Verified Claim · Ecclesiology
The use and veneration of images of Christ, Mary, and the saints was not a pagan corruption of Christianity but an early and continuous Christian practice, defended against iconoclasm at the Second Council of Nicaea in AD 787.
The Protestant and iconoclast objection to sacred images is that they constitute idolatry. The early Church understood the second commandment differently, distinguishing between the worship (latria) due to God alone and the veneration (dulia) offered to images as an honour directed ultimately to the person depicted.
Archaeological evidence from the third century shows that Christians used sacred images from very early on. The full theological defence of images was articulated in response to the iconoclast heresy of the eighth century, culminating in the Second Council of Nicaea (787), which is accepted as the Seventh Ecumenical Council by both Catholics and Orthodox.
5 dateable primary sources spanning AD 200–787. Tap any dot to expand.
Before the Incarnation, God was invisible and could not be depicted without idolatry. After the Incarnation, God has a human face — the face of Jesus of Nazareth. To refuse to depict the face of Christ is to suggest that his humanity was somehow less real than other humans. Theodore of Studios made this argument at Nicaea II: iconoclasm is a form of Docetism, denying the reality of the Incarnation.
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