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Distinguishing between the "created" and the "Uncreated" and the Theology of the Icon Introduction to the works of Saint John of Damascus,
“To the vilifiers of holy icons, three
homilies”
By Michael Mavroforakis
Homily No.157 - Transcript of a radio broadcast by the Church of Piraeus – from the series of radio broadcasts titled “ Orthodoxy and Heresy”, by “Biblical B” and collaborators. |
Dear listeners, greetings!
In today’s program we will continue discussing the topic that we
began last time; and specifically, we shall examine the matter
regarding the holy Icons.
1. Introduction to the empirical Theology of the Icon
We have already mentioned in our previous broadcast that the guide
text we will be using and studying for this topic is “To the
vilifiers of the holy icons, three homilies by Saint John of
Damascus”.
Today we shall continue, by commenting on these texts as an opening,
but also on the clime as well as the prerequisites that existed for
this topic.
We noted in the previous broadcast that Orthodox Theology (as a
charismatic function of the Church) is first of all empirical and
realistic. And to use the term used by Saint Gregory Palamas (that
major Father and Theologian of our Church), “the function of the
Church is evidential”. That is, in Orthodoxy, “theology” is not
perceived as a philosophical contemplation or ideological forms or
personal subjective interpretations that originate from purely human
thoughts.
Orthodox Theology contains the concept of experience. It contains
the concept of “living the experience”, it contains the meaning of
“revelation” (that is, of the knowledge provided by the Creator
Himself, by God Himself).
Thus, Theology is evidential, because it is founded in Theognosy
(knowledge of God), which is nothing more than the sighting of
events, the experiencing of situations and Theopty (sighting of
God). And these are not
merely views and perceptions; they are the very experience of the
Church Herself, which is evident even in the very first writings of
the Ecclesiastic authors - including the Apostles of course. But it
is evident even later on, in the writings of Justin Martyr, Irenaios
and the others who directly interpreted a revelation by God as a
revealing of Divine Glory in dramatic events, through Theophanies
(manifestations of God). These Theophanies are a common experience
of all the Saints of the Church, whether we are referring to the era
of the Old Testament, or the era of the New Testament.
Therefore two basic consequences arise from the relation between the
Uncreated divine Energies and all the creatures (all of Creation).
The first is that Theognosy (Knowledge of God) as something
empirical or as “experience” takes place charismatically through the
prophets and the saints, either through a direct and immediate
sighting of the divine energies, or through events, with forms, with
symbols, with the mysteries (Sacraments) and with images within
natural and historical reality.
The second consequence is that this Theognosy, which leads to
salvation and to the perfection of all of creation – both the one we
can see with our physical eyes, but also the one that we can’t
perceive with our senses; that is, both the tangible as well as the
spiritually understood one, is not static or fossilized. It is not
simply an element of the past; it is in fact realized during a
dynamic and creative progression.
Theophanies (divine manifestations) comprise the central core of
History overall – the entire course of history of Israel. The
interpretation of Orthodox Theology is based precisely on these
Manifestations which take place within Creation at a historical
point in time.
Thus, the incarnation of the Logos was easily and naturally regarded
as an organic continuity of the history of the Theophanies of the
Old Testament.
Consequently, the partaking (methexis) in the Divine Glory - as this
Glory reveals itself - does not take place only with a direct
sighting of it, but also with the specific imprint of the Energies,
during in the natural and historical reality and in the activities
of worship and the Mysteries of the Church. That is because worship,
with its mysteries are actual Theophanies within tangible and
specific activities.
Besides, even those who in a direct manner see Divine Glory (that
is, the Prophets and the Saints), see images - as clearly mentioned
in Saint John of Damascus’ works, as we shall ascertain in the
forthcoming broadcasts. Likewise in the 7th Ecumenical
Synod, with its mention that “the prophets saw God in virtual
images”.
Thus, even centuries before the appearance of the Iconomachy and its
argument that visual representations were “idols”, John the
Evangelist had already written that “Isaiah had seen the Glory of
Christ”; in its fight against the Judaic and idolatrous concepts,
Orthodox Theology had interpreted God’s manifestations in the Old
Testament’s occurrences as “theophanies” (manifestations of God) or
“photophanies” (manifestations of the Light); as “Theopties”
(sightings of God) and experiences of very specific events – in
symbols, forms and types. Even the fleshless presence of the Logos
(the endemic Logos, as referred to by Saint Maximus the Confessor),
is historical and is portrayed in forms and in virtual
representations brightly illuminated. Consequently Orthodox Theology
as life and experience – but even as a scientific description of the
products of that experience - is linked to the vision and the sight
of a reality. And it is precisely within that cadre that iconography
is also placed.
2. Distinguishing between created and Uncreated in Orthodox
Theology
Let’s now proceed to clarify certain points that we mentioned above;
first and foremost, about the relation between the Uncreated Creator
and Creation.
This relation - between the Uncreated Creator God and all creations,
from the tiniest stone (we could say) to a spiritual angel, always
through the Uncreated Energies - imposes the ineffable union of the
physical and the metaphysical within Creation and History.
