Orthodox Outlet for Dogmatic Enquiries | Digital Books |
CHAPTER 4
NECESSITY OF ICONOGRAPHY
Christians throughout the Roman Empire and well beyond its borders
reacted with shock and outrage at the Emperor's unprecedented move.
St. Germanos I resigned his position as Patriarch of Constantinople.
St. Gregory III, Pope of Rome at the time, held two synods in Rome
condemning Leo and his actions. In some parts of the Empire, there
were riots and even popular uprisings, often led by the monks, which
group unanimously opposed Leo's attempted “reforms” of the Christian
Faith. The ensuing chaos and Christian infighting continued for over
an hundred years. However, as interesting as the history of the
Byzantine iconoclast controversy is, it is not within our purview
here to examine the events in detail; that topic has been
excellently treated in very many other places.37 What matters to us
are the arguments that each side used to support their position;
many of these arguments are the same that today's iconoclasts
continue to use.
It is not precisely known what motivated Emperor Leo to begin
issuing his edicts against the Holy Icons. Some historians have
posited that the Emperor may have been influenced by Islam, a
strictly iconoclastic religion which was quickly rising in power and
which the Emperor had encountered firsthand during his battles with
the Islamic Ummayad Caliphate.38 Another likely motivating factor
was the Emperor's apparent search for reasons why God's wrath had
fallen upon the Empire in the form of Muslim victories and recent
natural disasters; images seemed to him an obvious answer.39
The
most obvious reason and the most widely cited by the iconoclasts
themselves, though, was a strict and literal interpretation of the
Second Commandment, which states (see Exodus
20:4-6 and Deuteronomy
5:8-10):
The strict and literal interpretation of these verses of Scripture
lays at the heart of and has been the key point in all movements of
Christian iconoclasm, including the the original iconoclasm of the
Byzantines, that of the Protestant Reformers, and that of modern
iconoclasts.
The immediate problem with such a strict and literal interpretation,
however, is that Scripture itself does not interpret this as a
prohibition of images in a strict and literal sense. Where the
Second Commandment occurs in the book of Exodus, for instance, God
says only a few chapters later (Exodus
26:1):
And in another verse previous to that, God even associates his own
presence with images (Exodus
25:22):
Clearly, Scripture can and does distinguish between an idol and an
icon, just as the early Christians and Jews we encountered earlier
did. Few, if any, Christians interpret the Sixth Commandment, which
forbids murder, so strictly.41 Nearly all Christians accept that
Scripture distinguishes here between murder and killing, forbidding
the former while allowing for the latter in some limited
circumstances; this is especially true in the light of later verses
in which God directly orders the killing of certain groups and
individuals.42
Why, then, if Protestants can allow for a distinction
here between murder and killing in the light of later verses, do
they refuse to allow for a distinction between idols and icons in
the Second Commandment in the light of later verses allowing for and
even ordering the production of religious images? This inconsistency
smacks of hypocrisy and is indicative of certain readers
interpreting their own presuppositions into the text rather than
allowing the text to speak for itself.
And the text of Scripture certainly does interpret itself on this
matter. Speaking to the people and repeating much of the Second
Commandment to them, the Prophet Moses explains why it is that they
are forbidden to make an image of God (Deuteronomy
4:11, 15-18):
According to the Prophet Moses, then, the reason that the Hebrews
were ordered not to make an image is because they saw no image. They
were unable to make an image of God because God was as yet unseen
and even unseeable, and therefore undepicted and undepictable.
However, approximately 2000 years ago, a remarkable event occurred
which changed all of this: the Incarnation; in the words of the Holy
Apostle John (Gospel of John
1:14):
God became man in the Person of Jesus Christ, born of the Virgin
Mary. And, in becoming man, he took on all the properties of
mankind, becoming like us in all things.43 Amongst the properties
common to humankind is to have form and to be depictable; Christ,
therefore, took upon himself the ability to be depicted in an image.
We are no longer in the situation of the Hebrews in the Book of
Deuteronomy who had only “heard the sound of the words, but saw no
form;” we have now “beheld His glory.”
The truth of the Incarnation is fatal to any attempt at Christian
iconoclasm and, necessarily, iconoclasts have traditionally, and
dangerously, downplayed or altogether ignored it and its
implications. The father of Protestant iconoclasm, John Calvin, for
instance, wrote against images as if he were totally unfamiliar with
the Incarnation of the Lord: Therefore it remains that only those things are to be sculptured or painted which the eyes are capable of seeing: let not God's majesty, which is far above the perception of the eyes, be debased through unseemly representations.44
St. John of Damascus (ca. 646-749), one of the most important
defenders of the Holy Icons during the Byzantine controversy, noted
this betrayal of the prime truth of Christianity amongst the
iconoclasts of his day and rightly declared:
One of the truly remarkable features of all iconoclastic movements,
no matter which location or century, is their inevitable lack of
emphasis on the Incarnation and resulting pseudo-Eutychian
Christology, often approaching very close to outright docetism.46 A
suitable example of this can be read in a short treatise forged by
the 8th century Byzantine iconoclasts in the name of the 4thcentury
Bishop and Church Father St. Epiphanius of Salamis:
The author here is apparently even aware of the Orthodox
counter-argument formulated by St. John of Damascus and yet, rather
than attempt to provide a decent answer to it, he simply ignores it
and repeats the same thing he had said previously but with different
phrasing, completely sidestepping the logical flaw in his own
argument. If the Word of God “became perfect man born from the
ever-virgin Mary” he took on all of the aspects of what it means to
be a man, as we discussed above. Men are comprehensible,
expressible, graspable by the mind, and circumscribable, therefore
the Word of God, in order to be perfect man, had taken on
comprehensibility, expressibility, graspability, and
circumscribability. If he did not, then he did not become perfect
man, which conclusion places us firmly in the camp of the docetists.
