HISTORY of the CHRISTIAN CHURCH*
CHAPTER VIII.
CHRISTIAN ART.
§ 102. Religion and Art.
Man is a being intellectual,
or thinking and knowing, moral, or willing and acting, and aesthetic,
or feeling and enjoying. To these three cardinal faculties corresponds the old
trilogy of the true, the good, and the beautiful, and the
three provinces of science, or knowledge of the truth, virtue, or
practice of the good, and art, or the representation of the beautiful,
the harmony of the ideal and the real. These three elements are of equally
divine origin and destiny.
Religion is not so much a
separate province besides these three, as the elevation and sanctification of
all to the glory of God. It represents the idea of holiness, or of union with
God, who is the original of all that is true, good, and beautiful.
Christianity, as perfect religion, is also perfect humanity. It hates only sin;
and this belongs not originally to human nature, but has invaded it from
without. It is a leaven which pervades the whole lump. It aims at a harmonious
unfolding of all the gifts and powers of the soul. It would redeem and
regenerate the whole man, and bring him into blessed fellowship with God. It
enlightens the understanding, sanctifies the will, gives peace to the heart,
and consecrates even the body a temple of the Holy Ghost. The ancient word:
"Homo sum, nihil humani a me alienum puto," is fully true only of the
Christian. "All things are yours," says the Apostle. All things are
of God, and for God. Of these truths we must never lose sight, notwithstanding
the manifold abuses or imperfect and premature applications of them.
Hence there is a Christian art,
as well as a Christian science, a spiritual eloquence, a Christian virtue.
Feeling and imagination are as much in need of redemption, and capable of
sanctification, as reason and will.
The proper and highest mission
of art lies in the worship of God. We are to worship God "in the beauty of
holiness." All science culminates
in theology and theosophy, all art becomes perfect in cultus. Holy Scripture
gives it this position, and brings it into the closest connection with
religion, from the first chapter of Genesis to the last chapter of the
Revelation, from the paradise of innocence to the new glorified earth. This is
especially true of the two most spiritual and noble arts, of poetry and music,
which proclaim the praise of God_in all the great epochs of the history of his
kingdom from the beginning to the consummation. A considerable part of the
Bible: the Psalms, the book of Job, the song of Solomon, the parables, the
Revelation, and many portions of the historical, prophetical, and didactic
books, are poetical, and that in the purest and highest sense of the word.
Christianity was introduced into the world with the song of the heavenly host,
and the consummation of the church will be also the consummation of poetry and
song in the service of the heavenly sanctuary.
Art has always, and in all
civilized nations, stood in intimate connection with worship. Among the heathen
it ministered to idolatry. Hence the aversion or suspicion of the early
Christians towards it. But the same is true of the philosophy of the Greeks,
and the law of the Romans; yet philosophy and law are not in themselves
objectionable. All depends on the spirit which animates these gifts, and the
purpose which they are made to serve.
The great revolution in the
outward condition of the church under Constantine dissipated the prejudices
against art and the hindrances to its employment in the service of the church.
There now arose a Christian art which has beautified and enriched the worship
of God, and created immortal monuments of architecture, painting, poetry, and
melody, for the edification of all ages; although, as the cultus of the early
church in general perpetuated many elements of Judaism and heathenism, so the
history of Christian art exhibits many impurities and superstitions which
provoke and justify protest. Artists have corrupted art, as theologians
theology, and priests the church. But the remedy for these imperfections is not
the abolition of art and the banishment of it from the church, but the
renovation and ever purer shaping of it by the spirit and in the service of
Christianity, which is the religion of truth, of beauty, and of holiness.
From this time, therefore, church history also must
bring the various arts, in their relation to Christian worship, into the field
of its review. Henceforth there is a history of Christian architecture,
sculpture, painting, and above all of Christian poetry and music.
§ 103. Church Architecture.
On the history of
Architecture in general, comp. the works of Kugler,
Kinkel, Schnaase, and others, on the plastic arts; also Kreuser: Der christliche Kirchenbau,
seine Geschichte, Symbolik u. Bildnerei, Bonn, 1851. 2 vols., and the English
works of Knight, Brown, Close, J. Ferguson
(A Hist. of Architecture, Lond. 1865, 3 vols.), etc.
Architecture is required to
provide the suitable outward theatre for the public worship of God, to build
houses of God among men, where he may hold fellowship with his people, and
bless them with heavenly gifts. This is the highest office and glory of the art
of building. Architecture is a handmaid of devotion. A beautiful church is a
sermon in stone, and its spire a finger pointing to heaven. Under the old
covenant there was no more important or splendid building than the temple at
Jerusalem, which was erected by divine command and after the pattern of the
tabernacle of the wilderness. And yet this was only a significant emblem and
shadow of what was to come.
Christianity is, indeed, not
bound to place, and may everywhere worship the omnipresent God. The apostles
and martyrs held the most solemn worship in modest private dwellings, and even
in deserts and subterranean catacombs, and during the whole period of
persecution there were few church buildings properly so called. The cause of
this want, however, lay not in conscientious objection, but in the oppressed
condition of the Christians. No sooner did they enjoy external and internal
peace, than they built special places of devotion, which in a normal, orderly
condition of the church are as necessary to public worship as special sacred
times. The first certain traces of proper church buildings, in distinction from
private places, appear in the second half of the third century, during the
three-and-forty years’ rest between the persecution of Decius and that of
Diocletian.1125 But these were destroyed in the latter persecution.
The period of church building
properly begins with Constantine the Great. After Christianity was acknowledged
by the state, and empowered to hold property, it raised houses of worship in
all parts of the Roman empire. There was probably more building of this kind in
the fourth century than there has been in an period since, excepting perhaps
the nineteenth century in the United States, where, every ten years, hundreds
of churches and chapels are erected, while in the great cities of Europe the
multiplication of churches by no means keeps pace with the increase of
population.1126 Constantine and
his mother Helena led the way with a good example. The emperor adorned not only
his new residential city, but also the holy Places in Palestine, and the
African city Constantine, with basilicas, partly at his own expense, partly
from the public treasury. His successors on the throne, excepting Julian, as
well as bishops and wealthy laymen, vied with each other in building,
beautifying, and enriching churches. This was considered a work pleasing to God
and meritorious. Ambition and self-righteousness mingled themselves here, as
they almost everywhere do, with zeal for the glory of God. Chrysostom even
laments that many a time the poor are forgotten in the church buildings, and
suggests that it is not enough to adorn the altar, the walls, and the floor,
but that we must, above all, offer the soul a living sacrifice to the Lord.1127 Jerome also rebukes those who haughtily pride themselves in the
costly gifts which they offer to God, and directs them to help needy
fellow-Christians rather, since not the house of stone, but the soul of the
believer is the true temple of Christ.
The fourth century saw in the
city of Rome above forty great churches.1128 In Constantinople the Church of the Apostles and the church of
St. Sophia, built by Constantine, excelled in magnificence and beauty, and in
the fifth century were considerably enlarged and beautified by Justinian.
Sometimes heathen temples or other public buildings were transformed for
Christian worship. The Emperor Phocas (602-610), for example, gave to the Roman
bishop Boniface IV, the Pantheon, built by Agrippa under Augustus, and renowned
for its immense and magnificent dome (now called chiesa della rotonda), and it
was thenceforth consecrated to the virgin Mary and the martyrs.
But generally the heathen
temples, from their small size and their frequent round form, were not adapted
for the Christian worship, as this is held within the building, and
requires large room for the congregation, that the preaching and the
Scripture-reading may be heard; while the heathen sacrifices were performed
before the portico, and the multitude looked on without the sanctuary.
The sanctuary of Pandrosos, on the Acropolis at Athens, holds but few persons,
and even the Parthenon is not so capacious as an ordinary church. The Pantheon
in Rome is an exception, and is much larger than most temples. The small round
pagan temples were most easily convertible into Christian baptisteries and
burial chapels. Far more frequently, doubtless, was the material of forsaken or
destroyed temples applied to the building of churches.
§ 104. The Consecration of Churches.
New churches were consecrated
with great solemnity by prayer, singing, the communion, eulogies of present
bishops, and the depositing of relics of saints.1129 This service set them apart from all profane uses, and designated
them exclusively for the service and praise of God and the edification of his
people. The dedication of Solomon’s temple,1130 as well as the purification of
the temple after its desecration by the heathen Syrians,1131 furnished the biblical
authority for this custom. In times of persecution the consecration must have
been performed in silence. But now these occasions became festivals attended by
multitudes. Many bishops, like Theodoret, even invited the pagans to attend
them. The first description of such a festivity is given us by Eusebius: the
consecration of the church of the Redeemer at the Holy Sepulchre,1132 and of a church at Tyre.1133
After the Jewish precedent,1134 it was usual to celebrate the
anniversary of the consecration.1135
Churches were dedicated either
to the holy Trinity, or to one of the three divine Persons, especially Christ,
or to the Virgin Mary, or to apostles, especially Peter, Paul, and John, or to
distinguished martyrs and saints.
