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Orthodox Theology

Icons And Iconography

A study path for icons as confession of the Incarnation, worship, memory, and visual theology.

Icons And The Incarnation

Orthodox iconography is not merely religious decoration. It is tied to the confession that the Son of God truly became visible in the flesh. Because Christ became man, the Church can depict Him according to His humanity without claiming to contain the divine nature.

This study path should connect icons to Christology, worship, memory of the saints, and the iconoclastic controversy. Nicaea II is more directly relevant to icons than Nicaea I, so the app should eventually add a dedicated Nicaea II council page.

  • - Christological foundation: the Word became flesh.
  • - Liturgical function: icons direct honor to the prototype, not wood and paint as idols.
  • - History link: iconoclasm and the Seventh Ecumenical Council.

Iconoclasm And Nicaea II

The icon controversy was answered most decisively at the Seventh Ecumenical Council, which defended the veneration of icons in light of the Incarnation. The issue was not whether matter is holy in itself, but whether Christ can truly be depicted because He truly became man.

That makes icons a theological subject as much as an artistic one.

  • - Nicaea II is the key council for icons.
  • - The defense of icons is grounded in Christ's real humanity.
  • - Honor passes to the prototype, not to paint and wood as divine objects.

How To Read Icons

Icons are read, not just looked at. Their posture, colors, inscriptions, and gestures all communicate theology and memory.

The app should eventually connect icons to the feasts and saints they depict so that the user can move from image to Scripture and back again.

  • - Look for inscriptions and feast titles.
  • - Connect iconography to Scripture and the liturgical calendar.
  • - Study icons as confessional images of the Incarnation.

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