God alone is the absolute truth and benevolence. All of Creation,
all of created reality partakes of that truth and benevolence,
progressively. The truth is imprinted within this progressive
course, which is why there is an organic relation between the “form”
and the “truth”.
In Orthodox Theology the “form” is not a vacant thing. It is not
without contents – in any phase of the history of Divine Providence.
Nor is it a simple depiction, but is rather a precedent phase in
which the truth is dynamically realized – and always in relation to
whatever takes place in the future. All of History is continuous,
uniform and organic. Thus, the history of The Old Testament is the
“form” of the events of the New Testament, while the world of The
New Testament is the “form” of the future.
From the aforementioned, one can easily perceive that within all
creations, their created status and their relativity play a leading
role; things become upgraded between themselves as they interact.
For example, when comparing the soul to the body, the soul is
bodiless and immaterial. But
compared to God it is corporeal and material. The same applies for
an angel, as clearly stated by Saint John of Damascus in his
positions on the matter: Only God is actually immaterial, being the
“Uncreated” One.
As such, the basic distinction according to Orthodox Theology is not
between the tangible and the intelligible; the material and the
spiritual; the visible and the invisible; the body and the soul; but
between the created and the Uncreated. Only God is literally
immaterial and intelligible. All of Creation has the same created
essence, which is differentiated by degrees and receptivity.
Thus, for example, when
divine Energy is dominant - as a perfecting and deifying energy –
all beings are linked to it, according to their material, schematic,
virtual and intelligible dependencies. For example a stone becomes a
substance “in the image of”, whereas the creation that is “in the
image and in the likeness of God” does not only become a substance;
it also becomes perfected when deified, given that it possesses the
analogous receptivity.
This relation between energies and creations when judged and viewed
from a philosophical and scientific aspect introduces a truly
revolutionary world theory and a radical anthropology.
There are no idols any more; no “substances and archetypes”
that determine things and relations. There are only “activated
occurrences”. Not only is man unable to become acquainted with God’s
essence (because that is man’s borderline state, his limitation),
but also with the essence of His creations.
Thus, man’s relations are all
based on activated occurrences and events.
At any rate, we have already seen in previous broadcasts these
discernments between the state of being created (Creation) and the
Uncreated Creator, but also the borderline state of man and of
everything created that seeks to know the essence of the Uncreated
Creator, when examining Saint Basil the Great’s discourses against
the heretical Eunomios.
Creation overall, therefore, cannot be confused with the divine
essence, nor can any part of it be rendered a god, like an idol. It
merely partakes of the Divine Energies, according to its “being” and
its “well being”. It continuously becomes something, and that
something can lapse, given that nothing absolute exists. Only God is
absolute and indescribable. But an image describes the boundaries
and the progress of every created reality. The description and the
depiction of the fleshless and incarnated presence of the Logos
pertain to created beings and not to the Divine Nature. It is
through forms and images that “methexis” (partaking) takes place in
the uncreated Divine Energies and in the sighting of those Energies.
Therefore, meanings, forms and every kind of depiction are linked to
what Theology calls “prototypes”. That is exactly how every notion
of “idolatry” is dismantled, given that Creation (as mentioned
previously) has nothing absolute but on the contrary is
characterized by the aforementioned relativity of things.
Icons, therefore cannot constitute “idols” for Orthodox
Theology in any manner, because they too comprise part of Creation,
and everything created is at an infinite distance from the Uncreated
Creator.
Every kind of depiction of persons and events throughout the history
of Divine Providence preserves the memory of the Ecclesiastic
community. The community thus experiences History, as well as the
same truth and perpetually refers to that truth and to the
“methexis” of Divine Energies. Depictions
do not pertain to any idol, but to life, to the truth and to actual
achievements. That is
why the icon is linked to a lasting triumph within the bosom of
natural and of historical reality, as described in an excellent
manner by Saint John of Damascus in his discourses that we shall
examine further along.
3. The incompatibility between Neoplatonism and Orthodoxy
At this point we should note that Orthodox Theology of the icon is
intensely Anti-Manichaic. And this is evident in Saint John of
Damascus’ polemics, also in Saint Theodore the Studite’s, but is
also evident in the decisions of the 7th Ecumenical
Council. One can easily see that the arguments by the defenders of
holy icons have no essential dependence on Neoplatonic models.
Unfortunately however, the researchers who have paradoxically
accepted this dependence are not few. These researchers seem to be
misinterpreting the much discussed position of the Orthodox, on the
link between “the depiction and the original”. But this link – per
its content – in no way is regarded Neoplatonically.
The original and the “surmise” according to Neoplatonic is one
thing, and the “icon” of the Orthodox is another, with regard to the
Uncreated Divine Energies where we have the uniting of the physical
and the metaphysical in a reality that is continously changing.
The “surmises” according to Neoplatonic philosophy are simple
figures of unintelligent matter. They are stamps and imprints on
shapeless and disposable matter. But in Biblical and Orthodox
Theology there exists the world of the created in all its
gradations: material-bodily, intelligible-bodiless, which, in
relation with the energy nexus of the Uncreated Triadic God is
reformed, perfected and depicted, on this perfecting course.