The idea of dedication, of
course, by no means necessarily involves the superstitious notion of the
omnipresent God being inclosed in a definite place. On the contrary, Solomon
had long before said at the dedication of the temple at Jerusalem:
"Behold, the heaven and heaven of heavens cannot contain thee; how much
less this house that I have builded."
When Athanasius was once censured for assembling the congregation on
Easter, for want of room, in a newly built but not yet consecrated church, he
appealed to the injunction of the Lord, that we enter into our closet to pray,
as consecrating every place. Chrysostom urged that every house should be a
church, and every head of a family a spiritual shepherd, remembering the
account which he must give even for his children and servants.1136 Not walls and roof, but faith and life, constitute the church,1137 and the advantage of prayer in
the church comes not so much from a special holiness of the place, as from the
Christian fellowship, the bond of love, and the prayer of the priests.1138 Augustine gives to his congregation the excellent admonition:
"It is your duty to put your talent to usury; every one must be bishop in
his own house; he must see that his wife, his son, his daughter, his servant,
since he is bought with so great a price, continues in the true faith. The apostle’s
doctrine has placed the master over the servant, and has bound the servant to
obedience to the master, but Christ has paid a ransom for both."1139
§ 105. Interior Arrangement of Churches.
The interior arrangement of the
Christian churches in part imitated the temple at Jerusalem, in part proceeded
directly, from the Christian spirit. It exhibits, therefore, like the whole
catholic system, a mixture of Judaism and Christianity. At the bottom of it lay
the ideas of the priesthood and of sacrifice, and of fellowship with God
administered thereby.
Accordingly, in every large
church after Constantine there were three main divisions, which answered, on
the one hand, to the divisions of Solomon’s temple, on the other, to the three
classes of attendants, the catechumens, the faithful, and the priests, or the
three stages of approach to God. The evangelical idea of immediate access of
the whole believing congregation to the throne of grace, does not yet appear.
The priesthood everywhere comes between.
1. The portico: In this again
must be distinguished:
(a) The inner portico, a
covered hall which belonged to the church itself, and was called provnao", or commonly, from its long, narrow shape, navrqhx, ferula, i.e., literally, staff, rod.1140 The name paradise also occurs, because on one side of the
wall of the portico Adam and Eve in paradise were frequently painted,_probably
to signify that the fallen posterity of Adam find again their lost paradise in
the church of Christ. The inner court was the place for all the unbaptized, for
catechumens, pagans, and Jews, and for members of the church condemned to light
penance, who might hear the preaching and the reading of the Scriptures, but
must withdraw before the administration of the Holy Supper.
(b) The outer portico, aujlhv, atrium, also locus lugentium or hiemantium, which was open, and not in any
way enclosed within the sacred walls, hence not a part of the house of God
properly so called. Here those under heavy penance, the "weepers"1141 as they were called, must
tarry, exposed to all weather, and apply with tears to those entering for their
Christian intercessions.
In this outer portico, or
atrium, stood the laver,1142 in which, after the primitive
Jewish and heathen custom, maintained to this day in the Roman church, the
worshipper, in token of inward purification, must wash every time he entered
the church.1143
After about the ninth century,
when churches were no longer built with spacious porticoes, this laver was
transferred to the church itself, and fixed at the doors in the form of a
holywater basin, supposed to be an imitation of the brazen sea in the priest’s
court of Solomon’s temple.1144 This symbolical
usage could easily gather upon itself superstitious notions of the magical
virtue of the holy water. Even in the pseudo-Apostolic Constitutions the consecrated
water is called "a means of warding off diseases, frightening away evil
spirits, a medicine for body and soul, and for purification from sins;"
and though these expressions related primarily to the sacramental water of
baptism as the bath of regeneration, yet they were easily applied by the people
to consecrated water in general. In the Roman Catholic church the consecration
of the water1145 is performed on Easter Sunday evening; in the
Greco-Russian church, three times in the year.
2. The temple proper,1146 the holy place,1147 or the nave of the church,1148 as it were the ark of the new
covenant. This part extended from the doors of entrance to the steps of the
altar, had sometimes two or four side-naves, according to the size of the
church, and was designed for the body of the laity, the faithful and baptized.
The men sat on the right towards the south (in the men’s nave), the women on
the left towards the north (in the women’s nave), or, in Eastern countries,
where the sexes were more strictly separated, in the galleries above.1149 The monks and nuns, and the higher civil officers, especially the
emperors with their families, usually had special seats of honor in
semicircular niches on both sides of the altar.
About the middle of the main nave
was the pulpit or the ambo,1150 or subsequently two desks,
at the left the Gospel-desk, at the right the Epistle-desk, where
the lector or deacon read the Scripture lessons. The sermon was not always
delivered from the pulpit, but more frequently either from the steps of the
altar (hence the phrase: "speaking from the rails"), or from the seat
of the bishop behind the altar-table.1151
Between the reading-desks and
the altar was the odeum,1152 the place for the singers, and
at the right and left the seats for the lower clergy (anagnosts or readers,
exorcists, acolytes). This part of the nave lay somewhat higher than the floor
of the church, though not so high as the altar-choir, and hence was also called
the lower choir, and the gradual, because steps (gradus) led up to it. In the
Eastern church the choir and nave are scarcely separated, and they form
together the naov", or temple hall; in the Western
the choir and the sanctuary are put together under the name cancelli or chancel.
3. The most holy place,1153 or the choir proper;1154 called also in distinction from
the lower choir, the high choir,1155 for the priests, and for the
offering of the sacrifice of the Eucharist. No layman, excepting the emperor
(in the east), might enter it. It was semi-circular or conchoidal1156 in form, and was situated at
the eastern end of the church, opposite the entrance doors, because the light,
to which Christians should turn themselves, comes from the east.1157 It was separated from the other part of the church by rails or a
lattice,1158 and by a curtain, or by sacred doors called in the
Greek church the picture-wall, iconostas, on account of the sacred paintings on it.1159 While in the Eastern churches this screen is still used, it in
time gave place in the West to a low balustrade.
In the middle of the sanctuary
stood the altar,1160 generally a table, or sometimes a chest with a lid; at
first of wood, then, after the beginning of the sixth century, of stone or
marble, or even of silver and gold, with a wall behind it, and an
overshadowing, dome-shaped canopy,1161 above which a cross was usually
fixed. The altar was hollow, and served as the receptacle for the relics of the
martyrs; it was placed, where this was possible, exactly over the grave of a
martyr, probably with reference to the passage in the Revelation: "I saw
under the altar the souls of them that were slain for the word of God, and for
the testimony which they held."1162 Often a subterranean chapel or crypt1163 was built under the church, in
order to have the church exactly upon the burial place of the saint, and at the
same time to keep alive the memory of the primitive worship in underground
vaults in the times of persecution.
The altar held therefore the
twofold office of a tomb (though at the same time the monument of a new, higher
life), and a place of sacrifice. It was manifestly the most holy place in the
entire church, to which everything else had regard; whereas in Protestantism
the pulpit and the word of God come into the foreground, and altar and
sacrament stand back. Hence the altar was adorned also in the richest manner
with costly cloths, with the cross, or at a later period the crucifix, with
burning tapers, symbolical of Christ the light of the world,1164 and previously consecrated for
ecclesiastical use,1165 with a splendid copy of the Holy Scriptures, or the
mass-book, but above all with the tabernacle, or little house for preserving
the consecrated host, on which in the middle ages the German stone-cutters and
sculptors displayed wonderful art.
Side
altars did not come
into use until Gregory the Great. Ignatius,1166 Athanasius, Gregory Nazianzen,
and Augustine know of only one altar in the church. The Greek church has no
more to this day. The introduction of such side altars, which however belong
not to the altar space, but to the nave of the church, is connected with the
progress of the worship of martyrs and relics.
At the left of the altar war, the table of prothesis,1167 on which the elements for the
holy Supper were prepared, and which is still used in the Greek church; at the
right the sacristy,1168 where the priests robed themselves, and retired for
silent prayer. Behind the altar on the circular wall (and under the painting of
Christ enthroned, if there was one) stood the bishop’s chair,1169 overlooking the whole church.
On both sides of it, in a semicircle, were the seats of the presbyters. None
but the clergy were allowed to receive the holy Supper within the altar rails.1170
§ 106. Architectural Style. The Basilicas.
Comp. the works on the
Basilicas by P. Sarnelli (Antica
Basilicografia. Neapoli, 1686), Ciampini
(Rom. 1693), Guttensohn & Knapp (Monumenta di Rel. christ., ossia
raccolta delle antiche chiese di Roma. Rom. 1822 sqq. 3 vols.; also in German,
MĂĽnchen, 1843), Bunsen (Die
Basiliken des christlichen Roms. MĂĽnchen, 1843, a commentary on the preceding),
Von Quast (Berl. 1845), and Zestermann
(Die antiken und die christlichen Basiliken. Leipz. 1847).
The history of church building,
from the simple basilicas of the fourth century to the perfect Gothic
cathedrals of the thirteenth and fourteenth, exhibits, like the history of the
other Christian arts and the sciences, a gradual subjection and transformation
of previous Jewish and heathen forms by the Christian principle. The church succeeded
to the inheritance of all nations, but could only by degrees purge this
inheritance of its sinful adulterations, pervade it with her spirit, and
subject it to her aims; for she fulfils her mission through human
freedom, not in spite of it, and does not magically transform nations,
but legitimately educates them.
