Athenian Cathedral |
Why is that? The Catholics pray before their pictures
but don't normally kiss them. Why is the cult of images farther
advanced in Greece?
The
Orthodox theologians would probably argue that this is not cult of
images but cult of persons depicted by those images, most often Jesus
or Mary. Nevertheless it is a fact that Greeks show reverence to
their images and kiss them when they enter a church. But it wasn't
always so. In the eighth century emperor Leo the 3rd
officially banned the cult if icons and ordered their removal from
churches. It must have been a common practice if the emperor
officially banned it. But where did it come from? After all this is
not an integral part of Christianity. Gospels say nothing about icons
whereas the Old Testament clearly bans any cult of graven images.
Saint Paul in his letters does not tell his followers to obey all the
precepts of the Old Testament but he clearly bans any participation
in pagan rituals which were connected to the cult of images of
Olympian gods. Where, then, did that Greek cult of icons came from?
Perhaps this is simply inculturation, this
characteristic flexibility of Church Fathers, who took into account
the mentality of the people to whom the Good News was being
proclaimed. In in the middle of winter people are used to celebrat
the yearly rebirth of the Sun god Mithras (who is always portrayed
with a Sun disc behind his head), then let's celebrate God's birth in
mid winter, just make sure it is the birth of Christ and not Mithras.
If in spring equinox people are used to commemorating the death of
god Attis and his miraculous resurrection three days later, then
let's continue with the ritual, just make sure it is the death and
resurrection of Christ that is celebrated, not Attis. If the people
are used to bowing before images – let them carry on, just make
sure these are the images of Christ the King, not emperor of Rome.
Kissing an icon |
Perhaps
even the official interpretation of the meaning of the Eucharist that
is maintained by the Church is a result of inculturation. What is the
meaning of the Eucharist? For us, born in the 20th
century it appears that Jesus of Nazareth, who was God incarnate,
changed bread into his own body and gave it to his disciples to eat
so they could also receive his divine power and could do the same
things he did. The same ritual is repeated even today and we – who
participate in it – get the same power from that. However,
theologians tell us the the Eucharist is most of all a sacrifice.
A
sacrifice? What sort of sacrifice? Of course during a mass money is
collected, but most participants understand this as a way to support
the priest, anyway the few bob every person puts in is not a huge
sacrifice. Theologians, however, insist – during the mass the
priest says words which somehow change the bread into the Body of
Christ and then this bread is broken in two, which in itself is a
repetition of the sacrifice on the cross. For us, born in the 20th
century the sacrifice on the cross is not very difficult to
comprehend. One of the ways to understand it is to see it in the
light similar to those movements of non-violence initiated by great
leaders like Mahatma Gandhi, Martin Luther King or the Polish
dissident Jacek Kuron. The basic rule of those leaders was not
answering violence with violence, one can go to prison for beliefs
and in extreme cases one can be ready to die, but violence as an
answer to violence is not accepted. The sacrifice on the cross would
perfectly fit this way of thinking but why should the breaking of
bread during the mass be a repetition of this sacrifice?
Lets look at this with the eyes of a freshly converted
citizen of an ancient Greek polis. For a Greek of that time religious
behaviour meant most of all participation in sacrifices offered to
gods. These sacrifices were public events and the whole city took
part in them. A bull bedecked in wreaths, with his horns gilded, was
led in a procession in front of a god (that is – a sculpture
representing that god), where his throat was slashed and the meat was
divided – one portion was burned to send it to heavens and the rest
was roasted and consumed by the participants. Some gods – like
Demeter, the mother of harvests – would be given bread as
offerings. Newly converted Christians weren't allowed to take part in
these rituals, the New testament clearly forbids it. At the same time
the Christians were invited to take part in another rite – the
Eucharist. For them it was a sacrifice – analogous to sacrifices
given to the pagan gods.
A sacrificial bull |
Bowing
before images wasn't an alien concept either. Part of the cult of
Roman Emperors was bowing before their images. Christians refused to
participate and sometimes paid with their lives, but a bow before an
image of Christ the King was a different matter. Although even then
it was not universally accepted. The earliest writings where the
icons are mentioned don't appear to be favourable to their cult.
Eusebius of Cesarea in the 4th
century mentions their existence as does St Augustine in the 5th.
Clearly not all Greeks accepted the practice of bowing before icons.
In the 8th
century emperor Leo decided it constituted idolatry and ordered
destruction of all icons within his dominion. Only in monasteries
outside his dominion could icons older than the 8th
century survive. One such monastery is St Catherine on Mt Sinai,
where the oldest icons in existence are preserved.
What was interesting was Leo's motivation. He was one of
the most able Byzantine emperors, one of those who saved the empire
from destruction. Arabs tried to conquer Constantinople during his
reign but he prepared the city for a long siege and then destroyed
Arab fleet with a secret weapon known as “Greek Fire”The Arabs
left the city alone and never tried to conquer it again but Leo was
aware that the Christian empire lost to them the whole of North
Africa and the Middle East (including St Catherine Monastery). Why
did that happen? Why did the army of a powerful empire lose wars with
some nomad camel drivers? The Arabs had a simple answer: you worship
icons and this idolatry is forbidden by God. We – said the Arabs –
only bow before Allah who cannot be seen and He gives us victories.
Emperor Leo clearly agreed with this opinion and because he also
wanted victories, ordered all churches within his dominion to be
emptied of icons.
A
concept of God as someone who gives military aid appears as rather
odd to us but it clearly wasn't odd then. For ancient Greeks it was
obvious that gods help in wars. In Homer's poems gods run around the
battlefield, some of them help this side, other the other. The
Christians claimed that the Olympian gods are illusions and there is
only one God, the one worshipped by them. For the first Christian
this was not a god who would support any military action, they would
rather let themseles be thrown to the lions than to start an armed
uprising. In the 4th
century, however, emperor Constantine decided to check whether this
Christian God is really better than Zeus, prayed to him for a victory
in the battle he was about to start and won. For him this was proof
that the Christians are right. He was a military man, though, and
understood this God just as the ancient hoplites understood Athena,
who was supposed to run with them on the battlefield.
Icons in an Athenian church |
It is not always so that whatever the emperor says, his
subjects accept as right. Many of the subjects of emperor Leo thought
he was wrong. He was a strong ruler and during his time it was
illegal to hang an icon in a church but after his death the cult of
icons was revived. At the Second Council of Nicea in AD 787 it was
decided that an image can bring a worshipper closer to God. It is
important that the image does not represent the material world but
the divine light that fills this world. This is why icons created
after that date avoid any realism. Their aim is to make sure that the
worshipper sees that divine light in the face of the saint.
From that time on in every Greek church there icons of
Jesus and Mary. At least these two but often there are many other
icons as well.
But why do Greeks show their respect by kissing icons?
Well, I can't really answer this specific question.
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