APOLOGIA OF ST JOHN
DAMASCENE AGAINST
THOSE WHO DECRY HOLY IMAGES.

PART I
With the ever-present conviction of my own unworthiness,
I ought to have kept silence and confessed my
shortcomings before God, but all things are good at the
right time. I see the Church which God founded on the
Apostles and Prophets, its corner-stone being Christ His
Son, tossed on an angry sea, beaten by rushing waves,
shaken and troubled by the assaults of evil spirits. I
see rents in the seamless robe of Christ, which impious
men have sought to part asunder, and His body cut into
pieces, that is, the word of God and the ancient
tradition of the Church. Therefore I have judged it
unreasonable to keep silence and to hold my tongue,
bearing in mind the Scripture warning:--"If thou
withdrawest thyself, my soul shall not delight in thee,"
(Heb. 10.38) and "If thou seest [2] the sword coming and
dost not warn thy brother, I shall require his blood at
thy hand." (cf. Ez. 33.8) Fear, then, compelled me to
speak; the truth was stronger than the majesty of kings.
"I bore testimony to Thee before kings," I heard the
royal* David saying, "and I was not ashamed." (Ps.
119.46) No, I was the more incited to speak. The King's
command is all powerful over his subjects. For few men
have hitherto been found who, whilst recognising the
power of the earthly king to come from above, have
resisted his unlawful demands.
In the first place, grasping as a kind of pillar, or
foundation, the teaching of the Church, which is our
salvation, I have opened out its meaning, giving, as it
were, the reins to a well caparisoned charger.† For I
look upon it as a great calamity that the Church, adorned
with her great privileges and the holiest examples of
saints in the past, should go back to the first
rudiments, and fear where there is no fear. It is
disastrous to suppose that the Church does not know God
as He is, that she degenerates into idolatry, for if she
declines from perfection [3] in a single iota, it is as
an enduring mark on a comely face, destroying by its
unsightliness the beauty of the whole. A small thing is
not small when it leads to something great, nor indeed is
it a thing of no matter to give up the ancient tradition
of the Church held by our forefathers, whose conduct we
should observe, and whose faith we should imitate.
In the first place, then, before speaking to you, I
beseech Almighty God, to whom all things lie open, who
knows my small capacity and my genuine intention, to
bless the words of my mouth, and to enable me to bridle
my mind and direct it to Him, to walk in His presence
straightly, not declining to a plausible right hand, nor
knowing the left. Then I ask all God's people, the chosen
ones of His royal priesthood, with the holy shepherd of
Christ's orthodox flock, who represents in his own person
Christ's priesthood, to receive my treatise with
kindness. They must not dwell on my unworthiness, nor
seek for eloquence, for I am only too conscious of my
shortcomings. They must consider the thoughts themselves.
The kingdom of heaven is not in word but in deed.
Conquest is not my object. I [4] raise a hand which is
fighting for the truth--a willing hand under the divine
guidance. Relying, then, upon substantial truth as my
auxiliary, I will enter on my subject matter.
I have taken heed to the words of Truth Himself:- "The
Lord thy God is one." (Deut. 6.4) And "Thou shalt fear
the Lord thy God, and shalt serve Him only, and thou
shalt not have strange, gods." (Deut. 6.13) Again, "Thou
shalt not make to thyself a graven thing, nor the
likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or in the
earth beneath" (Ex. 20.4); and "Let them be all
confounded that adore graven things." (Ps. 97.7) Again,
"The gods that have not made heaven and earth, let them
perish." (Jer. 10.11) In this way God spoke of old to the
patriarchs through the prophets, and lastly, through His
only-begotten Son, on whose account He made the ages. He
says, "This is eternal life, that they may know Thee, the
only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou didst send."
(Jn 17.3) I believe in one God, the source of all things,
without beginning, uncreated, immortal, everlasting,
incomprehensible, bodiless, invisible, uncircumscribed,*
without form. I believe in one supersubstantial [5]
being, one divine Godhead in three entities, the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Ghost, and I adore Him alone with
the worship of latreia. I adore one God, one Godhead but
three Persons, God the Father, God the Son made flesh,
and God the Holy Ghost, one God. I do not adore creation
more than the Creator, but I adore the creature created
as I am, adopting creation freely and spontaneously that
He might elevate our nature and make us partakers of His
divine nature. Together with my Lord and King I worship
Him clothed in the flesh, not as if it were a garment or
He constituted a fourth person of the Trinity--God
forbid. That flesh is divine, and endures after its
assumption. Human nature was not lost in the Godhead, but
just as the Word made flesh remained the Word, so flesh
became the Word remaining flesh, becoming, rather, one
with the Word through union (kaq upostasin). Therefore I
venture to draw an image of the invisible God, not as
invisible, but as having become visible for our sakes
through flesh and blood. I do not draw an image of the
immortal Godhead. I paint the visible flesh of God, for
it is impossible to represent [6] a spirit (yuch), how
much more God who gives breath to the spirit.
Now adversaries say: God's commands to Moses the
law-giver were, "Thou shalt adore shalt worship him the
Lord thy God, and thou alone, and thou shalt not make to
thyself a graven thing that is in heaven above, or in the
earth beneath."
They err truly, not knowing the Scriptures, for the
letter kills whilst the spirit quickens--not finding in
the letter the hidden meaning. I could say to these
people, with justice, He who taught you this would teach
you the following. Listen to the law-giver's
interpretation in Deuteronomy: "And the Lord spoke to you
from the midst of the fire. You heard the voice of His
words, but you saw not any form at all." (Deut. 4.12) And
shortly afterwards: "Keep your souls carefully. You saw
not any similitude in the day that the Lord God spoke to
you in Horeb from the midst of the fire, lest perhaps
being deceived you might make you a graven similitude, or
image of male and female, the similitude of any beasts
that are upon the earth, or of birds that fly under
heaven." (Deut. 4.15-17) And again, "Lest, perhaps,
lifting up thy eyes to [7] heaven, thou see the sun and
the moon, and all the stars of heaven, and being deceived
by error thou adore and serve them." (Deut. 4.19)
You see the one thing to be aimed at is not to adore a
created thing more than the Creator, nor to give the
worship of latreia except to Him alone. By worship,
consequently, He always understands the worship of
latreia. For, again, He says: "Thou shalt not have
strange gods other than Me. Thou shalt not make to
thyself a graven thing, nor any similitude. Thou shalt
not adore them, and thou shalt not serve them, for I am
the Lord thy God." (Deut. 5.7-9) And again, "Overthrow
their altars, and break down their statues; burn their
groves with fire, and break their idols in pieces. For
thou shalt not adore a strange god." (Deut. 12.3) And a
little further on: "Thou shalt not make to thyself gods
of metal." (Ex. 34.17)
You see that He forbids image-making on account of
idolatry, and that it is impossible to make an image of
the immeasurable, uncircumscribed, invisible God. You
have not seen the likeness of Him, the Scripture says,
and this was St Paul's testimony as he stood in the midst
of the Areopagus: "Being, therefore, [8] the offspring of
God, we must not suppose the divinity to be like unto
gold, or silver, or stone, the graving of art, and device
of man." (Acts 17.29)
These injunctions were given to the Jews on account of
their proneness to idolatry. Now we, on the contrary, are
no longer in leading strings. Speaking theologically, it
is given to us to avoid superstitious error, to be with
God in the knowledge of the truth, to worship God alone,
to enjoy the fulness of His knowledge. We have passed the
stage of infancy, and reached the perfection of manhood.
We receive our habit of mind from God, and know what may
be imaged and what may not. The Scripture says, "You have
not seen the likeness of Him." (Ex. 33.20) What wisdom in
the law-giver. How depict the invisible? How picture the
inconceivable? How give expression to the limitless, the
immeasurable, the invisible? How give a form to
immensity? How paint immortality? How localise mystery?
It is clear that when you contemplate God, who is a pure
spirit, becoming man for your sake, you will be able to
clothe Him with the human form. When the Invisible One
becomes visible to flesh, you may then draw a likeness of
His [9] form. When He who is a pure spirit, without form
or limit, immeasurable in the boundlessness of His own
nature, existing as God, takes upon Himself the form of a
servant in substance and in stature, and a body of flesh,
then you may draw His likeness, and show it to anyone
willing to contemplate it. Depict His ineffable
condescension, His virginal birth, His baptism in the
Jordan, His transfiguration on Thabor, His all-powerful
sufferings, His death and miracles, the proofs of His
Godhead, the deeds which He worked in the flesh through
divine power, His saving Cross, His Sepulchre, and
resurrection, and ascent into heaven. Give to it all the
endurance of engraving and colour. Have no fear or
anxiety; worship is not all of the same kind. Abraham
worshipped the sons of Emmor, impious men in ignorance of
God, when he bought the double cave for a tomb. (Gen.
23.7; Acts 7.16) Jacob worshipped his brother Esau and
Pharao, the Egyptian, but on the point of his staff.*
(Gen 33.3) He worshipped, he did not adore. Josue and
Daniel worshipped an angel of God; (Jos. 5.14) they did
not adore him. The worship of latreia is one thing, and
the worship which is given to merit [10] another. Now, as
we are talking of images and worship, let us analyse the
exact meaning of each. An image is a likeness of the
original with a certain difference, for it is not an
exact reproduction of the original. Thus, the Son is the
living, substantial, unchangeable Image of the invisible
God (Col. 1.15), bearing in Himself the whole Father,
being in all things equal to Him, differing only in being
begotten by the Father, who is the Begetter; the Son is
begotten. The Father does not proceed from the Son, but
the Son from the Father. It is through the Son, though
not after Him, that He is what He is, the Father who
generates. In God, too, there are representations and
images of His future acts,-that is to say, His counsel
from all eternity, which is ever unchangeable. That which
is divine is immutable; there is no change in Him, nor
shadow of change. (James 1.17) Blessed Denis, (the
Carthusian [i.e., Pseudo-Dionysius]) who has made divine
things in God's presence his study, says that these
representations and images are marked out beforehand. In
His counsels, God has noted and settled all that He would
do, the unchanging future events before they came to
pass. In the same way, a man who wished to [11] build a
house would first make and think out a plan. Again,
visible things are images of invisible and intangible
things, on which they throw a faint light. Holy Scripture
clothes in figure God and the angels, and the same holy
man (Blessed Denis) explains why. When sensible things
sufficiently render what is beyond sense, and give a form
to what is intangible, a medium would be reckoned
imperfect according to our standard, if it did not fully
represent material vision, or if it required effort of
mind. If, therefore, Holy Scripture, providing for our
need, ever putting before us what is intangible, clothes
it in flesh, does it not make an image of what is thus
invested with our nature, and brought to the level of our
desires, yet invisible? A certain conception through the
senses thus takes place in the brain, which was not there
before, and is transmitted to the judicial faculty, and
added to the mental store. Gregory, who is so eloquent
about God, says that the mind, which is set upon getting
beyond corporeal things, is incapable of doing it. For
the invisible things of God since the creation of the
world are made visible through images. (Rom. 1.20) We see
images in [12] creation which remind us faintly of God,
as when, for instance, we speak of the holy and adorable
Trinity, imaged by the sun, or light, or burning rays, or
by a running fountain, or a full river, or by the mind,
speech, or the spirit within us, or by a rose tree, or a
sprouting flower, or a sweet fragrance.
