohibitum quia malum), from
the clause: "Thou shalt not make to thyself any graven image", etc. In
whatever sense the archaeologist may understand this, it is clearly not
natural law, nor can anyone prove the inherent wickedness of making a
graven thing; therefore it is Divine positive law (malum quia
prohibitum) of the Old Dispensation that no more applies to Christians
than the law of marrying one's brother's widow.
Since there is no Divine
positive law in the New Testament on the subject, Christians are bound
firstly by the natural law that forbids us to give to any creature the
honour due to God alone, and forbids the obvious absurdity of
addressing prayers or any sort of absolute worship to a manufactured
image; secondly, by whatever ecclesiastical laws may have been made on
this subject by the authority of the Church The situation was defined
quite clearly by the Second Council of Nicaea in 787. In its seventh
session the Fathers drew up the essential decision (horos) of the
synod. In this, after repeating the Nicene Creed and the condemnation
of former heretics, they come to the burning question of the treatment
of holy images. They speak of real adoration, supreme worship paid to a
being for its own sake only, acknowledgment of absolute dependence on
some one who can grant favours without reference to any one else. This
is what they mean by latreia and they declare emphatically that this
kind of worship must be given to God only. It is sheer idolatry to pay
latreia to any creature at all. In Latin, adoratio is generally (though
not always; see e.g. in the Vulgate, 2 Samuel 1:2, etc.) used in this
sense. Since the council especially there is a tendency to restrict it
to this sense only, so that adorare sanctos certainly now sounds
scandalous. So in English by adoration we now always understand the
latreia of the Fathers of the Second Nicaean Council. From this
adoration the council distinguishes respect and honourable reverence
(aspasmos kai timetike proskynesis) such as may be paid to any
venerable or great person-the emperor, patriarch, and so on. A fortiori
may and should such reverence be paid to the saints who reign with God.
The words proskynesis (as distinct from latreia) and douleia became the
technical ones for this inferior honour. Proskynesis (which oddly
enough means etymologically the same thing as adoratio -- ad + os,
kynein, to kiss) corresponds in Christian use to the Latin veneratio;
douleia would generally be translated cultus. In English we use
veneration, reverence, cult, worship for these ideas.
This reverence will be
expressed in signs determined by custom and etiquette. It must be noted
that all outward marks of respect are only arbitary signs, like words,
and that signs have no inherent necessary connotation. They mean what
it is agreed and understood that they shall mean. It is always
impossible to maintain that any sign or word must necessarily signify
some one idea. Like flags these things have come to mean what the
people who use them intend them to mean. Kneeling in itself means no
more than sitting. In regard then to genuflections, kisses, incense and
such signs paid to any object or person the only reasonable standard is
the understood intention of the people who use them. Their greater or
less abundance is a matter of etiquette that may well differ in
different countries. Kneeling especially by no means always connotes
supreme adoration. People for a long time knelt to kings. The Fathers
of Nicaea II further distinguish between absolute and relative worship.
Absolute worship is paid to any person for his own sake. Relative
worship is paid to a sign, not at all for its own sake, but for the
sake of the thing signified. The sign in itself is nothing, but it
shares the honour of its prototype. An insult to the sign (a flag or
statue) is an insult to the thing of which it is a sign; so also we
honour the prototype by honouring the sign. In this case all the
outward marks of reverence, visibly directed towards the sign, turn in
intention towards the real object of our reverence -- the thing
signified. The sign is only put UP as a visible direction for our
reverence, because the real thing is not physically present. Every
oneknows the use of such signs in ordinary life. People salute flags,
bow to empty thrones, uncover to statues and so on, nor does any one
think that this reverence is directed to coloured bunting or wood and
stone.
It is this relative worship
that is to be paid to the cross, images of Christ and the saints, while
the intention directs it all really to the persons these things
represent. The text then of the decision of the seventh session of
Nicaea II is: "We define (orizomen with all certainty and care that
both the figure of the sacred and lifegiving Cross, as also the
venerable and holy images, whether made in colours or mosaic or other
materials, are to be placed suitably in the holy churches of God, on
sacred vessels and vestments, on walls and pictures, in houses and by
roads; that is to say, the images of our Lord God and Saviour Jesus
Christ, of our immaculate Lady the holy Mother of God, of the
honourable angels and all saints and holy men. For as often as they are
seen in their pictorial representations, people who look at them are
ardently lifted up to the memory and love of the originals and induced
to give them respect and worshipful honour (aspasmon kai timetiken
proskynesin but not real adoration (alethinen latreian) which according
to our faith is due only to the Divine Nature. So that offerings of
incense and lights are to be given to these as to the figure of the
sacred and lifegiving Cross, to the holy Gospel-books and other sacred
objects in order to do them honour, as was the pious custom of ancient
times. For honour paid to an image passes on to its prototype; he who
worships (ho proskynon) an image worships the reality of him who is
painted in it" (Mansi, XIII, pp. 378-9; Harduin, IV, pp. 453-6).
That is still the
standpoint of the Catholic Church. The question was settled for us by
the Seventh Œcumenical Council; nothing has since been added to that
definition. The customs by which we show our "respect and worshipful
honour" for holy images naturally vary in different countries and at
different times. Only the authority of the Church has occasionally
stepped in, sometimes to prevent a spasmodic return to Iconoclasm, more
often to forbid excesses of such signs of reverence as would be
misunderstood and give scandal.
The Schoolmen discussed the
whole question at length. St. Thomas declares what idolatry is in the
"Summa Theologica", II-II:94, and explains the use of images in the
Catholic Church (II-II:94:2, ad 1Um). He distinguishes between latria
and dulia (II-II:103). The twenty-fifth session of the Council of Trent
(Dec., 1543) repeats faithfully the principles of Nicaea II:
[The holy Synod commands]
that images of Christ, the Virgin Mother of God, and other saints are
to be held and kept especially in churches, that due honour and
reverence (debitum honorem et venerationem) are to be paid to them, not
that any divinity or power is thought to be in them for the sake of
which they may be worshipped, or that anything can be asked of them, or
that any trust may be put in images, as was done by the heathen who put
their trust in their idols [Ps. cxxxiv, 15 sqq.], but because the
honour shown to them is referred to the prototypes which they
represent, so that by kissing, uncovering to, kneeling before images we
adore Christ and honour the saints whose likeness they bear (Denzinger,
no. 986).
As an example of
contemporary Catholic teaching on this subject one could hardly quote
anything better expressed than the "Catechism of Christian Doctrine"
used in England by command of the Catholic bishops. In four points,
this book sums up the whole Catholic position exactly:
* "It is forbidden to give divine honour or worship to the angels and saints for this belongs to God alone."
* "We should pay to the
angels and saints an inferior honour or worship, for this is due to
them as the servants and special friends of God."
* "We should give to
relics, crucifixes and holy pictures a relative honour, as they relate
to Christ and his saints and are memorials of them."
* "We do not pray to relics or images, for they can neither see nor hear nor help us."
Written by Adrian Fortescue. Transcribed by Tomas Hancil.
The Catholic Encyclopedia,
Volume VII. Published 1910. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Nihil
Obstat, June 1, 1910. Remy Lafort, S.T.D., Censor. Imprimatur. +John
Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York

Alleluia | Altars | Canon of the Mass
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