The history of Western
architecture is the richer. The East contented itself with the Byzantine style,
and adhered more strictly to the forms of the round temples, baptisteries, and
mausoleums; while the West, starting from the Roman basilica, developed various
styles.
The style of the earliest
Christian churches was not copied from the heathen temples, because, apart from
their connection with idolatry, which was itself highly offensive to the
Christian sentiment, they were in form and arrangement, as we have already
remarked, entirely unsuitable to Christian worship. The primitive Christian
architecture followed the basilicas, and hence the churches built in this style
were themselves called basilicas. The connection of the Christian and heathen
basilicas, which has been hitherto recognized, and has been maintained by
celebrated connoisseurs,1171 has been denied by some modem investigators,1172 who have claimed for the
Christian an entirely independent origin. And it is perfectly true, as concerns
the interior arrangement and symbolical import of the building, that these can
be ascribed to the Christian mind alone. Nor have any forensic or mercantile
basilicas, to our knowledge, been transformed into Christian churches.1173 But in external architectural form there is without question an
affinity, and there appears no reason why the church should not have employed
this classic form.
The basilicas,1174 or royal halls, were public
judicial and mercantile buildings, of simple, but beautiful structure, in the
form of a long rectangle, consisting of a main hall, or main nave, two, often
four, side naves,1175 which were separated by colonnades from the central
space, and were somewhat lower. Here the people assembled for business and
amusement. At the end of the hall opposite the entrance, stood a semicircular,
somewhat elevated niche (apsis, tribune), arched over with a half-dome, where
were the seats of the judges and advocates, and where judicial business was
transacted. Under the floor of the tribunal was sometimes a cellar-like place
of confinement for accused criminals.
In the history of architecture,
too, there is a Nemesis. As the cross became changed from a sign of weakness to
a sign of honor and victory, so must the basilica in which Christ and
innumerable martyrs were condemned to death, become a place for the worship of
the crucified One. The judicial tribune became the altar; the seat of the
praetor behind it became the bishop’s chair; the benches of the jurymen became
the seats of presbyters; the hall of business and trade became a place of devotion
for the faithful people; the subterranean jail became a crypt or burial place,
the superterrene birth-place, of a Christian martyr. To these were added other
changes, especially the introduction of a cross-nave between the apse and the
main nave, giving to the basilica the symbolical form of the once despised, but
now glorious cross, and forming, so to speak, a recumbent crucifix. The cross
with equal arms is called the Greek; that with unequal arms, in which
the transept is shorter than the main nave from the entrance to the altar, the Latin.
Towers, which express the heavenward spirit of the Christian religion, were not
introduced till the ninth century, and were then built primarily for bells.
This style found rapid
acceptance in the course of the fourth century with East and West; most of all
in Rome, where a considerable number of basilicas, some in their ancient
venerable simplicity, some with later alterations, are still preserved. The
church of St. Maria Maggiore on the Esquiline hill affords the best view of an
ancient basilica; the oldest principal church of Rome_S. Giovanni in Laterano
(so named from the Roman patrician family of the Laterans), dedicated to the
Evangelist John and to John the Baptist; the church of St. Paul, outside the
city on the way to Ostia, which was burnt in 1823, but afterwards rebuilt
splendidly in the same style, and consecrated by the pope in December, 1854;
also S. Clemente, S. Agnese, and S. Lorenzo, outside the walls_are examples.
The old church of St. Peter (Basilica Vaticana), which was built on the spot of
this apostle’s martyrdom, the Neronian circus, and was torn down in the
fifteenth century (the last remnant did not fall till 1606), surpassed all
other churches of Rome in splendor and wealth, and was rebuilt, not in the same
style, but, as is well known, in the Italian style of the sixteenth century.
Next to Rome, Ravenna is rich in
old church buildings, among which the great basilica of S. Apollinare in Classe
(in the port town, three miles from the main city, and built about the middle
of the sixth century) is the most notable. The transept, as in all the churches
of this city, is wanting.
In the East Roman empire there
appeared even under Constantine sundry departures and transitions toward the
Byzantine style. The oldest buildings there, which follow more or less the
style of the Roman basilica, are the church at Tyre, begun in 313, destroyed in
the middle ages, but known to us from the description of the historian
Eusebius;1176 the original St. Sophia of Constantine in
Constantinople; and the churches in the Holy Land, built likewise by him and
his mother Helena, at, Mamre or Hebron, at Bethlehem over the birth-spot of
Christ, on the Mount of Olives in memory of the ascension, and over the holy
sepulchre on Mount Calvary. Justinian also sometimes built basilicas, for
variety, together with his splendid Byzantine churches; and of these the church
of St. Mary in Jerusalem was the finest, and was destined to imitate the temple
of Solomon, but it was utterly blotted out by the Mohammedans.1177
§ 107. The Byzantine Style.
Procopius: De
aedificiis Justiniani. L.i.c. 1-3. Car.
Dufresne Dom. du Cange: Constantinopolis Christiana.
Venet. 1729. Salzenberg und KortĂĽm:
Altchristliche Baudenkmale Constantinopels vom V. bis XII Jahrh. (40
magnificent copperplates and illustrations). Berlin, 1854.
The second style which meets us
in this period, is the Byzantine, which in the West modified the basilica
style, in the East soon superseded it, and in the Russo-Greek church has
maintained itself to this day. It dates from the sixth century, from the reign
of the scholarly and art-loving emperor Justinian I. (527-565), which was the
flourishing period of Constantinople and of the centralized
ecclesiastico-political despotism, in many respects akin to the age of Louis
XIV. of France.
The characteristic feature of
this style is the hemispherical dome, which, like the vault of heaven with its
glory, spanned the centre of the Greek or the Latin cross, supported by massive
columns (instead of slender pillars like the basilicas), and by its height and
its prominence ruling the other parts of the building. This dome corresponds on
the one hand to the centralizing principle of the Byzantine empire,1178 but at the same time, and far
more clearly than the flat basilica, to that upward striving of the Christian
spirit from the earth towards the height of heaven, which afterwards more
plainly expressed itself in the pointed arches and the towers of the Germanic
cathedral. "While in the basilica style everything looks towards the end
of the building where the altar and episcopal throne are set, and by this
prevailing connection the upward direction is denied a free expression, in the
dome structure everything concentrates itself about the spacious centre of the
building over which, drawing the eye irresistibly upward, rises to an
awe-inspiring height the majestic central dome. The basilica presents in the
apse a figure of the horizon from which the sun of righteousness arises in his
glory; the Byzantine building unfolds in the dome a figure of the whole vault
of heaven in sublime, imposing majesty, but detracts thereby from the
prominence of the altar, and leaves for it only a place of subordinate import."
The dome is not, indeed,
absolutely new. The Pantheon in Rome, whose imposing dome has a diameter of a
hundred and thirty-two feet, dates from the age of Augustus, b.c. 26. But here the dome rises on a
circular wall, and so strikes root in the earth, altogether in character with
the heathen religion. The Byzantine dome rests on few columns connected by
arches, and, like the vault of heaven, freely spans the central space of the
church in airy height, without shutting up that space by walls.
Around the main central dome1179 stand four smaller domes in a
square, and upon each dome rises a lofty gilded cross, which in the earlier
churches stands upon a crescent, hung with all sorts of chains, and fastened by
these to the dome.
The noblest and most complete
building of this kind is the renowned church of St. Sophia at Constantinople,
which was erected in lavish Asiatic splendor by the emperor Justinian after a
plan by the architects Anthemius of Tralles and Isidore of Miletus (a.d. 532-537), and consecrated to the
Redeemer,1180 but was transformed after the Turkish conquest into a
Mohammedan mosque (Aja Sofia). It is two hundred and twenty-eight feet broad,
and two hundred and fifty-two feet long; the dome, supported by four gigantic
columns, rises a hundred and sixty-nine feet high over the altar, is a hundred
and eight feet in diameter, and floats so freely and airily above the great
central space, that, in the language of the Byzantine court biographer
Procopius, it seems not to rest on terra firma, but to hang from heaven by
golden chains.1181 The most costly
material was used in the building; the Phrygian marble with rose-colored and
white veins, the dark red marble of the Nile, the green of Laconia, the black
and white spotted of the Bosphorus, the gold-colored Libyan. And when the dome
reflected the brilliance of the lighted silver chandeliers, and sent it back
doubled from above, it might well remind one of the vault of heaven with its
manifold starry glories, and account for the proud satisfaction with which
Justinian on the day of the consecration, treading in solemn procession the
finished building, exclaimed: "I have outdone thee, O Solomon!"1182 The church of St. Sophia stood thenceforth the grand model of the
new Greek architecture, not only for the Christian East and the Russian church,
but even for the Mohammedans in the building of their mosques.
In the West the city of Ravenna,
on the Adriatic coast, after Honorius, (a.d.
