Icons use among Christians

  • Thread starter Thread starter EvangelCatholic
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
E

EvangelCatholic

Guest
It is likely that there have been many discussions about icons, particularly iconoclasm. Is there interest in exploring the use of icons in worship and piety? It came up on another thread when an Antiochian Orthodox saw a Coptic icon in a Lutheran Church.

Personally, the icon is favored over statues.

Any thoughts?
 
It is likely that there have been many discussions about icons, particularly iconoclasm. Is there interest in exploring the use of icons in worship and piety? It came up on another thread when an Antiochian Orthodox saw a Coptic icon in a Lutheran Church.

Personally, the icon is favored over statues.

Any thoughts?
Well, icons and statues are just one of many ways of bringing the Gospel to the people. For centuries and centuries a vast majority of the population could not read, and if it could, it would not be able to fully grasp the message of Scripture. Sacred art - especially icons, but later on also statues - fill that gap. Obviously icons were somewhat simpler to produce and carry around that statues, though statues also have a peculiar way of increasing devotion.

Ultimately for me it all boils down to the Incarnation: why did the invisible God take flesh and dwell among us? Why did He touch the leper? Why did He put mud in the blind man’s eyes? Icon in Greek means “image”, and we know that Christ is the visible image of the invisible God (Colossians 1:15).
 
Personally, the icon is favored over statues.
The East developed a deeper theology of iconography after the heresy of iconoclasm which lead to the phasing out of the use of statues in the East. Although there were religious statues used in the Byzantine Empire in the First Millennium, that vanished by the Second Millennium. And even those that are preserved and dug up, it does seem that “2D” images were preferred over 3D statues even before the complete phasing out of statues in the East. Many Churches were already adorned with iconography well before the iconoclastic heretics.
 
I’d call it a form of a triptych, too…but are the central figures sculptures or just paintings? I couldn’t tell from the photo.
 
What I meant is that the figures are two dimensional unlike a statue. I thought there is a name for that? The art depicts the coronation of the blessed Virgin Mary.
 
What I meant is that the figures are two dimensional unlike a statue. I thought there is a name for that? The art depicts the coronation of the blessed Virgin Mary.
If these are raised figures on a flat surface, that would be a “relief” as opposed to a fully solid shape.

ICXC NIKA
 
Jon, I have been in Detroit several times but unfortunately have not worshiped at or viewed old Holy Trinity Church. What is the difference between religious paintings and icons? Sorry to ask such an unintelligent question 😊
There are very specific rubrics regarding the creation of an icon and how the figure is represented; so specific that it is often referred to as “writing” rather than painting an icon.

IIUC, icons are considered to be a kind of graphical text rather than just art.

ICXC NIKA
 
There are very specific rubrics regarding the creation of an icon and how the figure is represented; so specific that it is often referred to as “writing” rather than painting an icon.

IIUC, icons are considered to be a kind of graphical text rather than just art.

ICXC NIKA
Thanks GEddie.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top