Again, an image is expressive of something in the future,
mystically shadowing forth what is to happen. For
instance, the ark represents the image of Our Lady,
Mother of God,* so does the staff and the earthen jar.
The serpent brings before us Him who vanquished on the
Cross the bite of the original serpent; the sea, water,
and the cloud the grace of baptism. (I Cor. 10.1)
Again, things which have taken place are expressed by
images for the remembrance either of a wonder, or an
honour, or dishonour, or good or evil, to help those who
look upon it in after times that we may avoid evils and
imitate goodness. It is of two kinds, the written image
in books, as when God had the law inscribed on tablets,
and when He enjoined that the lives of holy men should be
recorded and sensible memorials be preserved in [13]
remembrance; as, for instance, the earthen jar and the
staff in the ark. (Ex. 34.28; Heb. 9.4) So now we
preserve in writing the images and the good deeds of the
past. Either, therefore, take away images altogether and
be out of harmony with God, who made these regulations,
or receive them with the language and in the manner which
befits them. In speaking of the manner let us go into the
question of worship.
Worship is the symbol of veneration and of honour. Let us
understand that there are different degrees of worship.
First of all the worship of latreia, which we show to
God, who alone by nature is worthy of worship. When, for
the sake of God who is worshipful by nature, we honour
His saints and servants, as Josue and Daniel worshipped
an angel, and David His holy places, when be says, "Let
us go to the place where His feet have stood." (Ps.
132.7) Again, in His tabernacles, as when all the people
of Israel adored in the tent, and standing round the
temple in Jerusalem, fixing their gaze upon it from all
sides, and worshipping from that day to this, or in the
rulers established by Him, as Jacob rendered homage to
Esau, his elder brother, (Gen. 33.3) and to Pharaoh, the
[14] divinely established ruler. (Gen. 47.7) Joseph was
worshipped by his brothers. (Gen. 50.18) I am aware that
worship was based on honour, as in the case of Abraham
and the sons of Emmor. (Gen. 23.7) Either, then, do away
with worship, or receive it altogether according to its
proper measure.
Answer me this question. Is there only one God? You
answer, "Yes, there is only one Law-giver." Why, then,
does He command contrary things? The cherubim are not
outside of creation; why, then, does He allow cherubim
carved by the hand of man to overshadow the mercy-scat?
Is it not evident that as it is impossible to make an
image of God, who is uncircumscribed and impassible, or
of one like to God, creation should not be worshipped as
God. He allows the image of the cherubim who are
circumscribed, and prostrate in adoration before the
divine throne, to be made, and thus prostrate to
overshadow the mercy-seat. It was fitting that the image
of the heavenly choirs should overshadow the divine
mysteries. Would you say that the ark and staff and
mercy-seat were not made? Are [15] they not produced by
the hand of man? Are they not due to what you call
contemptible matter? What was the tabernacle itself? Was
it not an image? Was it not a type and a figure? Hence
the holy Apostle's words concerning the observances of
the law, "Who serve unto the example and shadow, of
heavenly things." As it was answered to Moses, when he
was to finish the tabernacle: "See" (He says), "that thou
make all things according to the pattern which was shown
thee on the Mount." (Heb. 8.5; Ex. 25.40) But the law was
not an image. It shrouded the image. In the words of the
same Apostle, "the law contains the shadow of the goods
to come, not the image of those things." (Heb. 10.1) For
if the law should forbid images, and yet be itself a
forerunner of images, what should we say? If the
tabernacle was a figure, and the type of a type, why does
the law not prohibit image-making? But this is not in the
least the case. There is a time for everything. (Eccl.
3.1)
Of old, God the incorporeal and uncircumscribed was never
depicted. Now, however, when God is seen clothed in
flesh, and conversing with men, (Bar. 3.38) I make an
image of the God whom I see. I do not worship matter, I
[16] worship the God of matter, who became matter for my
sake, and deigned to inhabit matter, who worked out my
salvation through matter. I will not cease from honouring
that matter which works my salvation. I venerate it,
though not as God. How could God be born out of lifeless
things? And if God's body is God by union (kaq
upostasin), it is immutable. The nature of God remains
the same as before, the flesh created in time is
quickened by a logical and reasoning soul. I honour all
matter besides, and venerate it. Through it, filled, as
it were, with a divine power and grace, my salvation has
come to me. Was not the thrice happy and thrice blessed
wood of the Cross matter? Was not the sacred and holy
mountain of Calvary matter? What of the life-giving rock,
the Holy Sepulchre, the source of our resurrection: was
it not matter? Is not the most holy book of the Gospels
matter? Is not the blessed table matter which gives us
the Bread of Life? Are not the gold and silver matter,
out of which crosses and altar-plate and chalices are
made? And before all these things, is not the body and
blood of our Lord matter? Either do away with the
veneration [17] and worship due to all these things, or
submit to the tradition of the Church in the worship of
images, honouring God and His friends, and following in
this the grace of the Holy Spirit. Do not despise matter,
for it is not despicable. Nothing is that which God has
made. This is the Manichean heresy. That alone is
despicable which does not come from God, but is our own
invention, the spontaneous choice of will to disregard
the natural law,--that is to say, sin. If, therefore, you
dishonour and give up images, because they are produced
by matter, consider what the Scripture says: And the Lord
spoke to Moses, saying, "Behold I have called by name
Beseleel, the son of Uri, the son of Hur, of the tribe of
Juda. And I have filled him with the spirit of God, with
wisdom and understanding, and knowledge in all manner of
work. To devise whatsoever may be artificially made of
gold, and silver, and brass, of marble and precious
stones, and variety of wood. And I have given him for his
companion, Ooliab, the son of Achisamech, of the tribe of
Dan. And I have put wisdom in the heart of every skilful
man, that they may make all things which I have commanded
thee." (Ex. 31.1-6) [18] And again: "Moses said to all
the assembly of the children of Israel: This is the word
the Lord hath commanded, saying: Set aside with you first
fruits to the Lord. Let every one that is willing and
hath a ready heart, offer them to the Lord, gold, and
silver, and brass, violet, and purple, and scarlet twice
dyed, and fine linen, goat's hair, and ram's skins died
red and violet, coloured skins, selim-wood, and oil to
maintain lights and to make ointment, and most sweet
incense, onyx stones, and precious stones for the
adorning of the ephod and the rational. Whosoever of you
is wise, let him come, and make that which the Lord hath
commanded." (Ex. 35.4-10) See you here the glorification
of matter which you make inglorious. What is more
insignificant than goat's hair or colours? Are not
scarlet and purple and hyacinth colours? Now, consider
the handiwork of man becoming the likeness of the
cherubim. How, then, can you make the law a pretence for
giving up what it orders? If you invoke it against
images, you should keep the Sabbath, and practise
circumcision. It is certain that "if you observe the law,
Christ will not profit you. You who are justified in the
law, you [19] are fallen from grace." (Gal. 5.2-4) Israel
of old did not see God, but "we see the Lord's glory face
to face." (IICor. 3.18)
We proclaim Him also by our senses on all sides, and we
sanctify the noblest sense, which is that of sight. The
image is a memorial, just what words are to a listening
ear. What a book is to the literate, that an image is to
the illiterate. The image speaks to the sight as words to
the ear; it brings us understanding. Hence God ordered
the ark to be made of imperishable wood, and to be gilded
outside and in, and the tablets to be put in it, and the
staff and the golden urn containing the manna, for a
remembrance of the past and a type of the future. Who can
say these were not images and far-sounding heralds? And
they did not hang on the walls of the tabernacle; but in
sight of all the people who looked towards them, they
were brought forward for the worship and adoration of
God, who made use of them. It is evident that they were
not worshipped for themselves, but that the people were
led through them to remember past signs, and to worship
the God of wonders. They were images to serve as
recollections, not divine, but leading to divine things
by divine power.
[20] And God ordered twelve stones to be taken out of the
Jordan, and specified why. For he says: "When your son
asks you the meaning of these stones, tell him how the
water left the Jordan by the divine command, and how the
ark was saved and the whole people." (Jos. 4.21-22) How,
then, shall we not record on image the saving pains and
wonders of Christ our Lord, so that when my child asks
me, "What is this?" I may say, that God the Word became
man, and that for His sake not Israel alone passed
through the Jordan, but all the human race gained their
original happiness. Through Him human nature rose from
the lowest depths of the earth higher than the skies, and
in His Person sat down on the throne His Father had
prepared for Him.
But the adversary says: "Make an image of Christ or of
His mother who bore Him (thV qeotokou) and let that be
sufficient." O what folly this is! On your own showing,
you are absolutely against the saints. For if you make an
image of Christ and not of the saints, it is evident that
you do not disown images, but the honour of the saints.
You make statues indeed of Christ as of one glorified,
whilst you [21] reject the saints as unworthy of honour,
and call truth a falsehood. "I live," says the Lord, "and
I will glorify those who glorify Me." (I Sam. 2.30) And
the divine Apostle: therefore now he is not a servant,
but a son. "And if a son, an heir also through God."
(Gal. 4.7) Again, "If we suffer with Him, that we also
may be glorified:" (Rom. 8.17) you are not waging war
against images, but against the saints. St John, who
rested on His breast, says, that "we shall be like to
Him" (I Jn. 3.2): just as a man by contact with fire
becomes fire, not by nature, but by contact and by
burning and by participation, so is it, I apprehend, with
the flesh of the Crucified Son of God. That flesh, by
participation through union (kaq upostasin) with the
divine nature, was unchangeably God, not in virtue of
grace from God as was the case with each of the prophets,
but by the presence of the Fountain Head Himself. God,
the Scripture says, stood in the synagogue of the gods,
(Ps. 82.1) so that the saints, too, are gods. Holy
Gregory takes the words, "God stands in the midst of the
gods," to mean that He discriminates their several
merits. The saints in their lifetime were filled with the
Holy Spirit, and when they are [22] no more, His grace
abides with their spirits and with their bodies in their
tombs, and also with their likenesses and holy images,
not by nature, but by grace and divine power.