404) the seat of the Western empire, or of the eparchate, and the last refuge
of the old Roman magnificence and art, affords beautiful monuments of the
Byzantine style; especially in the church of St. Vitale, which was erected by
the bishop Maximian in 547.1183
In the West the ground plan of the basilica was usually
retained, with pillars and entablature, until the ninth century, and the dome
and vaultings of the Byzantine style were united with it. Out of this union
arose what is called the Romanesque or the round-arch style, which prevailed
from the tenth to the thirteenth century, and was then, from the thirteenth to
the fifteenth, followed by the Germanic or pointed-arch style, with its
gigantic masterpieces, the Gothic cathedrals. From the fifteenth century
eclecticism and confusion prevailed in architecture, till the modern attempts
to reproduce the ancient style. The Oriental church, on the contrary, has never
gone beyond the Byzantine, its productivity almost entirely ceasing with the
age of Justinian. But it is possible that the Graeco Russian church will in the
future develop something new.
§ 108. Baptisteries, Grave-Chapels, and Crypts.
Baptisteries or Photisteries,1184 chapels designed exclusively
for the administration of baptism, are a form of church building by themselves.
In the first centuries baptism was performed on streams in the open air, or in
private houses. But after the public exercise of Christian worship became
lawful, in the fourth century special buildings for this holy ordinance began
to appear, either entirely separate, or connected with the main church (at the
side of the western main entrance) by a covered passage; and they were
generally, dedicated to John the Baptist. The need of them arose partly from
the still prevalent custom of immersion, partly from the fact that the number
of candidates often amounted to hundreds and thousands; since baptism was at
that time administered) as a rule, only three or four times a year, on the eve
of the great festivals (Easter, Pentecost, Epiphany, and Christmas), and at
episcopal sees, while the church proper was filled with the praying
congregation.
These baptismal chapels were not
oblong, like the basilicas, but round (like most of the Roman temples), and
commonly covered with a dome. They had in the centre, like the bathing and
swimming houses of the Roman watering places, a large baptismal basin,1185 into which several steps
descended. Around this stood a colonnade and a circular or polygonal gallery
for spectators; and before the main entrance there was a spacious vestibule in
the form of an entirely walled rectangle or oval. Generally the baptisteries had
two divisions for the two sexes. The interior was sumptuously ornamented;
especially the font, on which was frequently represented the symbolical figure
of a hart panting for the brook, or a lamb, or the baptism of Christ by John.
The earliest baptistery, of the Constantinian church of St. Peter in Rome,
whose living flood was supplied from a fountain of the Vatican hill, was
adorned with beautiful mosaic, the green, gold, and purple of which were
reflected in the water. The most celebrated existing baptistery is that of the
Lateran church at Rome, the original plan of which is ascribed to Constantine,
but has undergone changes in the process of time.1186
After the sixth century, when
the baptism of adults had become rare, it became customary to place a baptismal
basin in the porch of the church, or in the church itself, at the left of the
entrance, and, after baptism came to be administered no longer by the bishop
alone, but by every pastor, each parish church contained such an arrangement.
Still baptisteries also continued in use, and even in the later middle ages new
ones were occasionally erected.
Finally, after the time of
Constantine it became customary to erect small houses of worship or memorial chapels upon the burial-places of the
martyrs, and to dedicate them to their memory.1187 These served more especially for private edification.
The subterranean chapels, or crypts, were connected with the
churches built over them, and brought to mind the worship of the catacombs in
the times of persecution. These crypts always produce a most earnest, solemn
impression, and many of them are of considerable archaeological interest.
§ 109. Crosses and Crucifixes.
Jac. Gretser. (R.C.): De cruce Christi. 2
vols. Ingolst. 1608. Just. Lipsius: De cruce Christi. Antw. 1694. Fr. MĂĽnter:
Die Sinnbilder u. Kunstvorstellungen der alten Christen. Altona, 1825. C. J. Hefele (R.C.): Alter u. älteste Form
der Crucifixe (in the 2d vol. of his Beiträge zur Kirchengesch., Archäologie u.
Liturgik. TĂĽbingen, 1864, p. 265 sqq.).
The cross, as the symbol of redemption, and the signing of the
cross upon the forehead, the eyes, the mouth, the breast, and even upon parts
of clothing, were in universal use in this period, as they had been even in the
second century, both in private Christian life and in public worship. They were
also in many ways abused in the service of superstition; and the nickname cross-worshippers,1188 which the heathen applied to
the Christians in the time of Tertullian,1189 was in many cases not entirely
unwarranted. Besides simple wooden crosses, now that the church had risen to
the kingdom, there were many crosses of silver and gold, or sumptuously set
with pearls and gems.1190
The conspicuous part which,
according to the statements of Eusebius, the cross played in the life of
Constantine, is well known: forming the instrument of his conversion; borne by
fifty men, leading him to his victories over Maxentius and Licinius; inscribed
upon his banners, upon the weapons of his soldiers in his palace, and upon
public places, and lying in the right hand of his own statue. Shortly
afterwards Julian accused the Christians of worshipping the wood of the cross.
"The sign of universal detestation," says Chrysostom,1191 "the sign of extreme
penalty, is now become the object of universal desire and love. We see it
everywhere triumphant; we find it on houses, on roofs, and on walls, in cities
and hamlets, on the markets, along the roads, and in the deserts, on the
mountains and in the valleys, on the sea, on ships, on books and weapons, on
garments, in marriage chambers, at banquets, upon gold and silver vessels, in
pearls, in painting upon walls, on beds, on the bodies of very sick animals, on
the bodies of the possessed [_to drive away the disease and the demon_], at the
dances of the merry, and in the brotherhoods of ascetics." Besides this, it was usual to mark the cross
on windows and floors, and to wear it upon the forehead.1192 According to Augustine this sign was to remind believers that
their calling is to follow Christ in true humility, through suffering, into
glory.
We might speak in the same way
of the use of other Christian emblems from the sphere of nature; the
representation of Christ by a good Shepherd, a lamb, a fish, and the like,
which we have already observed in the period preceding.1193
Towards the end of the present
period we for the first time meet with crucifixes; that is, crosses not
bare, but with the figure of the crucified Saviour upon them. The transition to
the crucifix we find in the fifth century in the figure of a lamb, or even a
bust of Christ, attached to the cross, sometimes at the top, sometimes at the
bottom.1194 Afterwards the
whole figure of Christ was fastened to the cross, and the earlier forms gave
place to this. The Trullan council of Constantinople (the Quinisextum), a.d. 692, directed in the 82d canon:
"Hereafter, instead of the lamb, the human figure of Christ shall be set
up on the images."1195 But
subsequently the orthodox church of the East prohibited all plastic images,
crucifixes among them, and it tolerates only pictures of Christ and the saints.
The earlier Latin crucifixes offend the taste and disturb devotion; but the
Catholic art in its flourishing period succeeded in combining, in the figure of
the suffering and dying Redeemer, the expression of the deepest and holiest
anguish with that of supreme dignity. In the middle age there was frequently
added to the crucifix a group of Mary, John, a soldier, and the penitent
Magdalene, who on her knees embraced the post of the cross.
§ 110. Images of Christ.
Fr. Kugler:
Handbuch der Geschichte der Malerei seit Constantin dem Berlin, 1847, 2 vols.;
and other works on the history of painting. Also C. GrĂĽneisen: Die bildliche Darstellung der Gottheit. Stuttgart
1828. On the Iconoclastic controversies, comp. Maimbourg (R.C.): Histoire de l’hérésie de l’Iconoclastes.
Par. 1679 sqq. 2 vols. Dallaeus
(Calvinist): De imaginibus. Lugd. Bat. 1642. Fr.
Spanheim: Historia imaginum
restituta. Lugd. Bat. 1686. P. E. Jablonski
(†1757): De origine imaginum Christi Domini, in Opuscul. ed. Water, Lugd. Bat.
1804, tom. iii. Walch:
Ketzergesch., vols. x. and xi. J. Marx:
Der Bildersturm der byzantinischen Kaiser. Trier, 1839. W. Grimm: Die Sage vom Ursprunge der
Christusbilder. Berlin, 1843, L. GlĂĽckselig:
Christus-Archäologie, Prag, 1863. Hefele:
Beiträge zur Kirchengeschichte, vol. ii. Tüb. 1861 (Christusbilder, p. 254
sqq.). Comp. the liter. in Hase’s Leben
Jesu, p. 79 (5th ed. 1865).
While the temple of Solomon left
to the Christian mind no doubt concerning the lawfulness and usefulness of
church architecture, the second commandment seemed directly to forbid a
Christian painting or sculpture. "The primitive church," says even a
modern Roman Catholic historian,1196 "had no images, of Christ,
since most Christians at that time still adhered to the commandment of Moses
(Ex. xx. 4); the more, that regard as well to the Gentile Christians as to the
Jewish forbade all use of images. To the latter the exhibition and veneration
of images would, of course, be an abomination, and to the newly converted
heathen it might be a temptation to relapse into idolatry. In addition, the
church was obliged, for her own honor, to abstain from images, particularly
from any representation of the Lord, lest she should be regarded by unbelievers
as merely a new kind and special sort of heathenism and creature-worship. And
further, the early Christians had in their idea of the bodily form of the Lord
no temptation, not the slightest incentive, to make likenesses of Christ. The
oppressed church conceived its Master only under the form of a servant,
despised and uncomely, as Isaiah, liii. 2, 3, describes the Servant of the
Lord."