An argument to the same end which the Orthodox theologians and
Church Fathers who fought against the Byzantine iconoclasts did not
have at hand is the question of whether a photograph of Christ would
have been permissible had the technology existed during his earthly
sojourn. If not, the iconoclast must answer the question of “why?”
Would it have been physically possible? If not, then Christ must not
have been fully human, therefore not perfect man. Would it have been
permissible by the laws of God? If not, then different rules must
apply to Christ's humanity than apply to ours, making his humanity
unlike our own instead of “like [us] in every way,”43
and so not real
humanity at all.
Each time without exception that iconoclasm has cropped up within
Christendom, its followers have found themselves dangerously close
to denying or at least minimizing the most central truth claim of
Christianity, the Incarnation, and, resultantly, placing themselves
within or startlingly close to the realm of docetism. The Holy Icons
are a necessary safeguard of the most central doctrines of
Christianity and to deny them causes a subtle but monumental
alteration in Christology and theology as a natural implication. In
the words of one historian, Richard Chenevix Trench, himself in fact
a Protestant clergyman (Anglican, to be specific), commenting on the
end of the Byzantine iconoclast controversy: Had the Iconoclasts triumphed, when their work showed itself at last in its true colours, it would have proved to be the triumph, not of faith in an invisible God, but of frivolous unbelief in an incarnate Saviour.48
The Kontakion49 for the Feast of the Triumph of Orthodoxy
(celebrated on the first Sunday of Lent), the commemoration of the
restoration of the Holy Icons to the churches following the
conclusion of the Byzantine iconoclast controversy, succinctly
summarizes the Orthodox argument against the docetism of the
iconoclasts:
No one could describe the Word of the Father;
Notes
35 Until fairly recently, it has been a common supposition that St.
Epiphanius of Salamis (ca. AD 310-403) and Eusebius of Caesarea (ca.
AD 263-339) were, in some sense, “proto-iconoclasts.” This thesis,
though, has been sufficiently addressed and dismissed by Bigham,
Steven. Epiphanius of Salamis, Doctor of Iconoclasm?: Deconstruction
of a Myth. Rollinsford, N.H.: Orthodox Research Institute, 2008.
However, even if we permit two dissenting voices, which we
nonetheless do not, the honest response is that it doesn't matter.
In the famous words of Aristotle (Nicomacaean Ethics, Book 1,
Chapter 7), “one swallow does not make a summer.” The point is that
even if there were several dissenting voices in the early Church,
which we have yet to discover, their trickle of difference is
drowned out by the roaring river of the rest of Christendom. They
are also unimportant in having had no large or lasting effect;
either they were ignored entirely or, more likely, they didn't
exist.
36 Treadgold, Warren T. A History of the Byzantine State and
Society. Stanford, Calif.: Stanford Univ., 2000.
37 For a concise but informative history, see chapter 9,
“Iconoclasm,” in Norwich, John Julius. A Short History of Byzantium.
New York: Knopf, 1997.
38 Von Grunebaum, G.E. "Byzantine Iconoclasm and the Influence of
the Islamic Environment." History of Religions 2.1 (1962): pp. 1-10.
39 See the Chronicle of St. Theophanes the Confessor, in English
translation: Turtledove, Harry (tr.). The Chronicle of Theophanes:
an English Translation of Anni Mundi 6095-6305 (A.D. 602-813).
Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania, 1982.
40 All quotations of Scripture contained in this essay are taken
from the New King James Version (NKJV).
41 According to Exodus
20:13 and Deuteronomy
5:17, “You shall not murder.” This Commandment is
traditionally number as the Sixth in the Decalogue (or Ten
Commandments) by Orthodox Christians, Jews, and most Protestants,
while Roman Catholics and Lutherans number it as the Fifth
Commandment.
42 See, for instance, 1
Samuel 15:2-3.
43 Hebrews 2:17
44 Institutes 1.11.12
45 St. John of Damascus, Apology Against Those Who Decry the Holy
Images, Part I.
46 Eutyches (ca. AD 380-456), the founder of the heresy known as
Monophysitism (mono [one] + physis [nature] = one nature [of
Christ]). He posited that Christ's human nature had been “swallowed
up like a drop of honey in the sea” of his divine nature, thereby
denying the full humanity of Christ. Eutyches' flawed Christology
was condemned by the Fourth Ecumenical Council at Chalcedon in AD
451. Docetism is a very early Christian heresy (late 1st/early
2ndcentury) which posited that Christ only appeared to be human but
was not so in reality, being instead totally divine. Docetism was
condemned by the early Christians even in the New Testament (see,
for instance, 2
John 1:7).
47 For the full text of the iconoclastic treatise falsely attributed
to St. Epiphanius as well as a cogent argument as to why this
attribution can safely be ruled as false, see Bigham, Steven. Epiphanius
of Salamis, Doctor of Iconoclasm?: Deconstruction of a Myth.
Rollinsford, N.H.: Orthodox Research Institute, 2008.
48 (Trench. Mediaeval History, Chap. vii.) “The Seven Ecumenical
Councils of the Undivided Church,” trans H. R. Percival,
in NPNF2, ed. P. Schaff and H. Wace, (repr. Grand Rapids MI: Wm. B.
Eerdmans, 1955), XIV, p. 575, cf. 547f.
49 A specific type of hymn used in the Orthodox Church to
commemorate a Saint or feast.
50 "OCA - Troparion
and Kontakion." The Orthodox Church in America .
|
Article posted in English on: 21-1-2015.
Last Update: 21-1-2015.