God charged David to build Him a temple through his son,
and to prepare a place of rest. Solomon, in building the
temple, made the cherubim, as the book of Kings says. And
he encompassed the cherubim with gold, and all the walls
in a circle, and he had the cherubim carved, and palms
inside and out, in a circle, not from the sides, be it
observed. And there were bulls and lions and
pomegranates. (I Kgs. 6.28-29) Is it not more seemly to
decorate all the walls of the Lord's house with holy
forms and images rather than with beasts and plants?
Where is the law declaring "thou shalt not make any
graven image"? But Solomon receiving the gift of wisdom,
imaging heaven, made the cherubim, and the likenesses of
bulls and lions, which the law forbade. Now if we make a
statue of Christ, and likenesses of the saints, does not
their being filled with the Holy Ghost increase the piety
of our homage? As then the people and the temple were
purified in blood and in burnt offerings, (Heb. 9.13) so
now the Blood [23] of Christ giving testimony under
Pontius Pilate, (I Tim. 6.13) and being Himself the first
fruits of the martyrs, the Church is built up on the
blood of the saints. Then the signs and forms of lifeless
animals figured forth the human tabernacle, the martyrs
themselves whom they were preparing for God's abode.
We depict Christ as our King and Lord, and do not deprive
Him of His army. The saints constitute the Lord's army.
Let the earthly king dismiss his army before he gives up
his King and Lord. Let him put off the purple before he
takes honour away from his most valiant men who have
conquered their passions. For if the saints are heirs of
God, and co-heirs of Christ, (Rom. 8.17) they will be
also partakers of the divine glory of sovereignty. If the
friends of God have had a part in the sufferings of
Christ, how shall they not receive a share of His glory
even on earth? "I call you not servants," our Lord says,
"you are my friends." (Jn. 15.15) Should we then deprive
them of the honour given to them by the Church? What
audacity! What boldness of mind, to fight God and His
commands! You, who refuse to worship images, would not
worship the Son of [24] God, the Living Image of the
invisible God, (Col. 1.15) and His unchanging form. I
worship the image of Christ as the Incarnate God; that of
Our Lady (thV qeotokou), the Mother of us all, as the
Mother of God's Son; that of the saints as the friends of
God. They have withstood sin unto blood, and followed
Christ in shedding their blood for Him, who shed His
blood for them. I put on record the excellencies and the
sufferings of those who have walked in His footsteps,
that I may sanctify myself, and be fired with the zeal of
imitation. St Basil says, "Honouring the image leads to
the prototype." If you raise churches to the saints of
God, raise also their trophies. The temple of old was not
built in the name of any man. The death of the just was a
cause of tears, not of feasting. A man who touched a
corpse was considered unclean, (Num. 19.11) even if the
corpse was Moses himself. But now the memories of the
saints are kept with rejoicings. The dead body of Jacob
was wept over, whilst there is joy over the death of
Stephen. Therefore, either give up the solemn
commemorations of the saints, which are not according to
the old law, or accept images which are [25] also against
it, as you say. But it is impossible not to keep with
rejoicing the memories of the saints. The Holy Apostles
and Fathers are at one in enjoining them. From the time
that God the Word became flesh He is as we are in
everything except sin, and of our nature, without
confusion. He has deified our flesh for ever, and we are
in very deed sanctified through His Godhead and the union
of His flesh with it. And from the time that God, the Son
of God, impassible by reason of His Godhead, chose to
suffer voluntarily He wiped out our debt, also paying for
us a most full and noble ransom. We are truly free
through the sacred blood of the Son pleading for us with
the Father. And we are indeed delivered from corruption
since He descended into hell to the souls detained there
through centuries (I Pet. 3.19) and gave the captives
their freedom, sight to the blind, (Mt. 12.29) and
chaining the strong one.* He rose in the plenitude of His
power, keeping the flesh of immortality which He had
taken for us. And since we have been born again of water
and the Spirit, we are truly sons and heirs of God. Hence
St Paul calls the faithful [26] holy; (I Cor. 1.2) hence
we do not grieve but rejoice over the death of the
saints. We are then no longer under grace, (Rom. 6.14)
being justified through faith, (Rom. 5.1) and knowing the
one true God. The just man is not bound by the law. (I.
Tim. 1.9) We are not held by the letter of the law, nor
do we serve as children, (Gal. 4.1) but grown into the
perfect estate of man we are fed on solid food, not on
that which conduces to idolatry. The law is good as a
light shining in a dark place until the day breaks. Your
hearts have already been illuminated, the living water of
God's knowledge has run over the tempestuous seas of
heathendom, and we may all know God. The old creation has
passed away, and all things are renovated. The holy
Apostle Paul said to St Peter, the chief of the
Apostles:* "If you, being a Jew, live as a heathen and
not a Jew, how will you persuade heathens to do as Jews
do?" (Gal. 2.14) And to the Galatians: "I will bear
witness to every circumcised man that it is salutary to
fulfil the whole law." (Gal. 5.3)
Of old they who did not know God, worshipped false gods.
But now, knowing God, or rather being known by Him, how
can we [27] return to bare and naked rudiments? (Gal.
4.8-9) I have looked upon the human form of God, and my
soul has been saved. I gaze upon the image of God, as
Jacob did, (Gen. 32.30) though in a different way. Jacob
sounded the note of the future, seeing with immaterial
sight, whilst the image of Him who is visible to flesh is
burnt into my soul. The shadow and winding sheet and
relics of the apostles cured sickness, and put demons to
flight. (Acts 5.15) How, then, shall not the shadow and
the statues of the saints be glorified? Either do away
with the worship of all matter, or be not an innovator.
Do not disturb the boundaries of centuries, put up by
your fathers. (Prov. 22.28)
It is not in writing only that they have bequeathed to us
the tradition of the Church, but also in certain
unwritten examples. In the twenty-seventh book of his
work, in thirty chapters addressed to Amphilochios
concerning the Holy Spirit, St Basil says, "In the
cherished teaching and dogmas of the Church, we hold some
things by written documents; others we have received in
mystery from the apostolical tradition." Both are of
equal value for the soul's growth. No one will dispute
this who has considered even a little the [28] discipline
of the Church. For if we neglect unwritten customs, as
not having much weight we bury in oblivion the most
pertinent facts connected with the Gospel. These are the
great Basil's words. How do we know the Holy place of
Calvary, or the Holy Sepulchre? Does it not rest on a
tradition handed down from father to son? It is written
that our Lord was crucified on Calvary, and buried in a
tomb, which Joseph hewed out of the rock; (Mt. 27.60) but
it is unwritten tradition which identifies these spots,
and does more things of the same kind. Whence come the
three immersions at baptism, praying with face turned
towards the east, and the tradition of the mysteries?*
Hence St Paul says, "Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and
hold the traditions which you have learned either by
word, or by our epistle." (II Thess. 2.15) As, then, so
much has been handed down in the Church, and is observed
down to the present day, why disparage images?
If you bring forward certain practices, they do not
inculpate our worship of images, but the worship of
heathens who make them idols. Because heathens do it
foolishly, this [29] is no reason for objecting to our
pious practice. If the same magicians and sorcerers use
supplication, so does the Church with catechumens; the
former invoke devils, but the Church calls upon God
against devils. Heathens have raised up images to demons,
whom they call gods. Now we have raised them to the one
Incarnate God, to His servants and friends, who are proof
against the diabolical hosts.
If, again, you object that the great Epiphanius
thoroughly rejected images, I would say in the first
place the work in question is fictitious and unauthentic.
It bears the name of some one who did not write it, which
used to be commonly done. Secondly, we know that blessed
Athanasius objected to the bodies of saints being put
into chests, and that he preferred their burial in the
ground, wishing to set at nought the strange custom of
the Egyptians, who did not bury their dead under ground,
but set them upon beds and couches. Thus, supposing that
he really wrote this work, the great Epiphanius, wishing
to correct something of the same kind, ordered that
images should not be used. The proof that he did not
object to images, is to be found in his [30] own church,
which is adorned with images to this day. Thirdly, the
exception is not a law to the Church, neither does one
swallow make summer, as it seems to Gregory the
theologian, and to the truth. Neither can one expression
overturn the tradition of the whole Church which is
spread throughout the world.
Accept, therefore, the teaching of Scripture and
spiritual writers. If the Scripture does call "the idols
of heathens silver and gold, and the works of man's
hand," (Ps. 135.15) it does not forbid the adoration of
inanimate things, or man's handiwork, but the adoration
of demons.
We have seen that prophets worshipped angels, and men,
and kings, and the impious, and even a staff. David says,
"And you adore His footstool." (Ps. 99.5) Isaias,
speaking in God's name, says, "The heavens are my throne,
and the earth my footstool." (Is. 66.1) Now, it is
evident to everyone that the heavens and the earth are
created things. Moses, too, and Aaron with all the people
adored the work of hands. St Paul, the golden
grasshopper* of the Church, says in his Epistle to the
Hebrews, "But Christ being come, a high priest of the
good [31] things to come, by a greater and more perfect
tabernacle not made by hand," that is "not of this
creation." And, again, "For Jesus is not entered into the
Holies made by hands, the patterns of the true; but into
heaven itself." (Heb. 9.11, 24) Thus the former holy
things, the tabernacle, and everything within it, were
made by hands, and no one denies that they were adored.
PART II
[55] I CRAVE your indulgence, my readers (despotai mou),
and ask you to receive the true statement of one who is
an unprofitable servant, the least of all, in the Church
of God. I have not been moved to speak by motives of
vainglory, God is my witness, but by zeal for the truth.
In this alone is my hope of salvation, and with it I
trust and pray to go out to meet Christ our Lord, asking
that it may be an expiation for my sins. The man who
received five talents from his lord, brought other five
which he had gained, and the man with two, other two. The
man who received one, and buried it, gave it back without
interest, and being pronounced a wicked servant, was
banished into external darkness. (Mt. 25.20ff) Lest I
should suffer in the same way, I obey God's commands, and
with the talent of eloquence, which is His gift, I put
before the wise among you a treasure table, so [56] that
when the Lord comes He may find me rich in souls, a
faithful servant, whom He may take into that ineffable
joy of His, which is my desire. Give me listening ears
and willing hearts. Receive my treatise, and ponder well
the force of the arguments. This is the second part of my
work on images. Certain children of the Church have urged
me to do it because the first part was not sufficiently
clear to all. Be indulgent with me on this account, for
my obedience.
