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The invisible God : the earliest Christians on art / Paul Corby Finney.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: New York : Oxford University Press, 1994.Description: 1 online resource (xxviii, 319 pages) : illustrationsContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 0585181462
  • 9780585181462
  • 1423758544
  • 9781423758549
  • 9786610443413
  • 6610443416
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: Invisible God.DDC classification:
  • 246/.2 20
LOC classification:
  • BV150 .F56 1994eb
Other classification:
  • 20.63
  • BO 2280
Online resources:
Contents:
The history of interpretation -- The apologists' attack on Greek art: history and literature -- The content of the attack on Greek art -- The emperor's image -- Christianity before 200: invisibility and adaptation -- The earliest Christian art -- Invisible divinity and visible religion.
Summary: This is a study of early Christian (first three centuries C.E.) attitudes toward art. The traditional view is that the early Christians produced no art because they were opposed in principle to visual images. When Christian art finally does appear, it has been considered a popular development and a decline from earlier, more austere spiritual values. Corby Finney here refutes these traditional understandings, through a close examination of the archaeological and literary evidence in its cultural and social context. He finds that it was primarily the Christian belief in the invisibility of God that inhibited the production of images, rather than opposition to images as such. A contributory factor, he believes was the relative invisibility of the Christians themselves within Roman society. Christina art "came out" chiefly when the Christian acquired a legal status and the capacity to own property and to build (and hence to decorate) places of worship. Before this, says Finney, very little differentiated the Christians from society at large, and certainly not outward signs. When they did use decorated material objects (seals and lamps) they drew on symbols already in use.; Offering an important corrective to prevailing views about early Christianity, this study will be of great importance not only to scholars and students of Christian theology and history, but to art historians as well.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Print version record.

The history of interpretation -- The apologists' attack on Greek art: history and literature -- The content of the attack on Greek art -- The emperor's image -- Christianity before 200: invisibility and adaptation -- The earliest Christian art -- Invisible divinity and visible religion.

This is a study of early Christian (first three centuries C.E.) attitudes toward art. The traditional view is that the early Christians produced no art because they were opposed in principle to visual images. When Christian art finally does appear, it has been considered a popular development and a decline from earlier, more austere spiritual values. Corby Finney here refutes these traditional understandings, through a close examination of the archaeological and literary evidence in its cultural and social context. He finds that it was primarily the Christian belief in the invisibility of God that inhibited the production of images, rather than opposition to images as such. A contributory factor, he believes was the relative invisibility of the Christians themselves within Roman society. Christina art "came out" chiefly when the Christian acquired a legal status and the capacity to own property and to build (and hence to decorate) places of worship. Before this, says Finney, very little differentiated the Christians from society at large, and certainly not outward signs. When they did use decorated material objects (seals and lamps) they drew on symbols already in use.; Offering an important corrective to prevailing views about early Christianity, this study will be of great importance not only to scholars and students of Christian theology and history, but to art historians as well.

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