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Pictures and Icons
Our brethren the Protestants do not believe in the pictures and icons in the Orthodox Church or in the statues in the Catholic Church. They consider them against the second commandment, in which the Lord says: “You shall not make for yourself any carved image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or serve them” (Ex.20: 4,5); (Deut.5: 8,9).
There was a war waged against icons in the 8th century in 726
A. D. during the time of Emperor Leo III.
It continued for a few
centuries then calmed down. It was revived in Protestantism since
the 15th and 16th centuries and has remained among their beliefs
till this day. Some of our Protestant brethren consider icons as
remnants of paganism. They reproach
Orthodoxy and Catholicism
for venerating icons, kissing them, lighting candles in front of them and kneeling before them.
We will try to reply to all these points, showing the spiritual benefits of icons and why the Church keeps them.
(1) In order to reply to the subject of icons, we must consider the following:
(a) What
does the verse, which our Protestant
brethren use imply? Why was this verse said and what is its
purpose? The reason behind our questioning
is the Apostle's phrase “the letter kills” (2Cor.3: 6).
(b) What are the other verses which, if put beside this verse, will complete its meaning and make us realise the spirit and not the letter in the Lord's commandment? We have previously explained the danger of using one verse.
(2)
What was God's aim in banning images and statues? The
Lord's aim is clear in His words: “You shall not bow down to
them nor serve them.”
Therefore the commandment is not
broken if the purpose of using them is far
from worship.
There is no doubt that this forbidding is one of the Lord's Ten Commandments. It was given in an era in which paganism abounded and there was so much anxiety that the believers might apostate that it was forbidden to engrave any stone, even in ordinary buildings or in constructing the altar.
(3) We see that God Himself, who commanded the people not to engrave any idol or form, ordered Moses in the incident of the enormous snakes to “Make a fiery serpent, and set it on a pole; and it shall be that everyone who is bitten, when he looks at it, shall live” (Num.21: 8). So Moses did this and he was not breaking the second commandment.
Moreover, the Lord Jesus Christ teaches us that this act was a pattern of His sacred cross. He says: “And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life” (John.3: 14,15).
(4) When the Lord ordered Moses to build the Ark of
Covenant,
He asked him to make cherubim of gold on top of it. He said:
“And you shall make two cherubim of gold; of hammered work
you shall make them at the two ends of the
mercy seat. Make one
cherub at one end, and the other cherub at the other end; you
shall make the cherubim at the two ends of
it of one piece with the
mercy seat. And the cherubim shall stretch out their wings above,
covering the mercy seat with their wings,
and they shall face one
another; the faces of the cherubim shall be toward the mercy,
seal. You shall put the mercy seat on top
of the ark, and in the ark
you shall put the Testimony that I will give
you. And there I will
meet with you, and I will speak with you from above the mercy
seat, from between the two cherubim which are
on the ark of the
Testimony, of all things which I will give
you in commandment to
the children of Israel” (Ex.25: 18-22). And it was done.
Forming the images of
these two cherubim was not a
transgression of the second commandment which orders not to
make an idol in the form of anything in
heaven above, because the
aim was not to worship the angels represented by these two
cherubim. On the contrary, the image of the two cherubim wasformed upon a Divine command in the same way that the snake was made upon a Divine command.
(5) In the same manner,
Solomon built the Temple and
decorated it from within: “he
made two cherubim of olive
wood, each ten cubits high. One wing of the cherub was five
cubits and the other wing of the cherub five
cubits: ten cubits
from the tip of one wing to the tip of the
other... both
cherubim
were of the same size and shape. Then he set the cherubim
inside the inner room; and they stretched
out the wings of the
cherubim. Also he overlaid the cherubim
with gold” (1Kin.6:
23-28).