The wicked serpent of old, Beloved, I mean the devil--is
wont to wage war in many ways against man, who is made
after God's image, and to work his destruction through
opposition. In the very beginning he inspired man with
the hope and desire of becoming a god, and through that
desire he dragged man down to share the death of the
brute creation. He has enticed man also by shameful and
brutal pleasures. What a contrast between becoming a god
and feeling brutal lust. And again, he led man into
infidelity, as the royal (qeopatwr) David says: "The fool
said in his heart there is no God." (Ps. 14.1) At one
time he has brought man to worship too many gods, at
another not even [57] the true God, sometimes demons, and
again, the heavens and the earth, the sun and moon and
stars, and the rest of creation, wild beasts and
reptiles. It is as bad to refuse due honour where honour
is due, as to give it where it is not due. Again, he has
taught some to call the uncreated god evil, and has
deceived others by making them recognise God, who is good
by nature, as the author of evil. Some he has deceived by
the misconception of one nature and one substance of the
Godhead; some he has induced to honour three natures and
three substances; some one substance in our Lord Jesus
Christ, the Second Person of the Holy Trinity; some two
natures and two substances.
But the truth, taking a middle course, sweeps away these
misconceptions and teaches us to acknowledge one God, one
nature in three persons (upostasesi) the Father, the Son,
and the Holy Ghost. Evil is not a being,* but an
accident, a certain conception, word, or deed against the
law of God, taking [58] its origin in this conception,
speech, or doing, and ending with it. The truth proclaims
also that in Christ, the second person of the Holy
Trinity, there are two natures and one person. Now, the
devil, the enemy of the truth and of man's salvation, in
suggesting that images of corruptible man and of birds
and beasts and reptiles, should be made and worshipped as
gods, has often led astray not only heathens but the
children of Israel. (Rom. 1.23) In these days he is eager
to trouble the peace of Christ's Church through false and
lying tongues, using divine words in favour of what is
evil, and striving to disguise his wicked intent, and
drawing the unstable away from true and patristic custom.
Some have risen up and said that it was wrong to
represent and set forth publicly for adoration the saving
wounds of Christ, and the combats of the saints against
the devil. Who with a knowledge of divine things and a
spiritual sense does not perceive in this a deception of
the devil? He is unwilling that his shame should be known
and that the glory of God and of His saints should be
published.
If we made an image of the invisible God, [59] we should
in truth do wrong. For it is impossible to make a statue
of one who is without body, invisible, boundless, and
formless. Again, if we made statues of men, and held them
to be gods, worshipping them as such, we should be most
impious. But we do neither. For in making the image of
God, who became incarnate and visible on earth, a man
amongst men through His unspeakable goodness, taking upon
Him shape and form and flesh, we are not misled. We long
to see what He was like. As the divine apostle says, "We
see now in a glass, darkly." (I Cor. 13.12) The image,
too, is a dark glass, according to the denseness of our
bodies. The mind, in much travail, cannot rid itself of
bodily things. Shame upon you, wicked devil, for grudging
us the sight of our Lord's likeness and our
sanctification through it. You would not have us gaze at
His saving sufferings nor wonder at His condescension,
neither contemplate His miracles nor praise His almighty
power. You grudge the saints the honour God gives to
them. You would not have us see their glory put on
record, nor allow us to become imitators of their
fortitude and faith. We will not [60] obey your
suggestions, wicked and man-hating devil. Listen to me,
people of all nations, men, women, and children, all of
you who bear the Christian name: If any one preach to you
something contrary to what the Catholic Church has
received from the holy apostles and fathers and councils,
and has kept down to the present day, do not heed him. Do
not receive the serpent's counsel, as Eve did, to whom it
was death. If an angel or an emperor teaches you anything
contrary to what you have received, shut your ears. I
have refrained so far from saying, as the holy apostle
said, "Let him be anathema," (Gal. 1.8) in the hope of
amendment.
But say those who do not enter into the mind of
Scripture, God said, through Moses the law-giver: "Thou
shalt not make to thyself the likeness of any thing that
is in heaven above, or in the earth beneath"; (Ex. 20.4)
and through the prophet David: "Let them be all
confounded that adore graven things, and that glory in
their idols," (Ps. 97.7) and many similar passages.
Whatever they have quoted from Holy Scripture and the
fathers is to the same intent.
[61] Now, what shall we say to these things? What, if not
that which God spoke to the Jews, "Search the
Scriptures." (Jn. 5.39)
It is good to examine the Scriptures, but let your mind
be enlightened from the search. It is impossible,
Beloved, that God should not speak truth. (Heb. 6.18)
There is one God, one Lawgiver of the old and new
dispensation, who "spoke of old in many ways to the
patriarchs through the prophets, and in these latter
times through His only begotten Son." (Heb. 1.1) Apply
your mind with discernment. It is not I who am speaking.
The Holy Ghost declared by the holy apostle St Paul that
God spoke of old in many different ways to the patriarchs
through the prophets. Note, in many different ways. A
skilful doctor does not invariably prescribe for all
alike, but for each according to his state, taking into
consideration climate and complaint, season and age,
giving one remedy to a child, another to a grown man,
according to his age; one thing to a weak patient,
another to a strong; and to each sufferer the right thing
for his state and malady: one thing in the summer,
another in the winter, another in the spring or autumn,
[62] and in each place according to its requirements. So
in the same way the good Physician of souls prescribed
for those who were still children and inclined to the
sickness of idolatry, holding idols to be gods, and
worshipping them as such, neglecting the worship of God,
and preferring the creature to His glory. He charged them
not to do this.
It is impossible to make an image of God, who is a pure
spirit, invisible, boundless, having neither form nor
circumscription. How can we make an image of what is
invisible? "No man hath seen God at any time; the only
begotten Son who is in the bosom of the Father, He hath
declared Him." (Jn. 1.18) And again, "No one shall see My
face and live, saith the Lord." (Ex. 33.20)
That they did worship idols there is no doubt from what
the Scripture says about the going out of the children of
Israel, when Moses went up to Mount Sinai, and persevered
in prayer to God. Whilst receiving the law, the
ungrateful people rose against Aaron, the priest of God,
saying: "Make us gods who may go before us. For as to
Moses, we know not what has befallen him." (Ex. 32.1ff)
Then, when they [63] had looked over the trinkets of
their wives, and brought them together, they ate and
drank, and were inebriated with wine and madness, and
began to make merry, saying in their foolishness, "These
are thy gods, O Israel." Do you see that they made gods
of idols who were demons, and that they worshipped the
creature instead of the Creator? As the holy apostle
says: "They changed the glory of the incorruptible God
into the likeness of the image of a corruptible man and
of birds, and of four-footed beasts, and of creeping
things, and served the creature rather than the Creator."
(Rom. 1.23, 25) On this account God forbade them to make
any graven image, as Moses says in Deuteronomy: "And the
Lord spoke to you from the midst of the fire; you heard
the voice of His words, but you saw not any form at all."
(Deut. 4.12) And a little further on: "Keep therefore
your souls carefully; you saw not any similitude in the
day that the Lord God spoke to you in Horeb, from the
midst of the fire, lest perhaps being deceived you might
make you a graven similitude or image of male or female,
the similitude of any beasts that are upon the earth, or
of birds that fly under heaven." (Deut. 4.9, 15-17) And
[64] again: "Lest perhaps lifting up thy eyes to heaven,
thou see the sun and the moon, and all the stars of
heaven, and being deceived by error, thou adore and serve
them." (Deut. 4.19) You see the one object in view is
that the creature should not be worshipped instead of the
Creator, and that the worship of latreia should be given
to God alone. Thus in every case when he speaks of
worship he means latreia. Again "Thou shalt not have
strange gods in my sight; thou shalt not make to thyself
a graven thing nor any likeness." (Deut. 5.7) Again:
"Thou shalt not make to thyself gods of metal." (Ex.
34.17) You see that He forbids image-making on account of
idolatry, and that it is impossible to make an image of
God, who is a Spirit, invisible, and uncircumscribed.
"You have not seen His likeness," (Deut. 4.15) He says;
and St Paul, standing in the midst of the Areopagus,
says: "Being therefore the offspring of God, we must not
suppose the divinity to be like unto gold, or silver, or
stone, the graving of art, a device of man." (Acts 17.29)
Listen again that it is so. Thou shalt not make to
thyself any brazen thing nor any likeness. These things,
he says, they made [65] by God's commandment a hanging of
violet, purple, scarlet, and fine twisted linen in the
entrance of the tabernacle, and the cherubim in woven
work. (Ex. 26.31) And they made also the propitiatory,
that is, the oracle of the purest gold, and the two
cherubim. (Ex 37.6-7) What will you say to this, O Moses?
You say, thou shalt not make to thyself any graven thing
nor any likeness, and you yourself fashion cherubim of
woven work, and two cherubim of pure gold. Listen to the
answer of God's servant Moses: "You blind and foolish
people, mark the force of what is said, and keep your
souls carefully. I said that you had seen no likeness on
the day when the Lord spoke to you on Mount Horeb, in the
midst of the fire, lest you should sin against the law
and make for yourselves a brazen likeness: thou shalt not
make any image or gods of metal. I never said thou shalt
not make the image of cherubim in adoration before the
propitiatory. What I said was: Thou shalt not make to
thyself gods of metal, and thou shalt not make any
likeness as of God, nor shalt thou adore the creature
instead of the Creator, nor any creature whatsoever as
God, nor have [66] I served the creature rather than the
Creator."
