As is known, the dogmatics of the Orthodox creed of faith is formulated in its fullness at the Ecumenical Councils, of which Orthodoxy counts seven.  The last council, the seventh one, assembled in the city of Nicaea in 787.  Following the holy Scripture and the decrees of the preceding Ecumenical Councils, the fathers formulated their creed of faith with full precision.


DEFINITION
of three hundred and sixty and seven holy fathers
of the Seventh Ecumenical Council (of Nicaea)

The holy, great and universal synod, by the grace of God and by order of our pious and Christ-loving emperor and empress, Constantine and his mother Irene, assembled for the second time in the famous metropolis of the Nicaeans in the province of the Bithynians, in the holy church of God named after Wisdom (Sophia), following the tradition of the catholic church, has decreed what is here laid down.

The one who granted us the light of recognizing him, the one who redeemed us from the darkness of idolatrous insanity, Christ our God, when he took for his bride his holy catholic church, having no blemish or wrinkle 1, promised he would guard her and assured his holy disciples saying, I am with you every day until the consummation of this age 2.  This promise however he made not only to them but also to us, who thanks to them have come to believe in his name3.  To this gracious offer some people paid no attention; being hoodwinked by the treacherous foe they abandoned the true line of reasoning, and setting themselves against the tradition of the catholic church they faltered in their grasp of the truth.  As the proverbial saying puts it, they turned askew the axles of their farm carts and gathered no harvest in their hands.  Indeed they had the effrontery to criticise the beauty pleasing to God established in the holy monuments; they were priests in name, but not in reality.  They were those of whom God calls out by prophecy, Many pastors have destroyed my vine, they have defiled my portion 4.  For they followed unholy men and trusting to their own frenzies they calumniated the holy church, which Christ our God has espoused to himself, and they failed to distinguish the holy from the profane 5, asserting that the icons of our Lord and of his saints were no different from the wooden images of satanic idols.

Therefore the Lord God, not bearing that what was subject to him should be destroyed by such a corruption, has by his good pleasure summoned us together through the divine diligence and decision of Constantine and Irene, our faithful emperor and empress, we who are those responsible for the priesthood everywhere, in order that the divinely inspired tradition of the catholic church should receive confirmation by a public decree.  So having made investigation with all accuracy and having taken counsel, setting for our aim the truth, we neither diminish nor augment, but simply guard intact all that pertains to the catholic church.  Thus, following the six holy universal synods, in the first place that assembled in the famous metropolis of the Nicaeans, and then that held after it in the imperial, God-guarded city:

We believe in one God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth, and of all things visible and invisible.  And in one Lord, Jesus Christ, the Son of God, the only-begotten, begotten of the Father before all ages, Light of Light, True God of True God, begotten, not made, of one essence with the Father, by Whom all things came to be: Who for us men and for our salvation came down from heaven, and was incarnate of the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary, and was made man; and was crucified also for us under Pontius Pilate, and suffered and was buried; and rose up on the third day in accordance with the Scriptures; and ascended into heaven, and sitteth at the right hand of the Father; and He shall come again with glory to judge the living and the dead, Whose kingdom shall have no end.  And in the Holy Spirit, the Lord, Giver of Life, Who proceedeth from the Father, Who with the Father and the Son together is worshipped and glorified, Who spoke by the Prophets.  And we believe in one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church.  We acknowledge one Baptism for the remission of sins.  We look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the age to come.  Amen.