The first representations of
Christ are of heretical and pagan origin. The Gnostic sect of the Carpocratians
worshipped crowned pictures of Christ, together with images of Pythagoras,
Plato, Aristotle, and other sages, and asserted that Pilate had caused a
portrait of Christ to be made.1197 In the same spirit of pantheistic hero-worship the emperor
Alexander Severus (a.d. 222-235)
set up in his domestic chapel for his adoration the images of Abraham, Orpheus,
Apollonius, and Christ.
After Constantine, the first
step towards images in the orthodox church was a change in the conception of
the outward form of Christ. The persecuted church had filled its eye with the
humble and suffering servant-form of Jesus, and found therein consolation and
strength in her tribulation. The victorious church saw the same Lord in
heavenly glory on the right hand of the Father, ruling over his enemies. The
one conceived Christ in his state of humiliation (but not in his state of
exaltation), as even repulsive, or at least "having no form nor
comeliness;" taking too literally the description of the suffering servant
of God in Is. lii. 14 and liii. 2, 3.1198 The other beheld in him the ideal of human beauty, "fairer
than the children of men," with "grace poured into his lips;"
after the Messianic interpretation of Ps. xlv. 3.1199
This alone, however, did not
warrant images of Christ. For, in the first place, authentic accounts of the
personal appearance of Jesus were lacking; and furthermore it seemed
incompetent to human art duly to set forth Him in Whom the whole fulness of the
Godhead and of perfect sinless humanity dwelt in unity.
On this point two opposite
tendencies developed themselves, giving occasion in time to the violent and
protracted image controversies, until, at the seventh ecumenical council at
Nice in 787, the use and adoration of images carried the day in the church.
1. On the one side, the
prejudices of the ante-Nicene period against images in painting or sculpture
continued alive, through fear of approach to pagan idolatry, or of lowering
Christianity into the province of sense. But generally the hostility was
directed only against images of Christ; and from it, as Neander justly
observes,1200 we are by no means to infer the rejection of all
representations of religious subjects; for images of Christ encounter
objections peculiar to themselves.
The church historian Eusebius
declared himself in the strongest manner against images of Christ in a letter
to the empress Constantia (the widow of Licinius and sister of Constantine),
who had asked him for such an image. Christ, says he, has laid aside His
earthly servant-form, and Paul exhorts us to cleave no longer to the sensible;1201 and the transcendent glory of
His heavenly body cannot be conceived nor represented by man; besides, the
second commandment forbids the making to ourselves any likeness of anything in
heaven or in earth. He had taken away from a lady an image of Christ and of
Paul, lest it should seem as if Christians, like the idolaters, carried their
God about in images. Believers ought rather to fix their mental eye, above all,
upon the divinity of Christ, and, for this purpose, to purify their hearts;
since only the pure in heart shall see God.1202 The same Eusebius, however, relates of Constantine, without the
slightest disapproval, that, in his Christian zeal, he caused the public
monuments in the forum of the new imperial city to be adorned with symbolical
representations of Christ, to wit, with figures of the good Shepherd and of
Daniel in the lion’s den.1203 He likewise
tells us, that the woman of the issue of blood, after her miraculous cure
(Matt. ix. 20), and out of gratitude for it, erected before her dwelling in
Caesarea Philippi (Paneas) two brazen statues, the figure of a kneeling woman,
and of a venerable man (Christ) extending his hand to help her, and that he had
seen these statues with his own eyes at Paneas.1204 In the same place he speaks also of pictures (probably
Carpocratian) of Christ and the apostles Peter and Paul, which he had seen, and
observes that these cannot be wondered at in those who were formerly heathen,
and who had been accustomed to testify their gratitude towards their
benefactors in this way.
The narrow fanatic Epiphanius of
Cyprus (†403) also seems to have been an opponent of images. For when he saw
the picture of Christ or a saint1205 on the altar-curtain in
Anablatha, a village of Palestine, he tore away the curtain, because it was
contrary to the Scriptures to hang up the picture of a man in the church, and
he advised the officers to use the cloth for winding the corpse of some poor
person.1206 This arbitrary
conduct, however, excited great indignation, and Epiphanius found himself
obliged to restore the injury to the village church by another curtain.
2. The prevalent spirit of the
age already very decidedly favored this material representation as a powerful
help to virtue and devotion, especially for the uneducated classes, whence the
use of images, in fact, mainly proceeded.
Plastic representation, it is
true, was never popular in the East. The Greek church tolerates no statues, and
forbids even crucifixes. In the West, too, in this period, sculpture occurs
almost exclusively in bas relief and high relief, particularly on sarcophagi,
and in carvings of ivory and gold in church decorations. Sculpture, from its
more finite nature, lies farther from Christianity than the other arts.
Painting, on the contrary, was
almost universally drawn into the service of religion; and that, not primarily
from the artistic impulse which developed itself afterwards, but from the
practical necessity of having objects of devout reverence in concrete form
before the eye, as a substitute for the sacred books, which were accessible to
the educated alone. Akin to this is the universal pleasure of children in
pictures.
The church-teachers approved and
defended this demand, though they themselves did not so directly need such
helps. In fact, later tradition traced it back to apostolic times, and saw in
the Evangelist Luke the first sacred painter. Whereof only so much is true:
that he has sketched in his Gospel and in the Acts of the Apostles vivid and
faithful pictures of the Lord, His mother, and His disciples, which are surely
of infinitely greater value than all pictures in color and statues in marble.1207
Basil the Great (†379) says
"I confess the appearance of the Son of God in the flesh, and the holy
Mary as the mother of God, who bore Him according to the flesh. And I receive
also the holy apostles and prophets and martyrs. Their likenesses I revere and
kiss with homage, for they are handed down from the holy apostles, and are not
forbidden, but on the contrary painted in all our churches."1208 His brother, Gregory of Nyssa, also, in his memorial discourse on
the martyr Theodore, speaks in praise of sacred painting, which "is wont
to speak silently from the walls, and thus to do much good." The bishop Paulinus of Nola, who caused
biblical pictures to be exhibited annually at the festival seasons in the
church of St. Felix, thought that by them the scenes of the Bible were made
clear to the uneducated rustic, as they could not otherwise be; impressed
themselves on his memory, awakened in him holy thoughts and feelings, and
restrained him from all kinds of vice.1209 The bishop Leontius of Neapolis in Cyprus, who at the close of
the sixth century wrote an apology for Christianity against the Jews, and in it
noticed the charge of idolatry, asserts that the law of Moses is directed not
unconditionally against the use of religious images, but only against the
idolatrous worship of them; since the tabernacle and the temple themselves
contained cherubim and other figures; and he advocates images, especially for
their beneficent influences. "In almost all the world," says he,
"profligate men, murderers, robbers, debauchees, idolaters, are daily
moved to contrition by a look at the cross of Christ, and led to renounce the
world, and practise every virtue."1210 And Leontius already appeals to the miraculous fact, that blood
flowed from many of the images.1211
Owing to the difficulty, already
noticed, of worthily representing Christ Himself, the first subjects were such
scenes from the Old Testament as formed a typical prophecy of the history of
the Redeemer. Thus the first step from the field of nature, whence the earliest
symbols of Christ_the lamb, the fish, the shepherd_were drawn, was into the
field of pre-Christian revelation, and thence it was another step into the
province of gospel history itself. The favorite pictures of this kind were, the
offering-up of Isaac_the pre-figuration of the great sacrifice on the cross;
the miracle of Moses drawing forth water from the rock with his rod_which was
interpreted either, according to 1 Cor. x. 4, of Christ Himself, or, more
especially_and frequently, of the birth of Christ from the womb of the Virgin;
the suffering Job_a type of Christ in His deepest humiliation; Daniel in the
lion’s den_the symbol of the Redeemer subduing the devil and death in the
underworld; the miraculous deliverance of the prophet Jonah from the whale’s
belly_foreshadowing the resurrection;1212 and the translation of
Elijah_foreshadowing the ascension of Christ.
About the middle of the fifth
century, just when the doctrine of the person of Christ reached its formal
settlement, the first representations of Christ Himself appeared, even said by
tradition to be faithful portraits of the original.1213 From that time the difficulty of representing the God-Man was
removed by an actual representation, and the recognition of the images of
Christ, especially of the Madonna with the Child, became even a test of
orthodoxy, as against the Nestorian heresy of an abstract separation of the two
natures in Christ. In the sixth century, according to the testimony of Gregory
of Tours, pictures of Christ were hung not only in churches but in almost every
private house.1214
Among these representations of
Christ there are two distinct types received in the church:
(1) The Salvator picture, with the expression of calm serenity and
dignity, and of heavenly gentleness, without the faintest mark of grief.