Note how the object of Scripture becomes clear to those
who really search it. You must know, Beloved, that in
every business truth and falsehood are distinguished, and
the object of the doer, whether it be good or bad. In the
gospel we find all things good and evil. God, the angels,
man, the heavens, the earth, water and fire and air, the
sun and moon and stars, light and darkness, Satan and the
devils, the serpent and scorpions, death and hell,
virtues and vices. And because everything told about them
is true, and the object in view is the glory of God and
the saints whom He has honoured, our salvation, and the
shame of the devil, we worship and embrace and love these
utterances, and receive them with our whole heart as we
do the whole of the old and new dispensation, and all the
spoken testimony of the holy fathers. Now, we reject the
evil, abominable writings of heathens and Manicheans and
all other heretics, as containing foolishness and lies,
promoting the advantage of Satan and his demons, and
giving them pleasure, although they contain the name of
God. So with regard [67] to images we must manifest the
truth, and take into account the intention of those who
make them. If it be in very deed for the glory of God and
of His saints to promote goodness, to avoid evil, and
save souls, we should receive and honour and worship them
as images, and remembrances, likenesses, and the books of
the illiterate. We should love and embrace them with hand
and heart as reminders of the incarnate God, or His
Mother, or of the saints, the participators in the
sufferings and the glory of Christ, the conquerors and
overthrowers of Satan, and diabolical fraud. If any one
should dare to make an image of Almighty God, who is pure
Spirit, invisible, uncircumscribed, we reject it as a
falsehood. If any one make images for the honour and
worship of the Devil and his angels, we abhor them and
deliver them to the flames. Or if any one give divine
honours to the statues of men, or birds, or reptiles, or
any other created thing, we anathematise him. As our
forefathers in the faith pulled down the temples of
demons, and erected on the same spot churches dedicated
to saints whom we honour, so they overturned the statues
of demons, and set up instead the [68] images of Christ,
of His holy Mother, and the saints. Even in the old
dispensation, Israel neither raised temples to human
beings, nor held sacred the memory of man. At that time
Adam's race was under a curse, and death was a penalty,
therefore a mourning. A corpse was looked upon as
unclean, and the man who touched it as contaminated. But
since the Godhead has taken to Himself our nature, it has
become glorified as a vivifying and efficacious remedy,
and has been transformed unto immortality. Thus the death
of the saints is a rejoicing, and churches are raised to
them, and their images are set up. Be assured that any
one wishing to pull down an image erected out of pure
zeal for the glory and enduring memory of Christ, or of
His holy Mother, or any of the saints, to put the devil
and his satellites to shame,--anyone, I say, refusing to
honour and worship this image as sacred--it is not to be
worshipped as God--is an enemy of Christ, of His blessed
Mother, and of the saints, and is an advocate of the
devil and his crew, showing grief by his conduct that the
saints are honoured and glorified, and the devil put to
shame. The image is a hymn of praise, a manifestation, a
[69] lasting token of those who have fought and
conquered, and of demons humbled and put to flight.
Kings have no call to make laws in the Church. What does
the holy apostle say? "And God, indeed, hath set some in
the church, first apostles, secondly prophets, thirdly
doctors and shepherds for the training of the Church." (I
Cor. 12.28) He does not say "kings." And again: "Obey
your prelates, and be subject to them. For they watch as
being to render an account of your souls." (Heb. 13.17)
Again: "Remember your prelates who have spoken the word
of God to you, whose faith follow, considering the end of
your conversation." (13.7) Kings have not spoken the word
to you, but apostles and prophets, pastors and doctors.
When God was speaking to David about building a house for
Him, He said: "Thou shalt not build me a house, for thou
art a man of blood." (I Chron. 28.3) "Render, therefore,
to all men their dues," St Paul exclaimed; "tribute to
whom tribute is due, custom to whom custom, fear to whom
fear, honour to whom honour." (Rom. 13.7) The political
prosperity is the king's business* the ecclesiastical
organisation [70] belongs to pastors and doctors, and to
take it out of their hands is to commit an act of
robbery. Saul rent Samuel's cloak, and what was the
consequence? God took from him his royalty, and gave it
to the meek David. (I Sam. 15.27-28) Jezabel pursued
Elias, pigs and dogs licked up her blood, (I Kgs. 19.2-3;
II Kgs. 9.33ff) and harlots were bathed in it. Herod
removed John, and was consumed by worms. (Acts 12.23) And
now holy Germanus, shining by word and example, has been
punished and become an exile, and many more bishops and
fathers, whose names are unknown to us. Is not this a
persecution? When the Pharisees and the learned
surrounded our Lord, ostensibly to listen to His
teaching, and when they asked Him if it was lawful to pay
tribute to Caesar, He answered them "Bring me a coin."
And when they had brought it, He said: "Whose image is
this?" Upon their reply, "Caesar's," He said, "Give to
Caesar that which is Caesar's and to God that which is
God's." (Mt. 22.17ff) We are obedient to you, O King, in
things concerning our daily life, in tributes, taxes, and
payments, which are your due; but in ecclesiastical
government we have our pastors, preachers of the word,
and exponents of ecclesiastical law. [71] We do not
change the boundaries marked out by our fathers (Prov.
22.28): we keep the tradition we have received. If we
begin to lay down the law to the Church, even in the
smallest thing, the whole edifice will fall to the ground
in no short time.
You look down upon matter and call it contemptible. This
is what the Manicheans did, but holy Scripture pronounces
it to be good for it says, "And God saw all that He had
made, and it was very good." (Gen. 2.31) I say matter is
God's creation and a good thing. Now, if you say it is
bad, you say either that it is not from God, or you make
Him a cause of evil. Listen to the words of Scripture
concerning matter, which you despise: "And Moses said to
all the assembly of the children of Israel: This is the
word the Lord hath commanded, saying: Set aside with you
first fruits to the Lord; let every one that is willing
and hath a ready heart, offer them to the Lord: gold, and
silver, and brass, violet and purple, and scarlet twice
dyed, and fine linen, goat's hair, and ram's skins dyed
red, and violet, and coloured skins, selimwood, and oil
to maintain lights, and to make ointment, and most sweet
incense, onyx [72] stones and precious stones for the
adorning of the ephod and the rational: Whosoever of you
is wise let him come and make that which the Lord hath
commanded: to wit, the tabernacle," etc.(Ex. 35.4-10)
Behold, then, matter is honoured, and you dishonour it.
What is more insignificant than goat's hair, or colours,
and are not violet and purple and scarlet colours? And
the likeness of the cherubim are the work of man's hand,
and the tabernacle itself from first to last was an
image. "Look," said God to Moses, "and make it according
to the pattern that was shown thee in the Mount," (Ex.
25.40) and it was adored by the people of Israel in a
circle. And, as to the cherubim, were they not in sight
of the people? And did not the people look at the ark,
and the lamps, and the table, the golden urn and the
staff, and adore? It is not matter which I adore; it is
the Lord of matter, becoming matter for my sake, taking
up His abode in matter and working out my salvation
through matter. For "the Word was made Flesh, and dwelt
amongst us." (Jn. 1.14) It is evident to all that flesh
is matter, and that it is created. I reverence and honour
matter, and worship that which has brought about my
salvation. I [73] honour it, not as God, but as a channel
of divine strength and grace. Was not the thrice blessed
wood of the Cross matter? and the sacred and holy
mountain of Calvary? Was not the holy sepulchre matter,
the life-giving stone the source of our resurrection? Was
not the book of the Gospels matter, and the holy table
which gives us the bread of life? Are not gold and silver
matter, of which crosses, and holy pictures, and chalices
are made? And above all, is not the Lord's Body and Blood
composed of matter? Either reject the honor and worship
of all these things, or conform to ecclesiastical
tradition, sanctifying the worship of images in the name
of God and of God's friends, and so obeying the grace of
the Divine Spirit. If you give up images on account of
the law, you should also keep the Sabbath and be
circumcised, for these are severely inculcated by it. You
should observe all the law, and not celebrate the Lord's
Passover out of Jerusalem. But you must know that if you
observe the law, Christ will profit you nothing. (Gal.
5.2) You are ordered to marry your brother's wife, and so
carry on his name, (Deut. 25.5ff) and not to sing the
song of the Lord in a strange land. (Ps. 137.4) Enough of
this! [74] "Those who have been justified by the law have
fallen from grace." (Gal. 5.4)
Let us set forth Christ, our King and Lord, not depriving
Him of His army. The saints are His army. Let the earthly
king strip himself of his army, and then of his own
dignity. Let him put off the purple and the diadem before
he take honour away from his most valiant men who have
conquered their passions.* For if the friends of Christ
are heirs of God and co-heirs of Christ, and are to be
partakers of the divine glory and kingdom, is not even
earthly glory due to them? I call you not servants, our
Lord says; you are my friends. Shall we, then, withhold
from them the honour which the Church gives them? You are
a bold and venturesome man to fight against God and His
ordinances. If you do not worship images, you do not
worship the Son of God, who is the living image of the
invisible God, and the immutable figure of His substance.
The temple which Solomon built was consecrated by the
blood of animals, and [75] decorated by images of lions,
oxen, and the palms and pomegranates. Now, the Church is
consecrated by the blood of Christ and of His saints, and
it is adorned with the image of Christ and of His saints.
Either take away the worship of images altogether, or be
not an innovator, and pass not beyond the ancient
boundaries which thy fathers have set. (Prov. 22.28) I am
not speaking of boundaries prior to the incarnation of
Christ our Lord, but since His coming. God spoke to them,
depreciating the traditions of the old law, saying, "I
also gave them statutes that were not good," (Ez. 20.25)
on account of their hardness of heart. "Consequently on
the change of priesthood the law of necessity was also
changed." (Heb. 7.12)
The eye-witnesses and ministers of the word handed down
the teaching of the Church, not only by writing, but also
by unwritten tradition. Whence comes our knowledge of the
sacred spot, Mount Calvary, of the holy sepulchre? Has it
not been handed down to us from father to son? It is
written that our Lord was crucified on Calvary, and
buried in the tomb which Joseph hewed out of the rock,
but it is unwritten tradition that teaches us we are
adoring [76] the right places, and many other things of
the same kind. Why do we believe in three baptisms, that
is, in three immersions? Why do we adore the Cross? Is it
not through tradition? Therefore the holy apostle says:
"Brethren, stand fast; and hold the traditions which you
have learned, whether by word, or by our epistle." (II
Thess. 2.15) Many things, therefore, being handed down to
the Church by unwritten tradition and kept up to the
present day, why do you speak slightingly of images? The
Manicheans followed a gospel according to Thomas, and you
will follow that of Leo. I do not admit an emperor's
tyrannical action in domineering over the Church. The
emperor has not received the power to bind and loose. I
know of the Emperor Valens, a Christian in name, who
persecuted the true faith, Zeno and Anastasius, Heraclius
and Constantine of Sicily, and Bardaniskus, called Philip
(filippikon). I am not to be persuaded that the Church is
set in order by imperial edicts, but by patristic
traditions, written and unwritten. As the written Gospel
has been preached in the whole world, so has it been an
unwritten tradition in the whole world to represent in
[77] image Christ, the incarnate God, and the saints, to
adore the Cross, and to pray towards the east.
The customs which you bring forward do not incriminate
our worship of images, but that of the heathens who make
idols of them. The pious practice of the Church is not to
be rejected because of heathen abuse. Sorcerers and
magicians exorcise; the Church exorcises catechumens. The
former invoke demons, the Church calls upon God against
demons. Heathens sacrificed to demons; Israel offered to
God both holocausts and victims. The Church, too, offers
an unbloody sacrifice to God. Heathens set up images to
demons, and Israel made idols of them in the words,
"These are thy gods, O Israel, who brought thee out of
Egypt." (Ex. 32.4) Now we have set up images to the true
God incarnate, to His servants and friends, who have put
the demon host to flight. If you say to this that blessed
Epiphanius clearly rejected our use of images, you must
know that the work in question is spurious and written by
some one else in the name of Epiphanius, as often
happens. A father does not fight his own children. All
have become participators in the one Spirit. [78] The
Church is a witness of this in adorning images, until
some men rose up against her and disturbed the peace of
Christ's fold, putting poisoned food before the people of
God.
