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John of Damascus: In Defense of Icons, c. 730
The Iconoclastic controversy lasted from 726, when Emperor Leo III (717-741) began an attack on the use of religious images, until 843 when The Empress Theodora allowed their restoration. The two periods of Iconoclasm were separated by the reign of the iconodule Empress Irene, under whom the Second Council of Nicea 787 was held.

Although politics, and especially the politics of church and state were involved, there were serious theological issues at stake. A number of defenses of Icons were made: based on the existence of Divinely approved images in nature and Scripture; based on the reality of the incarnation; and based on a Platonic metaphysics of ascending images which participated in the prototype.

The first two defenses are here presented in the first reading; the Platonic defense in second. Both were written by the Icons’ most distinguished proponent, St. John of Damascus (c.675-c.749), John was able to write freely since lived under Muslim rule outside the boundaries of the Byzantine emperor. In this century plus discussion of art, we find one of the most searching investigations into the nature of art in “western” culture before the Italian Renaissance.
from On Holy Images (c. 730)
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, 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.

John of Damascus part 34

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For as often as they are seen in their pictorial representations, people who look at them are ardently lifted up to the memory and...

John of Damascus part 33

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This reverence will be expressed in signs determined by custom and etiquette. It must be noted that all outward marks of respect are only...

John of Damascus part 32

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So in the First Commandment we must distinguish the clauses — “Thou shalt not have strange gods before me”, “Thou shall not adore them...

John of Damascus part 31

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The count paid the expenses. Soon after, at his death, by his will (dated 3 July, 1636) he left considerable property to the chapter...

John of Damascus part 30

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The coronation of images is an example of an old and obvious symbolic sign of honour that has become a fixed rite. The Greek...

John of Damascus part 29

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In both East and West the reverence we pay to images has crystallized into formal ritual. In the Latin Rite the priest is commanded...

John of Damascus part 28

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But there is a difference not of principle but of practice between East and West, to which we have already alluded. Especially since Iconoclasm,...

John of Damascus part 27

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Epiphanius of Salamis (d. 403) tore down a curtain in a church in Palestine because it had a picture of Christ or a saint....

John of Damascus part 26

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Long before the outbreak in the eighth century there were isolated cases of persons who feared the ever-growing cult of images and saw in...

John of Damascus part 25

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A curious story, that illustrates the length to which theworship of images had gone by the eighth century, is told in the “New Garden”...

Setna Tbubui

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Norman West part 2

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Van Lake

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