The transition of the icon to the original that it portrays
signifies perfection and brightening on the one hand, and on the
other hand, an “expression” and a representation of this
transformational course. As such, it is impossible for one to detect
any Manichaic and Neoplatonic models.
4. The intertwining of created and Uncreated “in the light”
According to the Orthodox Theology, God is light, and everything
lives, moves, develops and becomes perfected in relation to their
receptivity, through illumination. This precise Theology is
persuasively and overwhelmingly expressed by Orthodox iconography;
thus, the study of Orthodox Theology is linked to the study of
iconography.
The innovative style of Byzantine painting, with its illumination of
faces and objects, highlights the unity and the fullness of every
reality. Everything exists and is elevated because it partakes of
the light directly, and itself becomes a luminous form. Matter and
light can be seen as functionally intertwined.
In Byzantine iconography one will not see shades in the colours, or
perspectives, or vagueness, and no intensity whatsoever between
light and dark. Light calmly illuminates the portrayed topic that
exists and is being elevated; in this instance, Orthodox
hagiographers who live the dogma in the life of the Church triumph
with the description of that which the intertwining of the physical
and the metaphysical. The
veneration of icons as an act of honouring the persons and the
salvific events depicted on them presupposes participation in the
corpus of Ecclesiastic life.
An icon displays the light and the illumination, thus exhorting us
towards the aforementioned participation. An icon is not only the
book of the illiterate, but also a grand reminder of the Theological
truth. That is precisely why the depiction of the persons, objects
and events cannot be a naturalistic one, nor outside of an
illuminated and transformed reality. Thus, the Theology of Byzantine
iconography is simultaneously the Theology of light. Signs of the
transformed reality are imprinted in the icon on the tangible forms,
given that there is nothing of Creation that is omitted from the
salvific and Divine Energies.
This is the truth expressed by Orthodox iconography and by extension
all of Byzantine art. Finally, all of Creation - according to the
gradation of its receptivity – preserved and transformed in this
relation between creation and Creator.
5. Theological extensions of Orthodox Theology on
created-Uncreated and imagery.
It is well known (but will become more apparent in our firthcimg
broadcasts also, where we will analytically examine the matter of
holy icons from within the discourses of Saint John of Damascus),
that Orthodox iconography is based on the Christological dogma.
But because it has repeatedly been emphasized by Saint John of
Damascus and the others that the Logos was incarnated, the depiction
of Christ and the Holy Trinity is absolutely legitimate, inasmuch as
the Logos is the One Who reveals the Trinity. Nevertheless, the
supporters of icons did not merely base themselves solely on the
incarnation, and of course the dogmatic Condition of the Council of
Chalcedon. Orthodox Theology developed Christology, by placing the
Theophanies of the Old Testament as its starting point.
The Logos indwells in the patriarchs, in Moses and in the prophets,
but fleshlessly. Thus, depiction is legitimate and possible, because
this kind of revelation - in forms, in types and in virtual
representations – applies to historical events. The fleshless and
the incarnated presence of the Logos is found in the same, uniform
temporal dimension.
The Christology of the Church was rejected from the very beginning
by the heretical Docetists of the 1st century, who were
confronted firstly by Saint John the Evangelist.
These Gnostics did not accept
any possibility of God having relations with matter, and had
accepted the incarnation as a “seeming” one, and how one “thinks it
is”. One such Docetist could never accept a depiction that refers to
a relationship of Creation with the uncreated Divine Energies and
also denotes the progressive transformation of created beings.
The heretics of the 5th century – on whose account the
dogmatic condition of Chalcedon was drafted - appear to initially
have overcome the Docetists’ difficulties, in that they do not
regard the incarnation as a seeming one. But, while they have kicked
out Docetism “through the door”, they have introduced it (or perhaps
because they cannot reject it) “through the window”.
They are now discussing “how” the incarnation took place or
“how” humankind and godhood were joined in the one hypostasis of the
Logos, and they end up in a camouflaged Docetism, and every
iconography of persons and salvific events is now problematic.
Nestorians and Monophysites remove nature, History and the flesh
from the history and the transforming grace of God.
The former (Nestorians) with
their theory regarding hypostases – or, more precisely, about “the
two sons” – the man Jesus and the Son Logos, who are joined with the
uniform bearer of willing accord, and not with the union of the two
natures in essence. And in that manner they guide the interpretation
of salvation precariously towards moralism.
The latter (Monophysites), by eliminating human nature can
effortlessly reject even the incarnation. And all this signifies
that Theology ceases to be theopty – the sighting of the Light – in
the specific relationship between created and Uncreated.
But Orthodox Theology is clear: patriarchs, prophets,
apostles, saints, friends of God – every one of them without
exception – savour the sight of God from within their gifted body.
This signifies the bonding of physical and metaphysical – historical
reality. It is within this
historical reality that theopty, savoring, experiencing, meanings,
symbols, forms, icons and activities take place. And it is within
this precise dimension that Orthodox iconography sprouts from.
Translation : E.M. |
Article published in English on: 23-6-2018.
Last update: 28-7-2023.