If I venerate and worship, as the instruments of
salvation, the Cross and lance, and reed and sponge, by
means of which the Jews (qeoktonoi) scorned and put to
death my Lord, shall I not also worship images that
Christians make with a good intention for the glory and
remembrance of Christ? If I worship the image of the
Cross, made of whatever wood it may be, shall I not
worship the image which shows me the Crucified and my
salvation through the Cross? Oh, inhumanity of man! It is
evident that I do not worship matter, for supposing the
Cross, if it be made of wood, should fall to pieces, I
should throw them into the fire, and the same with
images.
Receive the united testimony of Scripture and the fathers
to show you that images and their worship are no new
invention, but the ancient tradition of the Church. In
the holy Gospel of St Matthew our Lord called His
disciples blessed, and with them all those who followed
their example and walked in their [79] footsteps in these
words: "Blessed are your eyes, because they see, and your
ears, because they hear. For, amen I say to you, many
prophets and just men have desired to see the things that
you see, and have not seen them, and to bear the things
that you hear, and have not heard them." (Mt. 13.16-17)
We also desire to see as much as we may. "We see now in a
glass, darkly," (I Cor. 13.12) and in image, and are
blessed. God Himself first made an image, and showed
forth images. For He "made the first man after His own
image." (Gen. 1.27) And Abraham, Moses, and Isaias, and
all the prophets saw images of God, not the substance of
God. The burning bush was an image of God's Mother, and
as Moses was about to approach it, God said: "Put off the
shoes from thy feet, for the place whereon thou standest
is holy ground." (Ex. 3.5) Now if the spot on which Moses
saw an image of Our Lady was holy, how much more the
image itself? And not only is it holy, but I venture to
say it is the holy of holies (agiwn agia). When the
Pharisees asked our Lord why Moses had allowed a bill of
divorce, He answered: "On account of the hardness of your
hearts Moses allowed you to divorce your wife, but in the
[80] beginning it was not so." (Mt. 19.8) And I say to
you that Moses, through the children of Israel's hardness
of heart, and knowing their proclivity to idolatry,
forbade them to make images. We are not in the same case.
We have taken a firm footing on the rock of faith, being
enriched with the light of God's friendship.
Listen to our Lord's words: "Ye foolish and blind,
whosoever shall swear by the temple, sweareth by it, and
by him that dwelleth in it; and he that sweareth by
heaven sweareth by the throne of God, and by Him that
sitteth thereon." (Mt. 23.21-22) And he who swears by an
image swears by the one whom it represents. It has been
sufficiently proved that the tabernacle, and the veil,
the ark and the table, and everything within the
tabernacle, were images and types, and the works of man's
hand, which were worshipped by all Israel, and also that
the cherubim in carving were made by God's order. For God
said to Moses, "See that thou doest all things according
to the pattern shown to thee on the mount." (Ex. 25.40)
Listen, too, to the apostle's testimony that Israel
worshipped images and the handiwork of man in obedience
to God: If, then, he were on earth he [81] would not be a
priest; seeing that there would be others to offer gifts
according. to the law, who serve unto the example and
shadow of heavenly things, as it was answered to Moses,
when he was to finish the tabernacle: See (says he) that
thou make all things according to the pattern which was
shown thee on the mount. But now he hath obtained a
better ministry, by how much also he is a mediator of a
better testament, which is established on better
promises. For if that former had been faultless, there
should not indeed a place have been sought for a second.
For finding fault with them, he saith: "Behold the day
shall come, saith the Lord: and I will perfect unto the
house of Israel, and unto the house of Juda, a New
Testament: not according to the Testament which I made to
their fathers, on the day when I took them by the hand to
lead them out of the land of Egypt." (Heb. 8.4-9) And a
little further on: "Now in saying a New, he hath made the
former Old. And that which decayeth and groweth old, is
near its end. For there was a tabernacle made the first,
wherein were the candlesticks, and the table, and the
setting forth of loaves, which [82] is called the Holy.
And after the second veil, the tabernacle, which is
called the Holy of Holies; having a golden censer, and
the ark of the testament covered about on every part with
gold, in which was a golden pot that had manna, and the
rod of Aaron that had blossomed, and the tables of the
testament. And over it were the cherubims of glory
overshadowing the propitiatory." (Heb. 8.13; 9.2-5) And
again: "For Jesus is not entered into the Holies made
with hands, the patterns of the true; but into heaven
itself." (Heb. 9.24) And again "For the law having a
shadow of the good things to come, not the very image of
the things." (Heb. 10.1)
You see that the law and everything it ordained and all
our own worship consist in the consecration of what is
made by hands, leading us through matter to the invisible
God. Now the law and all its ordinances were a
foreshadowing of the image in the future, that is, of our
worship. And our worship is an image of the eternal
reward. As to the thing itself, the heavenly Jerusalem,
it is invisible and immaterial, as the same divine
apostle says: "We have not here an abiding city, but we
seek for the one above, the heavenly [83] Jerusalem, of
which God is Lord and Architect." (Heb. 13.14; 11.10) All
ordinances of the law and of our worship have been
directed for that heavenly city. To God be praise for
ever. Amen.
PART III
EVERY one must recognise that a man who attempts to
dishonour an image which has been set up for the glory
and remembrance of Christ, of His holy Mother, or one of
his saints, is an enemy of Christ, of His holy Mother,
and the saints. It is also set up to shame the devil and
his crew, out of love and zeal for God. The man who
refuses to give this image due, though not divine,
honour, is an upholder of the devil and his demon host,
showing by his act grief that God and the saints are
honoured and glorified, and the devil put to shame. The
image is a canticle and manifestation and monument to the
memory of those who have fought bravely and won the
victory to the shame and confusion of the vanquished. I
have often seen lovers gazing at the loved [88] one's
garment, and embracing it with eyes and mouth as if it
was himself. We must give his due to every man, St Paul
says "Honour to whom honour: to the king as excelling: or
to governors as sent by him," (Rom. 13.7) to each
according to the measure of his dignity.
Where do you find in the Old Testament or in the Gospel
the Trinity, or consubstantiality, or one Godhead, or
three persons, or the one substance of Christ, or His two
natures, expressed in so many words? Still, as they are
contained in what Scripture does say, and defined by the
holy fathers, we receive them and anathematise those who
do not. I prove to you that in the old law God commanded
images to be made, first of all the tabernacle and
everything in it. Then in the gospel our Lord Himself
said to those who asked Him, tempting, whether it was
lawful to give tribute to Caesar, "Bring me a coin," and
they showed Him a penny. And He asked them whose likeness
it was, and they said to Him, Caesar's; and He said,
"Give to Caesar that which is Caesar's, and to God that
which is God's." (Mt. 22.17-21) As the coin bears the
likeness of Caesar, it is his, [89] and you should give
it to Caesar. So the image bears the likeness of Christ,
and you should give it Him, for it is His.
Our Lord called His disciples blessed, saying, "Many
kings and prophets have desired to see what you see, and
have not seen it, and to hear what you hear and have not
heard it. Blessed are your eyes which see and your ears
which hear." (Mt. 13.16-17) The apostles saw Christ with
their bodily eyes, and His sufferings and wonders, and
they listened to His words. We, too, desire to see, and
to hear, and to be blessed. They saw Him face to face, as
He was present in the body. Now, since he is not present
in the body to us, we hear His words from books and are
sanctified in spirit by the hearing, and are blessed, and
we adore, honouring the books which tell us of His words.
So, through the representation of images we look upon His
bodily form, and upon His miracles and His sufferings,
and are sanctified and satiated, gladdened and blessed.
Reverently we worship His bodily form, and contemplating
it, we form some notion of His divine glory. For, as we
are composed of [90] soul and body, and our soul does not
stand alone, but is, as it were, shrouded by a veil, it
is impossible for us to arrive at intellectual
conceptions without corporeal things. just as we listen
with our bodily ears to physical words and understand
spiritual things, so, through corporeal vision, we come
to the spiritual. On this account Christ took a body and
a soul, as man has both one and the other. And baptism
likewise is double, of water and the spirit. So is
communion and prayer and psalmody; everything has a
double signification, a corporeal and a spiritual. Thus
again, with lights and incense. The devil has tolerated
all these things, raising a storm against images alone.
His great jealousy of them may be learnt by what St
Sophronius, Patriarch of Jerusalem, recounts in his
"Spiritual Garden." Abbot Theodore Aeliotes told of a
holy hermit on the Mount of Olives, who was much troubled
by the demon of fornication. One day when he was sorely
tempted, the old man began to complain bitterly. "When
will you let me alone?" he said to the devil "be gone
from me! you and I have grown old together." The devil
appeared to him, saying, [91] "Swear to me that you will
keep what I am about to tell you to yourself, and I will
not trouble you any longer." And the old man swore it.
Then the devil said to him, "Do not worship this image,
and I will not harass you." The image in question
represented Our Lady, the holy Mother of God, bearing in
her arms our Lord Jesus Christ. You see what those who
forbid the worship of images hate in reality, and whose
instruments they are. The demon of fornication strove to
prevent the worship of Our Lady's image rather than to
tempt the old man to impurity. He knew that the former
evil was greater than fornication.
As we are treating of images and their worship, let us
draw out the meaning more accurately and say in the first
place what an image is; (2) Why the image was made; (3)
How many kinds of images there are; (4) What may be
expressed by an image, and what may not; (5) Who first
made images. Again, as to worship: (1) What is worship;
(2) How many kinds of worship there are; (3) What are the
things worshipped in Scripture; (4) That all worship is
for God, who is worshipful by nature; (5) That [92]
honour shown to the image is given to the original.
1st Point.--What is an Image?
An image is a likeness and representation of some one,
containing in itself the person who is imaged. The image
is not wont to be an exact reproduction of the original.
The image is one thing, the person represented another; a
difference is generally perceptible, because the subject
of each is the same. For instance, the image of a man may
give his bodily form, but not his mental powers. It has
no life, nor does it speak or feel or move. A son being
the natural image of his father is somewhat different
from him, for he is a son, not a father.
2nd Point.-For what purpose the Image is made.
Every image is a revelation and representation of
something hidden. For instance, man has not a clear
knowledge of what is invisible, the spirit being veiled
to the body, nor of future things, nor of things apart
and distant, because he is circumscribed by place and
time. [93] The image was devised for greater knowledge,
and for the manifestation and popularising of secret
things, as a pure benefit and help to salvation, so that
by showing things and making them known, we may arrive at
the hidden ones, desire and emulate what is good, shun
and hate what is evil.