According to the legend, this was a portrait, miraculously imprinted on a
cloth, which Christ Himself presented to Abgarus, king of Edessa, at his
request.1215 The original is
of course lost, or rather never existed, and is simply a mythical name for the
Byzantine type of the likeness of Christ which appeared after the fifth
century, and formed the basis of all the various representations of Christ
until Raphael and Michael Angelo. These pictures present the countenance of the
Lord in the bloom of youthful vigor and beauty, with a free, high forehead,
clear, beaming eyes, long, straight nose, hair parted in the middle, and a
somewhat reddish beard.
(2) The Ecce Homo picture of the suffering Saviour with the crown of
thorns. This is traced back by tradition to St. Veronica, who accompanied the
Saviour on the way to Golgotha, and gave Him her veil to wipe the sweat from
His face; whereupon the Lord miraculously imprinted on the cloth the image of
His thorn-crowned head.1216
The Abgarus likeness and the
Veronica both lay claim to a miraculous origin, and profess to be eijkovne" ajceiropoivhtai, pictures not made with human
hands. Besides these, however, tradition tells of pictures of Christ taken in a
natural way by Luke and by Nicodemus. The Salvator picture in the Lateran chapel
Sancta Sanctorum in Rome, which is attributed to Luke, belongs to the Edessene
or Byzantine type.
With so different pretended
portraits of the Lord we cannot wonder at the variations of the pictures of
Christ, which the Iconoclasts used as an argument against images. In truth,
every nation formed a likeness of its own, according to its existing ideals of
art and virtue.
Great influence was exerted upon
the representations of Christ by the apocryphal description of his person in
the Latin epistle of Publius Lentulus (a supposed friend of Pilate) to the
Roman senate, delineating Christ as a man of slender form, noble countenance,
dark hair parted in the middle, fair forehead, clear eyes, faultless mouth and
nose, and reddish beard.1217 An older, and
in some points different, description is that of John of Damascus, or some
other writer of the eighth century, who says: "Christ was of stately form,
with beautiful eyes, large nose, curling hair, somewhat bent, in the prime of
life, with black beard, and sallow complexion, like his mother."1218
No figure of Christ, in color,
or bronze, or marble, can reach the ideal of perfect beauty which came forth
into actual reality in the Son of God and Son of man. The highest creations of
art are here but feeble reflections of the original in heaven, yet prove the
mighty influence which the living Christ continually exerts even upon the
imagination and sentiment of the great painters and sculptors, and which He
will exert to the end of the world.
§ 111. Images of Madonna and Saints.
Besides the images of Christ,
representations were also made of prominent characters in sacred history,
especially of the blessed Virgin with the Child, of the wise men of the east,
as three kings worshipping before the manger,1219 of the four Evangelists, the
twelve Apostles, particularly Peter and Paul,1220 of many martyrs and saints of
the times of persecution, and honored bishops and monks of a later day.1221
According to a tradition of the
eighth century or later, the Evangelist Luke painted not only Christ, but Mary
also, and the two leading apostles. Still later legends ascribe to him even
seven Madonnas, several of which, it is pretended, still exist; one, for
example, in the Borghese chapel in the church of Maria Maggiore at Rome. The
Madonnas early betray the effort to represent the Virgin as the ideal of female
beauty, purity, and loveliness, and as resembling her divine Son.1222 Peter is usually represented with a round head, crisped hair and
beard; Paul, with a long face, bald crown, and pointed beard; both, frequently,
carrying rolls in their hands, or the first the cross and the keys (of the
kingdom of heaven), the second, the sword (of the word and the Spirit).
Such representations of Christ,
of the saints, and of biblical events, are found in the catacombs and other
places of burial, on sarcophagi and tombstones, in private houses, on cups and
seal rings, and (in spite of the prohibition of the council of Elvira in 305)1223 on the walls of churches,
especially behind the altar.
Manuscripts of the Bible also,
liturgical books, private houses, and even the vestments of officials in the
large cities of the Byzantine empire were ornamented with biblical pictures.
Bishop Asterius of Amasea in Pontus, in the second half of the fourth century, protested
against the wearing of these "God-pleasing garments,"1224 and advised that it were better
with the proceeds of them to honor the living images of God, and support the
poor; instead of wearing the palsied on the clothes, to visit the sick; and
instead of carrying with one the image of the sinful woman kneeling and
embracing the feet of Jesus, rather to lament one’s own sins with tears of
contrition.
The custom of prostration1225 before the picture, in token of
reverence for the saint represented by it, first appears in the Greek church in
the sixth century. And then, that the unintelligent people should in many cases
confound the image with the object represented, attribute to the outward,
material thing a magical power of miracles, and connect with the image sundry
superstitious notions_must be expected. Even Augustine laments that among the
rude Christian masses there are many image-worshippers,1226 but counts such in the great
number of those nominal Christians, to whom the essence of the Gospel is
unknown.
As works of art, these primitive
Christian paintings and sculptures are, in general, of very little value; of
much less value than the church edifices. They are rather earnest and elevated,
than beautiful and harmonious. For they proceeded originally not from taste,
but from practical want, and, at least in the Greek empire, were produced
chiefly by monks. It perfectly befitted the spirit of Christianity, to begin
with earnestness and sublimity, rather than, as heathenism, with sensuous
beauty. Hence also its repugnance to the nude, and its modest draping of
voluptuous forms; only hands, feet, and face were allowed to appear.
The Christian taste, it is well
known, afterwards changed, and, on the principle that to the pure all things
are pure, it represented even Christ on the cross, and the holy Child at His
mother’s breast or in His mothers arms, without covering.
Furthermore, in the time of Constantine
the ancient classical painting and sculpture had grievously degenerated; and
even in their best days they reached no adequate expression of the Christian
principle.
In this view, the loss of so
many of those old works of art, which, as the sheer apparatus of idolatry, were
unsparingly destroyed by the iconoclastic storms of the succeeding period, is
not much to be regretted. It was in. the later middle ages, when church
architecture had already reached its height, that Christian art succeeded in unfolding
an unprecedented bloom of painting and sculpture, and in far surpassing, on the
field of painting at least, the masterpieces of the ancient Greeks. Sculpture,
which can present man only in his finite limitation, without the flush of life
or the beaming eye, like a shadowy form from the realm of the dead, probably
attained among the ancient Greeks the summit of perfection, above which even
Canova and Thorwaldsen do not rise. But painting, which can represent man in
his organic connection with the world about him, and, to a certain degree, in
his unlimited depth of soul and spirit, as expressed in the countenance and the
eye, has waited for the influence of the Christian principle to fulfil its
perfect mission, and in the Christs of Leonardo da Vinci, Fra Beato Angelico,
Correggio, and Albrecht DĂĽrer, and the Madonnas of Raphael, has furnished the
noblest works which thus far adorn the history of the art.
§ 112. Consecrated Gifts.
It remains to mention in this
connection yet another form of decoration for churches, which had already been
customary among heathen and Jews: consecrated gifts. Thus the temple of Delphi,
for example, had become exceedingly rich through such presents of weapons,
silver and golden vessels, statues, &c. In almost every temple of Neptune
hung votive tablets, consecrated to the god in thankfulness for deliverance
from shipwreck by him.1227 A similar
custom seems to have existed among the Jews; for I Sam. xxi. implies that David
had deposited the sword of the Philistine Goliath in the sanctuary. In the
court of the priests a multitude of swords, lances, costly vessels, and other
valuable things, were to be seen.
Constantine embellished the
altar space in the church of Jerusalem with rich gifts of gold, silver, and
precious stones. Sozomen tells us1228 that Cyril, bishop of
Jerusalem, in a time of famine, sold the treasures and sacred gifts of the
church, and that afterwards some one recognized in the dress of an actress the
vestment he once presented to the church.
A peculiar variety of such
gifts, namely, memorials of miraculous cures,1229 appeared in the fifth century;
at least they are first mentioned by Theodoret, who said of them in his eighth
discourse on the martyrs: "That those who ask with the confidence of
faith, receive what they ask, is plainly proved by their sacred gifts in
testimony of their healing. Some offer feet, others hands, of gold or silver,
and these gifts show their deliverance from those evils, as tokens of which
they have been offered by the restored."
With the worship of saints this custom gained strongly, and became in
the middle age quite universal. Whoever recovered from a sickness, considered
himself bound first to testify by a gift his gratitude to the saint whose aid
he had invoked in his distress. Parents, whose children fortunately survived
the teething-fever, offered to St. Apollonia (all whose teeth, according to the
legend, had been broken out with pincers by a hangman’s servant) gifts of
jawbones in wax. In like manner St. Julian, for happily accomplished journeys,
and St. Hubert, for safe return from the perils of the chase, were very richly
endowed; but the Virgin Mary more than all. Almost every church or chapel which
has a miracle-working image of the mother of God, possesses even now a
multitude of golden and silver acknowledgments of fortunate returns and
recoveries.
§ 113. Church Poetry and Music.
J. Rambach: Anthologie christl. Gesänge
aus allen Jahrh. der christl. Kirche. Altona, 1817-’33. H. A. Daniel: Thesaurus hymnologicus. Hal.
1841-’56, 5 vols. Edélestand du Méril:
Poésies populaires latines antérieures au douzième siècle. Paris, 1843. C. Fortlage: Gesänge der christl. Vorzeit.
Berlin, 1844. G. A. Königsfeld u.