(6) It
was not only a matter of two cherubim, but the Holy
Bible says: “Then he carved all the walls of the temple all
around, both the inner and outer sanctuaries, with carved
figures of cherubim, palm trees, and open flowers”
(1Kin.6: 29). He made two doors for the
entrance and “carved
on them figures of cherubim, palm trees, and
open flowers, and
overlaid them with gold” (1
Kin.6: 32,35). Thus the house of
the Lord was decorated with images, paintings
and carvings and
the people still worshipped God. They did
not worship these
images or carvings. They did not disobey the second
commandment.
(7)
Likewise the Ark of the Covenant, which was respected
by priests, people and kings, did not at all represent pagan
worship. The Holy Bible tells us that after
the Israelites were
conquered at Ai, Joshua, the son of Nun and the successor of
Moses, together with the elders of Israel, knelt down and
prayed to the Lord before the Ark of the
Covenant till evening
(Josh.7: 6). The Lord did not say to Joshua: “You have broken
the second commandments”. But on the contrary, the Lord
talked to him, performed a miraculous sign
in revealing the sin
of Achen, son of Carmit, gave Ai into Joshua's hands and lifted
up Joshua's head.
Joshua did not sin by kneeling before the Ark of the Covenant of the Lord because he was not worshipping the Ark but he was worshipping the Lord who came and spoke from between the cherubim. Likewise David the Prophet did not sin when he celebrated the return of the Ark, leaping and dancing in front of it (2Sam.6: 12-15).
(8)
Similarly, we say that we do not worship the pictures or
the icons, but we venerate them, thus
venerating those to whom
they belong, according to the Lord's words to
His disciples: “If
anyone serves Me, him MY Father will honour” (John.12:
26).
If the Father venerates His saints, should we not venerate them?
(9) We
say the same regarding the cross, of which St. Paul
the Apostle says to the Galatians: “O foolish Galatians...
before whose eyes Jesus Christ was clearly portrayed among you as crucified” (Gal.3: 1).
(10) We thank God that our Protestant brethren now raise the cross on top of their churches without considering it a carved image.
(11) We thank God that in
their Sunday Schools, our
Protestant brethren distribute pictures of
the Lord Jesus Christ,
the angels, the prophets, Noah's Ark with its
animals, the Good
Shepherd and the sheep, David feeding his
sheep, Elijah and the
ravens looking after him, Poor Lazarus and
the dogs licking his
wounds, Balaam, and the Devil tempting the
Lord Jesus Christ
in the wilderness. In distributing these pictures they are not
worried or in any doubt that they may be breaking the second
commandment by having pictures of anything
that is in heaven
above or that is in the earth beneath.
(12) We cannot disregard the
effect of pictures as lessons
explaining the events of the Holy Bible and the lives of the
heroes of faith and history. An icon may
leave a more profound
effect on the soul than reading or listening to a sermon.
Icons connect the believers
on earth with the angels in
heaven and the righteous who abide in
Paradise. They give us a
strong inner motive to carry out the Apostle's words:
“Remember the leaders who spoke the word of God to you. Consider the outcome of their way of life and imitate their faith” (Heb.13: 7).
(13)
In venerating pictures, we are in effect venerating their
owners. When we kiss the Gospel, we show our love to the
word of God and to God who gave us His
commandments for
our guidance. When we bow down before the cross, we bow
down, as one of the Fathers said, “to Him
who is crucified on
it”. The commandment “You
shall not bow down to them or serve them”, does
not apply to us at all when we do these
things.
(14) It is well known that icons have been recognised since the Apostolic Era. It is said that St. Luke the Evangelist was an artist and that he portrayed more than one picture of the Virgin Mary. Tradition tells us about the image of the face of the Lord Jesus Christ imprinted on a handkerchief.
If you study the history of icons you will find that the strongest eras in faith were those in which people venerated icons. Their faith was not affected but on the contrary, they were virtuous people.
(15) Why should we deprive artists from sharing in activating the spiritual life of people? Pictures give spiritual feelings that affect the soul and effectively transfer to people the life-stories of saints.
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