3rd Point.-How many kinds of Images there are.
Images are of various kinds. First there is the natural
image. In everything the natural conception must be the
first, then we come to institution according to
imitation. The Son is the first natural and unchangeable
image of the invisible God, the Father, showing the
Father in Himself. "For no man has seen God." (Jn. 1.18)
Again, "Not that any one has seen the Father." (Jn. 6.46)
The apostle says that the Son is the image of the Father:
"Who is the image of the invisible God," (Col. 1.15) and
to the Hebrews, "Who being the brightness of His glory,
and the figure of His substance." (Heb. 1.3) In the
Gospel of St John we find that He does show the Father in
Himself. When Philip said to Him, "Show us the Father and
it is enough for us," [94] our Lord replied, "Have I been
so long with you and have you not known Me, Philip? He
who sees Me, sees the Father." (Jn. 14.8-9) For the Son
is the natural image of the Father, unchangeable, in
everything like to the Father, except that He is
begotten, and that He is not the Father. The Father
begets, being unbegotten. The Son is begotten, and is not
the Father, and the Holy Spirit is the image of the Son.
For no one can say the Lord Jesus, except in the Holy
Spirit. (I Cor. 12.3) Through the Holy Spirit we know
Christ, the Son of God and God, and in the Son we look
upon the Father. For in things that are conceived by
nature,* language is the interpreter, and spirit is the
interpreter of language. The Holy Spirit is the perfect
and unchangeable image of the Son, differing only in His
procession. The Son is begotten, but does not proceed.
And the son of any father is his natural image. Thus, the
natural is the first kind of image.
The second kind of image is that foreknowledge which is
in God's mind concerning future events, His eternal and
unchanging counsel. God is immutable and His counsel [95]
without beginning, and as it has been determined from all
eternity, it is carried out at the time preordained by
Him. Images and figures of what He is to do in the
future, the distinct determination of each, are called
predeterminations by holy Dionysius. In His counsels the
things predetermined by Him were characterised and imaged
and immutably fixed before they took place.
The third sort of image is that by imitation (kata
mimhsin) which God made, that is, man. For how can what
is created be of the same nature as what is uncreated,
except by imitation? As mind, the Father, the Word, the
Son, and the Holy Spirit are one God, so mind and word
and spirit are one man, according to God's will and
sovereign rule.
For God says: "Let us make man according to our own image
and likeness," and He adds, "I and let him have dominion
over the fishes of the sea and the birds of the air, and
the whole earth, and rule over it." (Gen. 1.26)
The fourth kind of image are the figures and types set
forth by Scripture of invisible and immaterial things in
bodily form, for a clearer apprehension of God and the
angels, [96] through our incapacity of perceiving
immaterial things unless clothed in analogical material
form, as Dionysius the Areopagite says, a man skilled in
divine things. Anyone would say that our incapacity for
reaching the contemplation of intellectual things, and
our need of familiar and cognate mediums, make it
necessary that immaterial things should be clothed in
form and shape. If, then, holy Scripture adapts itself to
us in seeking to elevate us above sense, does it not make
images of what it clothes in our own medium, and bring
within our reach that which we desire but are unable to
see? The spiritual* writer, Gregory, says that the mind
striving to banish corporeal images reduces itself to
incapability. But from the creation of the world the
invisible things of God are made clear by the visible
creation. We see images in created things, which remind
us faintly of divine tokens. For instance, sun and light
and brightness, the running waters of a perennial
fountain, our own mind and language and spirit, the sweet
fragrance of a flowering rose tree, are images of the
Holy and Eternal Trinity.
[97] The fifth kind of image is that which is typical of
the future, as the bush and the fleece, the rod and the
urn, foreshadowing the Virginal Mother of God, and the
serpent healing through the Cross those bitten by the
serpent of old. Thus, again, the sea, and water and the
cloud foreshadow the grace of baptism.
The sixth kind of image is for a remembrance of past
events, of a miracle or a good deed, for the honour and
glory and abiding memory of the most virtuous, or for the
shame and terror of the wicked, for the benefit of
succeeding generations who contemplate it, so that we may
shun evil and do good. This image is of two kinds, either
through the written word in books, for the word
represents the thing, as when God ordered the law to be
written on tablets, (Deut. 5.22) and the lives of
God-fearing men to be recorded, (Ex. 17.14) or through a
visible object, as when He commanded the urn and rod to
be placed in the ark for a lasting memory, (Ex, 16.33-34;
Num. 17.10) and the names of the tribes to be engraved on
the stones of the humeral. (Ex. 28.11-12) And also He
commanded the twelve stones to be taken from the Jordan
as a sacred token. (Jos. 4.20ff) Consider the prodigy,
the greatest which befell [98] the faithful people, the
taking of the ark, and the parting of the waters. So now
we set up the images of valiant men for an example and a
remembrance to ourselves. Therefore, either reject all
images, and be in opposition to Him who ordered these
things, or receive each and all with becoming greeting
and manner.
Fourth Chapter. What an Image is, what it is not; and how
each Image is to be set forth.
Bodies as having form and shape and colour, may properly
be represented in image. Now if nothing physical or
material may be attributed to an angel, a spirit, and a
devil, yet they may be depicted and circumscribed after
their own nature. Being intellectual beings, they are
believed to be present and to energise in places known to
us intellectually. They are represented materially as
Moses made an image of the cherubim who were looked upon
by those worthy of the honour, the material image
offering them an immaterial and intellectual sight. Only
the divine nature is uncircumscribed and incapable of
being represented in form or shape, and incomprehensible.
[99] If Holy Scripture clothes God in figures which are
apparently material, and can even be seen, they are still
immaterial. They were seen by the prophets and those to
whom they were revealed, not with bodily but with
intellectual eyes. They were not seen by all. In a word
it may be said that we can make images of all the forms
which we see. We apprehend these as if they were seen. If
at times we understand types from reasoning, and also
from what we see, and arrive at their comprehension in
this way, so with every sense, from what we have smelt,
or tasted, or touched, we arrive at apprehension by
bringing our reason to bear upon our experience.
We know that it is impossible to look upon God, or a
spirit, or a demon, as they are. They are seen in a
certain form, divine providence clothing in type and
figure what is without substance or material being, for
our instruction, and more intimate knowledge, lest we
should be in too great ignorance of God, and of the
spirit world. For God is a pure Spirit by His nature. The
angel, and a soul, and a demon, compared to God, who
alone is incomparable, are bodies; but compared to
material [100] bodies, they are bodiless. God therefore,
not wishing that we should be in ignorance of spirits,
clothed them in type and figure, and in images akin to
our nature, material forms visible to the mind in mental
vision. These we put into form and shape, for how were
the cherubim represented and described in image? But
Scripture offers forms and images even of God.
Who first made an Image.
In the beginning God begot His only begotten Son, His
word, the living image of Himself, the natural and
unchangeable image of His eternity. And He made man after
His own image and likeness. (Gen. 1.26) And Adam saw God,
and heard the sound of His feet as He walked at even, and
he hid in paradise. (Gen. 3.8) And Jacob saw and
struggled with God. It is evident that God appeared to
him in the form of a man. (Gen. 32.24ff) And Moses saw as
it were the back of a man, (Ex. 33.24ff) and Isaias saw
Him as a man seated on a throne. (Is. 6.1) And Daniel saw
the likeness of a man, and as the Son of Man coming to
the ancient of days. (Dan. 7.9, 13) No one saw the nature
of God, but the type and image of what, was to be. For
the Son and Word of [101] the invisible God, was to
become man in truth, that He might be united to our
nature, and be seen upon earth. Now all who looked upon
the type and image of the future, worshipped it, as St
Paul says in his epistle to the Hebrews: "All these died
according to faith, not having received the promises, but
beholding them afar off, and saluting them." (Heb. 11.13)
Shall I not make an image of Him who took the nature of
flesh for me? Shall I not reverence and worship Him,
through the honour and worship of His image? Abraham saw
not the nature of God, for no man ever saw God, but the
image of God, and falling down he adored. (Gen. 18.2)
Josue saw the image of an angel, (Jos. 5.14) not as he
is, for an angel is not visible to bodily eyes, and
falling down he adored, and so did Daniel. Yet an angel
is a creature, and servant, and minister of God, not God.
And he worshipped the angel not as God, but as God's
ministering spirit. And shall not I make images of
Christ's friends? And shall I not worship them as the
images of God's friends, not as gods? Neither Josue nor
Daniel worshipped the angels they saw as gods. Neither do
I worship the image as God, but through [102] the image
of the saints too, show my worship to God, because I
honour His friends, and do them reverence. God did not
unite Himself to the angelic nature, but to the human. He
did not become an angel: He became a man in nature, and
in truth. It is indeed Abraham's seed which He embraces,
not the angel's. (Heb. 2.16)
The Son of God in person did not take the nature of the
angels: He took the nature of man. The angels did not
participate in the divine nature, but in working and in
grace. Now, men do participate, and become partakers of
the divine nature when they receive the holy Body of
Christ and drink His Blood. For He is united in person to
the Godhead,* and two natures in the Body of Christ
shared by us are united indissolubly in person, and we
partake of the two natures, of the body bodily, and of
the Godhead in spirit, or, rather, of each in both. We
are made one, not in person, for first we have a person
and then we are [103] united by blending together the
body and the blood. How are we not greater than the
angels, if through fidelity to the commandments we keep
this perfect union? In itself our nature is far removed
from the angels, on account of death and the heaviness of
the body, but through God's goodness and its union with
Him it has become higher than the angels. For angels
stand by that nature with fear and trembling, as, in the
person of Christ, it sits upon a throne of glory, and
they will stand by in trembling at the judgment.
According to Scripture they are not partakers of the
divine glory. For they are all ministering spirits, being
sent to minister because of those who are to be heirs of
salvation, (Heb. 1.14) not that they shall reign
together, nor that they shall be together glorified, nor
that they shall sit at the table of the Father. The
saints, on the contrary, are the children of God, the
children of the kingdom, heirs of God, and co-heirs of
Christ. (Rom. 8.17) Therefore, I honour the saints, and
glorify the servants and friends and co-heirs of Christ
servants by nature, friends by their choice friends and
co-heirs by divine grace, as our Lord said in speaking to
the Father. (Jn. 17)
[104] As we are peaking of images, let us speak of
worship also, and in the first place determine what it
is.
On Adoration. What is Adoration?
Adoration is a token of subjection,--that is of
submission and humiliation. There are many kinds of
adoration.
On the kinds of Adoration.