A. W. v. Schlegel: Altchristliche
Hymnen u. Gesaenge lateinisch u. Deutsch. Bonn, 1847. Second collection by Königsfeld, Bonn, 1865. E. E. Koch: Geschichte des Kirchenlieds u.
Kirchengesangs der christl., insbesondere der deutschen evangel. Kirche. 2d ed.
Stuttgart, 1852 f. 4 vols. (i. 10-30). F. J. Mone:
Latein. Hymnen des Mittelalters (from MSS.), Freiburg, 1853-’55. (Vol. i.,
hymns of God and angels; ii., h. of Mary; iii., h. of saints.) Bässler:
Auswahl Alt-christl. Lieder vom 2-15ten Jahrh. Berlin, 1858. R. Ch. Trench:
Sacred Latin Poetry, chiefly lyrical, selected and arranged for use; with Notes
and Introduction (1849), 2d ed. improved, Lond. and Cambr. 1864. The valuable
hymnological works of Dr. J. M. Neale
(of Sackville College, Oxford): The Ecclesiastical Latin Poetry of the Middle
Ages (in Henry Thompson’s History of Roman Literature, Lond. and
Glasgow., 1852, p. 213 ff.); Mediaeval Hymns and Sequences, Lond. 1851;
Sequentiae ex Missalibus, 1852; Hymns of the Eastern Church, 1862, several
articles in the Ecclesiologist; and a Latin dissertation, De Sequentiis,
in the Essays on Liturgiology, etc., p. 359 sqq. (Comp. also J. Chandler: The Hymns of the Primitive
Church, now first collected, translated, and arranged, Lond. 1837.)
Poetry, and its twin sister
music, are the most sublime and spiritual arts, and are much more akin to the
genius of Christianity, and minister far more copiously to the purposes of
devotion and edification than architecture, painting, and sculpture. They
employ word and tone, and can speak thereby more directly to the spirit than
the plastic arts by stone and color, and give more adequate expression to the
whole wealth of the world of thought and feeling. In the Old Testament, as is
well known, they were essential parts of divine worship; and so they have been
in all ages and almost all branches of the Christian church.
Of the various species of
religious poetry, the hymn is the earliest and most important. It has a rich
history, in which the deepest experiences of Christian life are stored. But it
attains full bloom in the Evangelical church of the German and English tongue,
where it, like the Bible, becomes for the first time truly the possession of
the people, instead of being restricted to priest or choir.
The hymn, in the narrower sense,
belongs to lyrical poetry, or the poetry of feeling, in distinction from the
epic and dramatic. It differs also from the other forms of the lyric (ode,
elegy, sonnet, cantata, &c.) in its devotional nature, its popular form,
and its adaptation to singing. The hymn is a popular spiritual song, presenting
a healthful Christian sentiment in a noble, simple, and universally
intelligible form, and adapted to be read and sung with edification by the
whole congregation of the faithful. It must therefore contain nothing
inconsistent with Scripture, with the doctrines of the church, with general
Christian experience, or with the spirit of devotion. Every believing Christian
can join in the Gloria
in Excelsis or
the Te Deum. The classic hymns, which are,
indeed, comparatively few, stand above confessional differences, and resolve
the discords of human opinions in heavenly harmony. They resemble in this the
Psalms, from which all branches of the militant church draw daily nourishment
and comfort. They exhibit the bloom of the Christian life in the Sabbath dress
of beauty and holy rapture. They resound in all pious hearts, and have, like
the daily rising sun and the yearly returning spring, an indestructible
freshness and power. In truth, their benign virtue increases with increasing
age, like that of healing herbs, which is the richer the longer they are
bruised. They are true benefactors of the struggling church, ministering angels
sent forth to minister to them who shall be heirs of salvation. Next to the
Holy Scripture, a good hymn-book is the richest fountain of edification.
The book of Psalms is the oldest
Christian hymn-book, inherited by the church from the ancient covenant. The
appearance of the Messiah upon earth was the beginning of Christian poetry, and
was greeted by the immortal songs of Mary, of Elizabeth, of Simeon, and of the
heavenly host. Religion and poetry are married, therefore, in the gospel. In
the Epistles traces also appear of primitive Christian songs, in rhythmical
quotations which are not demonstrably taken from the Old Testament.1230 We know from the letter of the elder Pliny to Trajan, that the
Christians, in the beginning of the second century, praised Christ as their God
in songs; and from a later source, that there was a multitude of such songs.1231
Notwithstanding this, we have no
complete religious song remaining from the period of persecution, except the
song of Clement of Alexandria to the divine Logos_which, however, cannot be
called a hymn, and was probably never intended for public use_the Morning Song1232 and the Evening Song1233 in the Apostolic Constitutions,
especially the former, the so-called Gloria in Excelsis, which, as an expansion of the doxology of the
heavenly hosts, still rings in all parts of the Christian world. Next in order
comes the Te
Deum, in its
original Eastern form, or the kaq j eJkavsthn
hJmevran, which is
older than Ambrose. The Ter Sanctus, and several ancient liturgical prayers, also may be regarded as poems.
For the hymn is, in fact, nothing else than a prayer in the festive garb of poetical
inspiration, and the best liturgical prayers are poetical creations. Measure
and rhyme are by no means essential.
Upon these fruitful biblical and
primitive Christian models arose the hymnology of the ancient catholic church,
which forms the first stage in the history of hymnology, and upon which the
mediaeval, and then the evangelical Protestant stage, with their several
epochs, follow.
§ 114. The Poetry of the Oriental Church.
Comp. the third
volume of Daniel’s Thesaurus
hymnologicus (the Greek section prepared by B. Vormbaum); the works of
J. M. Neale, quoted sub § 113; an
article on Greek Hymnology in the Christian Remembrancer,
for April, 1859, London; also the liturgical works quoted § 98.
We should expect that the Greek
church, which was in advance in all branches of Christian doctrine and culture,
and received from ancient Greece so rich a heritage of poetry, would give the
key also in church song. This is true to a very limited extent. The Gloria in excelsis and the Te Deum are unquestionably the most
valuable jewels of sacred poetry which have come down from the early church,
and they are both, the first wholly, the second in part of Eastern origin, and
going back perhaps to the third or second century.1234 But, excepting these hymns in rhythmic prose, the Greek church of
the first six centuries produced nothing in this field which has had permanent
value or general use.1235 It long adhered
almost exclusively to the Psalms of David, who, as Chrysostom says, was first,
middle, and last in the assemblies of the Christians, and it had, in opposition
to heretical predilections, even a decided aversion to the public use of
uninspired songs. Like the Gnostics before them, the Arians and the
Apollinarians employed religious poetry and music as a popular means of
commending and propagating their errors, and thereby, although the abuse never
forbids the right use, brought discredit upon these arts. The council of
Laodicea, about a.d. 360,
prohibited even the ecclesiastical use of all uninspired or "private
hymns,"1236 and the council of Chalcedon, in 451, confirmed this
decree.
Yet there were exceptions.
Chrysostom thought that the perverting influence of the Arian hymnology in
Constantinople could be most effectually counteracted by the positive antidote
of solemn antiphonies and doxologies in processions. Gregory Nazianzen composed
orthodox hymns in the ancient measure; but from their speculative theological
character and their want of popular spirit, these hymns never passed into the
use of the church. The same may be said of the productions of Sophronius of
Jerusalem, who glorified the high festivals in Anacreontic stanzas; of Synesius
of Ptolemais (about a.d. 410),
who composed philosophical hymns; of Nonnus of Panopolis in Egypt, who wrote a
paraphrase of the Gospel of John in hexameters; of Eudoxia, the wife of the
emperor Theodosius II.; and of Paul Silentiarius, a statesman under Justinian
I., from whom we have several epigrams and an interesting poetical description
of the church of St. Sophia, written for its consecration. Anatolius, bishop of
Constantinople (†458), is properly the only poet of this period who realized
to any extent the idea of the church hymn, and whose songs were adapted to
popular use.1237
The Syrian church was the first
of all the Oriental churches to produce and admit into public worship a popular
orthodox poetry, in opposition to the heretical poetry of the Gnostic
Bardesanes (about a.d. 170) and
his son Harmonius. Ephraim Syrus (†378) led the way with a large number of
successful hymns in the Syrian language, and found in Isaac, presbyter of
Antioch, in the middle of the fifth century, and especially in Jacob, bishop of
Sarug in Mesopotamia (†521), worthy successors.1238
After the fifth century the
Greek church lost its prejudices against poetry, and produced a great but
slightly known abundance of sacred songs for public worship.
In the history of the Greek church
poetry, as well as the Latin, we may distinguish three epochs: (1) that of
formation, while it was slowly throwing off classical metres, and inventing its
peculiar style, down to about 650; (2) that of perfection, down to 820; (3)
that of decline and decay, to 1400 or to the fall of Constantinople. The first
period, beautiful as are some of the odes of Gregory of Nazianzen and
Sophronius of Jerusalem, has impressed scarcely any traces on the Greek office
books. The flourishing period of Greek poetry coincides with the period of the
image controversies, and the most eminent poets were at the same time advocates
of images; pre-eminent among them being John of Damascus, who has the double
honor of being the greatest theologian and the greatest poet of the Greek
church.
