A defense of St. Ephiphanius’s behavior in shredding the image should probably include the possibility that the image in the church there was being used as an idol. Or, what is more probable, that he was acting out of right concern, even if he didn’t properly understand the legitimacy of honorable imagery in a church. Once I saw an essay by St. John of Damascus which was a commentary on the (older) Church Fathers. He drew from them special passages where they talked about imagery and wrote in his own notes about how they support the use of images and icons in the churches. The essay can be found
here, and the best portion of it is under the subtitle “Authentic Testimony of Ancient Fathers in Favour of Images”. Another good part is “Testimony of Ancient and Learned Fathers Concerning Images”.
Some of the best examples of pro-image early Fathers are these:
St. Eusebius of Caesaria, Proof of the Gospel, Book 5 (completed before 311 A.D.): “Hence, even now the inhabitants cherish the place where visions appeared to Abraham, (Gen 18.1) as divinely consecrated. The turpentine tree is still to be seen, and those who received Abraham’s hospitality are painted in picture, one on each side, and the stranger of greatest dignity in the middle. He would be an image of our Lord and Saviour, whom even rude men reverence, Whose divine words they believe.” St. Athanasius, The Hundred Chapters, chapter 38 (written between 328 and 373 A.D.): “We, who are of the faithful, do not worship images as gods, as the heathens did, God forbid, but we mark our loving desire alone to see the face of the person represented in image. Hence, when it is obliterated, we are wont to throw the image as so much wood into the fire. Jacob, when he was about to die, worshipped on the point of Joseph’s staff, not honouring the staff but its owner. Just in the same way do we greet images as we should embrace our children and parents to signify our affection.” St. Basil of Caesarea, On the Spirit, chapter 18 (A.D. 375): “The image of the king is also called the king, and there are not two kings in consequence. Neither is power divided, nor is glory distributed. Just as the reigning power over us is one, so is our homage one, not many, and the honour given to the image reaches back to the original. What the image is in the one case as a representation, that the Son is by His humanity, and as in art likeness is according to form, so in the divine and incommensurable nature union is effected in the indwelling Godhead.” I think the following is an alternative translation of the same, since it is said by others to come from the same chapter: “The honour paid to the image passes on to the prototype. Now what in the one case the image is by reason of imitation, that in the other case the Son is by nature; and as in works of art the likeness is dependent on the form, so in the case of the divine and uncompounded nature the union consists in the communion of the Godhead.” St. Basil also praises a certain martyr, whose statue he admired, with these words: “I contemplate the hand put out to the flames, more powerfully dealt with by you. I see the struggle more clearly depicted on your statue.” St. Gregory of Nyssa, The Formation of Man, chapter 4 (A.D. 379): “For as, in men’s ordinary use, those who make images of princes both mould the figure of their form, and represent along with this the royal rank by the vesture of purple, and even the likeness is commonly spoken of as a king, so the human nature also, as it was made to rule the rest, was, by its likeness to the King of all, made as it were a living image, partaking with the archetype both in rank and in name.” In addition, when I read St. Irenaeus “Against Heresies,” which comes from 180 A.D., I noticed several positive comments about images. Book II, chapter 32, paragraph 2 goes through a list of “virtues” and includes “the arts” and specifies “the art of painting and sculpture, brass and marble work, and the kindred arts.” Thus he calls making images a virtue. Also book 4, chapter 17, paragraph 5 uses the analogy of a king painting an image of his son as an example of something God did, and he says nothing disparaging about it. And in book 3, chapter 17, paragraph 3, he uses the denarius in an analogy, mentioning particularly its image and inscription of Caesar, which he likens to the fact that God gives us His Son and a new name – and he says nothing disparaging about the coin.