The first kind is the worship of latreia, which we give
to God, who alone is adorable by nature, and this worship
is shown in several ways, and first by the worship of
servants. All created things worship Him, as servants
their master. "All things serve Thee," (Ps. 119.91) the
psalm says. Some serve willingly, others unwillingly;
some with full knowledge, willingly, as in the case of
the devout, others knowing, but not willing, against
their will, as the devil's. Others, again, not knowing
the true God, worship in spite of themselves Him whom
they do not know.
The second kind is the worship of admiration and desire
which we give to God on account of His essential glory.
He alone is worthy of praise, who receives it from no
one, being Himself the cause of all glory and all good,
[105] He is light, incomprehensible sweetness,
incomparable, immeasurable perfection, an ocean of
goodness, boundless wisdom, and power, who alone is
worthy of Himself to excite admiration, to be worshipped,
glorified, and desired.
The third kind of worship is that of thanksgiving for the
goods we have received. We must thank God for all created
things, and show Him perpetual worship, as from Him and
through Him all creation takes its being and subsists.
(Col. 1.16-17) He gives lavishly of His gifts to all, and
without being asked. He wishes all to be saved, (I Tim.
2.4) and to partake of His goodness. He is long-suffering
with us sinners. He allows His sun to shine upon the just
and unjust, and His rain to fall upon the wicked and the
good alike. (Mt. 5.45) And being the Son of God, He
became one of us for our sakes, and made us partakers of
His divine nature, so that "we shall be like unto Him,"
(I Jn. 3.2) as St John says in his Catholic epistle.
The fourth kind is suggested by the need and hope of
benefits. Recognising that without Him we can neither do
nor possess anything good, we worship Him, asking Him to
satisfy [106] our needs and desires, that we may be
preserved from evil and arrive at good.
The fifth kind is the worship of contrition and
confession. As sinners we worship God, and prostrate
ourselves before Him, needing His forgiveness, as it
becomes servants. This happens in three ways. A man may
be sorry out of love, or lest he should lose God's
benefits, or for fear of chastisement. The first is
prompted by goodness and desire for God himself, and the
condition of a son: the second is interested, the third
is slavish.
What we find worshipped in Scripture, and in how many
ways we show worship to creatures
First, those places in which God, who alone is holy, has
rested, and His resting-place in the saints, as in the
holy Mother of God and in all the saints. These are they
who are made like to God as far as possible, of their own
free will, and by God's indwelling, and by His abiding
grace. They are truly called gods, not by nature, but by
participation; just as red-hot iron is called fire, not
by nature, but by participation in the fire's action. He
says: [107] "Be ye holy because I am holy." (Lev. 19.2)
The first thing is the free choice of the will. Then, in
the case of a good choice, God helps it on and confirms
it. "I will take up my abode in them," (Lev. 26.12) He
says. "We are the temples of God, and the Spirit of God
dwells in us." (I Cor. 3.16) Again, "He gave them power
over unclean spirits, to cast them out, and to heal all
manner of diseases, and all manner of infirmities." (Mt.
10.1) And again, "That which I do you shall do, and
greater things." (Jn. 14.12) Again: "As I live, God says,
whosoever shall glorify Me, him will I glorify." (I Sam.
2.30) Again: "If we suffer with Him that we may be also
glorified with Him. (Rom. 8.17) And "God stood in the
synagogue of the gods; in the midst of it He points out
the gods." (Ps. 82.1) As, then, they are truly gods, not
by nature, but as partakers of God's nature, so they are
to be worshipped, not as worshipful on their own account,
but as possessing in themselves Him who is worshipful by
nature. Just in the same way iron when ignited is not by
nature hot and burning to the touch, it is the fire which
makes it so. They are worshipped as exalted by God, as
through Him inspiring fear to His enemies, and becoming
benefactors to the faithful. It is love [108] of God
which gives them their free access to Him, not as gods or
benefactors by nature, but as servants and ministers of
God. We worship them, then, as the king is honoured
through the honour given to a loved servant. He is
honoured as a minister in attendance upon his master--as
a valued friend, not as king. The prayers of those who
approach with faith are heard, whether through the
servant's intercession with the king, or whether through
the king's acceptance of the honour and faith shown by
the servant's petitioner, for it was in his name that the
petition was made. Thus, those who approached through the
apostles obtained their cures. Thus the shadow, and
winding-sheets, and girdles of the apostles worked
healings. (Acts 5.15) Those who perversely and profanely
wish them to be adored as gods are themselves damnable,
and deserve eternal fire. And those who in the false
pride of their hearts disdain to worship God's servants
are convicted of impiety towards God. The children who
derided and laughed to scorn Elisseus bear witness to
this, inasmuch as they were devoured by bears. (II Kgs.
2.23)
Secondly, we worship creatures by [109] honouring those
places or persons whom God has associated with the work
of our salvation, whether before our Lord's coming or
since the dispensation of His incarnation. For instance,
I venerate Mount Sinai, Nazareth, the stable at
Bethlehem, and the cave, the sacred mount of Golgotha,
the wood of the Cross, the nails and sponge and reed, the
sacred and saving lance, the dress and tunic, the linen
cloths, the swathing clothes, the holy tomb, the source
of our resurrection, the sepulchre, the holy mountain of
Sion and the mountain of Olives, the Pool of Bethsaida
and the sacred garden of Gethsemane, and all similar
spots. I cherish them and every holy temple of God, and
everything connected with God's name, not on their own
account but because they show forth the divine power, and
through them and in them it pleased God to bring about
our salvation. I venerate and worship angels and men, and
all matter participating in divine power and ministering
to our salvation through it. I do not worship the Jews.
They are not participators in divine power, nor have they
contributed to my salvation. They crucified my God, the
King of [110] Glory, moved rather by envy and hatred
against God their Benefactor. "Lord, I have loved the
beauty of Thy house," (Ps. 26.8) says David, "we will
adore in the place where his feet stood. And adore at His
holy mountain." (Ps. 132.7; 99.9) The holy Mother of God
is the living holy mountain of God. The apostles are the
teaching mountains of God. "The mountains skipped like
rams, and the hills like the lambs of the flock." (I Cor.
10.11)
The third kind of worship is directed to objects
dedicated to God, as, for instance, the holy Gospels and
other sacred books. They were written for our instruction
who live in these latter days. Sacred vessels, again,
chalices, thuribles, candelabra, and altars (trapezai)
belong to this category. It is evident that respect is
due to them all. Consider how Baltassar made the people
use the sacred vessels, and how God took away his kingdom
from him. (Dan. 5.2ff)
The fourth kind of worship is that of images seen by the
prophets. They saw God in sensible vision, and images of
future things, as Aaron's rod, the figure of Our Lady's
virginity, the urn, and the table. And Jacob worshipped
[111] on the point (epi to akron) of his rod. (Gen.
47.31) He was a type of our Lord. Images of past events
recall their remembrance. The tabernacle was an image of
the whole world. "See," God said to Moses, "the type
which was shown to thee on the mountain, and the golden
cherubim, the work of sculpturers, and the cherubim
within the veil of woven work." (Ex. 25.40) Thus we adore
the sacred figure of the Cross, the likeness of our God's
bodily features, the likeness of her who bore Him, and
all belonging to Him.
The fifth manner is in the worship of each other as
having upon us the mark of God and being made after His
image, humbling ourselves mutually, (Eph. 5.21) and so
fulfilling the law of charity.
The sixth manner is the worship of those in power who
have authority. "Give to all men their dues," the apostle
says; "give honour where it is due." (Rom. 13.7) This
Jacob did in worshipping Esau as his elder brother, and
Pharao the ruler established by God.
In the seventh place, the worship of servants towards
their masters and benefactors, and of petitioners towards
those who grant their favours, as in the case of Abraham
when he [112] bought the double cave from the sons of
Emmor. (Gen. 23.7, 12)
It is needless to say that fear, desire, and honour are
tokens of worship, as also submission and humiliation. No
one should be worshipped as God except the one true God.
Whatever is due to all the rest is for God's sake.
You see what great strength and divine zeal are given to
those who venerate the images of the saints with faith
and a pure conscience. Therefore, brethren, let us take
our stand on the rock of the faith, and on the tradition
of the Church, neither removing the boundaries laid down
by our holy fathers of old, (Prov. 22.28) nor listening
to those who would introduce innovation and destroy the
economy of the holy Catholic and Apostolic Church of God.
If any man is to have his foolish way, in a short time
the whole Organisation of the Church will be reduced to
nothing. Brethren and beloved children of the Church do
not put your mother to shame, do not rend her to pieces.
Receive her teaching through me. Listen to what God says
of her: "Thou art all fair, O my love, and there is not a
spot in thee." (Cant. 4.7) Let us worship and adore our
[113] God and Creator as alone worthy of worship by
nature, and let us worship the holy Mother of God, not as
God, but as God's Mother according to the flesh. Let us
worship the saints also, as the chosen friends of God,
and as possessing access to Him. If men worship kings
subject to corruption, who are often bad and impious, and
those ruling or deputed in their name, as the holy
apostle says, "Be subject to princes and powers," (Tit.
3.1) and again, "Give to all their due, to one honour, to
another fear," (Rom. 13.7) and our Lord, "Give to Caesar
that which is Caesar's, and to God that which is God's,"
(Mt. 22.21) how much more should we worship the King of
Kings? He alone is God by nature; and we should worship
His servants and friends who reign over their passions
and are constituted rulers of the whole earth. "Thou
shalt make them princes over all the earth," (Ps. 45.16)
says David. They receive power against demons and against
disease, (Lk. 9.1) and with Christ they reign over an
incorruptible and unchangeable kingdom. Their shadow
alone has put forth disease and demons. (Acts 5.16)
Should we not deem a shadow a slighter and weaker thing
than an image? Yet it is a true outline of the [114]
original. Brethren, the Christian is faith.* He who walks
by faith gains many things. The doubter, on the contrary,
is as a wave of the sea torn and tossed; he profits
nothing. (Jam. 1.6) All the saints pleased God by faith.
Let us then receive the teaching of the Church in
simplicity of heart without questioning. God made man
sane and sound. It was man who was over curious. (Eccl.
7.30) Let us not seek to learn a new faith, destructive
of ancient tradition, St Paul says, "If a man teach any
other Gospel than what he has been taught, let him be
anathema." (Gal. 1.9) Thus, we worship images, and it is
not a worship of matter, but of those whom matter
represents. The honour given to the image is referred to
the original, as holy Basil rightly says.
And may Christ fill you with the joy of His resurrection,
most holy flock of Christ, Christian people, chosen race,
body of the Church, and make you worthy to walk in the
footsteps of the saints, of the shepherds and teachers of
the Church, leading you to enjoy His glory in the
brightness of the saints. May you gain His glory for
eternity, with the [115] Uncreated Father, to whom be
praise for ever. Amen.