The flower of Greek poetry
belongs, therefore, in a later division of our history. Yet, since we find at
least the rise of it in the fifth century, we shall give here a brief
description of its peculiar character.
The earliest poets of the Greek
church, especially Gregory Nazianzen, in the fourth, and Sophronius of
Jerusalem in the seventh century, employed the classical metres, which are
entirely unsuitable to Christian ideas and church song, and therefore gradually
fell out of use.1239 Rhyme found no
entrance into the Greek church. In its stead the metrical or harmonic prose was
adopted from the Hebrew poetry and the earliest Christian hymns of Mary,
Zacharias, Simeon, and the angelic host. Anatolius of Constantinople (†458)
was the first to renounce the tyranny of the classic metre and strike out a new
path. The essential points in the peculiar system of the Greek versification
are the following:1240
The first stanza, which forms
the model of the succeeding ones, is called in technical language Hirmos, because it draws the others
after it. The succeeding stanzas are called Troparia (stanzas), and are divided, for chanting, by commas,
without regard to the sense. A number of troparia, from three to twenty or
more, forms an Ode, and this corresponds to the Latin Sequence,
which was introduced about the same time by the monk Notker in St. Gall. Each
ode is founded on a hirmos and ends with a troparion in praise of the Holy
Virgin.1241 The odes are
commonly arranged (probably after the example of such Psalms as the 25th,
112th, and 119th) in acrostic, sometimes in alphabetic, order. Nine odes form a
Canon.1242 The older odes
on the great events of the incarnation, the resurrection, and the ascension,
are sometimes sublime; but the later long canons, in glorification of unknown
martyrs are extremely prosaic and tedious and full of elements foreign to the
gospel. Even the best hymnological productions of the East lack the healthful
simplicity, naturalness, fervor, and depth of the Latin and of the Evangelical
Protestant hymn.
The principal church poets of
the East are Anatolius (†458), Andrew of Crete
(660-732), Germanus I. (634-734),
John Of Damascus (â€
about 780), Cosmas of Jerusalem,
called the Melodist (780), Theophanes
(759-818), Theodore of the
Studium (826), Methodius I.
(846), Joseph of the Studium
(830), Metrophanes of Smyrna (â€
900), Leo VI. (886-917), and Euthymius (†920).
The Greek church poetry is
contained in the liturgical books, especially in the twelve volumes of the
Menaea, which correspond to the Latin Breviary, and consist, for the most part,
of poetic or half-poetic odes in rhythmic prose.1243 These treasures, on which nine centuries have wrought, have
hitherto been almost exclusively confined to the Oriental church, and in fact
yield but few grains of gold for general use. Neale has latterly made a happy
effort to reproduce and make accessible in modern English metres, with very
considerable abridgments, the most valuable hymns of the Greek church.1244
We give a few specimens of
Neale’s translations of hymns of St. Anatolius, patriarch of Constantinople,
who attended the council of Chalcedon (451). The first is a Christmas hymn,
commencing in Greek:
Mevga kai; paravdoxon qau'ma.
"A great and
mighty wonder,
The festal makes secure:
The Virgin bears the
Infant
With Virgin-honor pure.
The Word is made
incarnate,
And yet remains on high:
And cherubim sing
anthems
To shepherds from the sky.
And we with them
triumphant
Repeat the hymn again:
’To God on high be glory,
And peace on earth to men!’
While thus they sing
your Monarch,
Those bright angelic bands,
Rejoice, ye vales
and mountains!
Ye oceans, clap your hands!
Since all He comes
to ransom,
By all be He adored,
The Infant born in
Bethlehem,
The Saviour and the Lord!
Now idol forms shall
perish,
All error shall decay,
And Christ shall wield His sceptre,
Our Lord and God for aye."
Another specimen of a Christmas
hymn by the same, commencing ejn Bhqleevm:
"In Bethlehem
is He born!
Maker of all things,
everlasting God!
He opens Eden’s gate,
Monarch of
ages! Thence the fiery sword
Gives glorious passage; thence,
The severing
mid-wall overthrown, the powers
Of earth and Heaven are one;
Angels and men renew
their ancient league,
The pure rejoin the pure,
In happy union! Now the Virgin-womb
Like some cherubic throne
Containeth Him, the
Uncontainable:
Bears Him, whom while they bear
The seraphs tremble!
bears Him, as He comes
To shower upon the world
The fulness of His
everlasting love!
One more on Christ calming the
storm, zofera'" trikumiva", as reproduced by Neale:
"Fierce was the
wild billow
Dark was the night;
Oars labor’d
heavily;
Foam glimmer’d white;
Mariners trembled
Peril was nigh;
Then said the God of
God
_’Peace! It is I.’
Ridge of the
mountain-wave,
Lower thy crest!
Wail of Euroclydon,
Be thou at rest!
Peril can none be_
Sorrow must fly
Where saith the
Light of Light,
_’Peace! It is I.’
Jesu,
Deliverer!
Come Thou to me:
Soothe Thou my
voyaging
Over life’s sea!
Thou, when the storm
of death
Roars, sweeping by,
Whisper, O Truth of
Truth!
- ’Peace! It is I.’ "
§ 115. The Latin Hymn.
More important than the Greek
hymnology is the Latin from the fourth to the sixteenth century. Smaller in
compass, it surpasses it in artless simplicity and truth, and in richness,
vigor, and fulness of thought, and is much more akin to the Protestant spirit.
With objective churchly character it combines deeper feeling and more
subjective appropriation and experience of salvation, and hence more warmth and
fervor than the Greek. It forms in these respects the transition to the
Evangelical hymn, which gives the most beautiful and profound expression to the
personal enjoyment of the Saviour and his redeeming grace. The best Latin hymns
have come through the Roman Breviary into general use, and through translations
and reproductions have become naturalized in Protestant churches. They treat
for the most part of the great facts of salvation and the fundamental doctrines
of Christianity. But many of them are devoted to the praises of Mary and the
martyrs, and vitiated with superstitions.
In the Latin church, as in the
Greek, heretics gave a wholesome impulse to poetical activity. The two
patriarchs of Latin church poetry, Hilary and Ambrose, were the champions of
orthodoxy against Arianism in the West.
The genius of Christianity
exerted an influence, partly liberating, partly transforming, upon the Latin
language and versification. Poetry in its youthful vigor is like an impetuous
mountain torrent, which knows no bounds and breaks through all obstacles; but
in its riper form it restrains itself and becomes truly free in
self-limitation; it assumes a symmetrical, well-regulated motion and combines
it with periodical rest. This is rhythm, which came to its perfection in the
poetry of Greece and Rome. But the laws of metre were an undue restraint to the
new Christian spirit which required a new form. The Latin poetry of the church
has a language of its own, a grammar of its own, a prosody of its own, and a
beauty of its own, and in freshness, vigor, and melody even surpasses the Latin
poetry of the classics. It had to cast away all the helps of the mythological
fables, but drew a purer and richer inspiration from the sacred history and
poetry of the Bible, and the heroic age of Christianity. But it had first to
pass through a state of barbarism like the Romanic languages of the South of
Europe in their transition from the old Latin. We observe the Latin language
under the influence of the youthful and hopeful religion of Christ, as at the
breath of a second spring, putting forth fresh blossoms and flowers and
clothing itself with a new garment of beauty, old words assuming new and deeper
meanings, obsolete words reviving, new words forming. In all this there is much
to offend a fastidious classical taste, yet the losses are richly compensated
by the gains. Christianity at its triumph in the Roman empire found the
classical Latin rapidly approaching its decay and dissolution; in the course of
time it brought out of its ashes a new creation.
The classical system of prosody
was gradually loosened, and accent substituted for quantity. Rhyme, unknown to
the ancients as a system or rule, was introduced in the middle or at the end of
the verse, giving the song a lyrical character, and thus a closer affinity with
music. For the hymns were to be sung in the churches. This accented and rhymed
poetry was at first, indeed, very imperfect, yet much better adapted to the
freedom, depth, and warmth of the Christian spirit, than the stereotyped,
stiff, and cold measure of the heathen classics.1245 Quantity is a more or less arbitrary and artificial device;
accent, or the emphasizing of one syllable in a polysyllabic word, is natural
and popular, and commends itself to the ear. Ambrose and his followers, with
happy instinct, chose for their hymns the Iambic dimeter, which is the least
metrical and the most rhythmical of all the ancient metres. The tendency to euphonious
rhyme went hand in hand with the accented rhythm, and this tendency appears
occasionally in its crude beginnings in Hilary and Ambrose, but more fully in
Damasus, the proper father of this improvement.
Rhyme is not the invention of
either a barbaric or an overcivilized age, but appears more or less in almost
all nations, languages, and grades of culture. Like rhythm it springs from the
natural esthetic sense of proportion, euphony, limitation, and periodic return.1246 It is found here and there, even in the oldest popular poetry of
republican Rome, that of Ennius, for example.1247 It occurs not rarely in the prose even of Cicero, and especially
of St. Augustine, who delights in ingenious alliterations and verbal
antitheses, like patet and latet, spes and res, fides<