We abominate and anathematize Arius and those who think like him and share in his mad error; also Macedonius and those with him, properly called the Pneumatomachi; we also confess our Lady, the holy Mary, to be really and truly the God-bearer, because she gave birth in the flesh to Christ, one of the Trinity, our God, just as the first synod at Ephesus decreed; it also expelled from the church Nestorius and those with him, because they were introducing a duality of persons.  Along with these synods, we also confess the two natures of the one who became incarnate for our sake from the God-bearer without blemish, Mary the ever-virgin, recognizing that he is perfect God and perfect man, as the synod at Chalcedon also proclaimed, when it drove from the divine precinct the foul-mouthed Eutyches and Dioscorus.  We reject along with them Severus Peter and their interconnected band with their many blasphemies, in whose company we anathematize the mythical speculations of Origen, Evagrius and Didymus, as did the fifth synod, that assembled at Constantinople.  Further we declare that there are two wills and principles of action, in accordance with what is proper to each of the natures in Christ, in the way that the sixth synod, that at Constantinople, proclaimed, when it also publicly rejected Sergius, Honorius, Cyrus, Pyrrhus, Macarius, those uninterested in true holiness, and their likeminded followers.  To summarize, we declare that we defend free from any innovations all the written and unwritten ecclesiastical traditions that have been entrusted to us.  One of these is the production of representational art; this is quite in harmony with the history of the spread of the gospel, as it provides confirmation that the becoming man of the Word of God was real and not just imaginary, and as it brings us a similar benefit.  For, things that mutually illustrate one another undoubtedly possess one another's message.

Given this state of affairs and stepping out as though on the royal highway, following as we are the God-spoken teaching of our holy fathers and the tradition of the catholic church — for we recognize that this tradition comes from the holy Spirit who dwells in her — we decree with full precision and care that, like the figure of the honoured and life-giving cross, the revered and holy images, whether painted or made of mosaic or of other suitable material, are to be exposed in the holy churches of God, on sacred instruments and vestments, on walls and panels, in houses and by public ways, these are the images of our Lord, God and saviour, Jesus Christ, and of our Lady without blemish, the holy God-bearer, and of the revered angels and of any of the saintly holy men.  The more frequently they are seen in representational art, the more are those who see them drawn to remember and long for those who serve as models, and to pay these images the tribute of salutation and respectful veneration.  Certainly this is not the full adoration (latria) in accordance with our faith, which is properly paid only to the divine nature, but it resembles that given to the figure of the honoured and life-giving cross, and also to the holy books of the gospels and to other sacred cult objects.  Further, people are drawn to honour these images with the offering of incense and lights, as was piously established by ancient custom.  Indeed, the honour paid to an image traverses it, reaching the model6; and he who venerates the image, venerates the person represented in that image.

So it is that the teaching of our holy fathers is strengthened, namely, the tradition of the catholic church which has received the gospel from one end of the earth to the other.  So it is that we really follow Paul, who spoke in Christ, and the entire divine apostolic group and the holiness of the fathers, clinging fast to the traditions which we have received7.  So it is that we sing out with the prophets the hymns of victory to the church: Rejoice exceedingly O daughter of Zion, proclaim O daughter of Jerusalem; enjoy your happiness and gladness with a full heart.  The Lord has removed away from you the injustices of your enemies, you have been redeemed from the hand of your foes.  The Lord the king is in your midst, you will never more see evil 8, and peace will be upon you for time eternal.  Therefore all those who dare to think or teach anything different, or who follow the accursed heretics in rejecting ecclesiastical traditions, or who devise innovations, or who spurn anything entrusted to the church (whether it be the gospel or the figure of the cross or any example of representational art or any martyr's holy relic), or who fabricate perverted and evil prejudices against cherishing any of the lawful traditions of the catholic church, or who secularize the sacred objects and saintly monasteries, we order that they be suspended if they are bishops or clerics, and excommunicated if they are monks or lay people.

Anathemas concerning holy images:

  1. If anyone does not confess that Christ our God can be represented in his humanity, let him be anathema.

  2. If anyone does not accept representation in art of evangelical scenes, let him be anathema.

  3. If anyone does not salute such representations as standing for the Lord and his saints, let him be anathema.

  4. If anyone rejects any written or unwritten tradition of the church, let him be anathema.


 1 Eph 5, 27.      2 Mt 28, 20.      3 See Jn 17, 20.      4 Jer 12, 10.      5 Ez 22, 26.      6 See Basil of Caesaria, De Spiritu s. (The holy Spirit) 18, 45 (PG 32, 149; SC 17, 194).      7 See 2 Th 2, 15.      8 Zp 3, 14 ff (Septuagint).

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