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Pictures of Christ
John Murray
The question of the propriety
of pictorial representations of the Saviour is one that merits examination. It
must be granted that the worship of Christ is central in our holy faith, and the
thought of the Saviour must in every instance be accompanied with that reverence
which belongs to his worship. We cannot think of him without the apprehension of
the majesty that is his. If we do not entertain the sense of his majesty, then
we are guilty of impiety and we dishonor him.
It will also be granted that the only purpose that could properly be served by a
pictorial representation is that it would convey to us some thought or lesson
representing him, consonant with truth and promotive of worship. Hence the
question is inescapable: is a pictorial representation a legitimate way of
conveying truth regarding him and of contributing to the worship which this
truth should evoke?
We are all aware of the influence exerted on the mind and heart by pictures.
Pictures are powerful media of communication. How suggestive they are for good
or for evil and all the more so when accompanied by the comment of the spoken or
written word! It is futile, therefore, to deny the influence exerted upon mind
and heart by a picture of Christ. And if such is legitimate, the influence
exerted should be one constraining to worship and adoration. To claim any lower
aim as that served by a picture of the Saviour would be contradiction of the
place which he must occupy in thought, affection, and honour.
The plea for the propriety of pictures of Christ is based on the fact that he
was truly man, that he had a human body, that he was visible in his human nature
to the physical senses, and that a picture assists us to take in the stupendous
reality of his incarnation, in a word, that he was made in the likeness of men
and was found in fashion as a man.
Our Lord had a true body. He could have been photographed. A portrait could have
been made of him and, if a good portrait, it would have reproduced his likeness.
Without doubt the disciples in the days of his flesh had a vivid mental image of
Jesus' appearance and they could not but have retained that recollection to the
end of their days. They could never have entertained the thought of him as he
had sojourned with them without something of that mental image and they could
not have entertained it without adoration and worship. The very features which
they remembered would have been part and parcel of their conception of him and
reminiscent of what he had been to them in his humiliation and in the glory of
his resurrection appearance. Much more might be said regarding the significance
for the disciples of Jesus' physical features.
Jesus is also glorified in the body and that body is visible. It will also
become visible to us at his glorious appearing "he will be seen the second time
without sin by those who look for him unto salvation" (Hebrews 9:28).
What then are we to say of pictures of Christ? First of all, it must be said
that we have no data whatsoever on the basis of which to make a pictorial
representation; we have no descriptions of his physical features which would
enable even the most accomplished artist to make an approximate portrait. In
view of the profound influence exerted by a picture, especially on the minds of
young people, we should perceive the peril involved in a portrayal for which
there is no warrant, a portrayal which is the creation of pure imagination. It
may help to point up the folly to ask: what would be the reaction of a disciple,
who had actually seen the Lord in the days of his flesh, to a portrait which
would be the work of imagination on the part of one who had never seen the
Saviour? We can readily detect what his recoil would be.
No impression we have of Jesus should be created without the proper revelatory
data, and every impression, every thought, should evoke worship. Hence, since we
possess no revelatory data for a picture or portrait in the proper sense of the
term, we are precluded from making one or using any that have been made.
Secondly, pictures of Christ are in principle a violation of the second
commandment. A picture of Christ, if it serves any useful purpose, must evoke
some thought or feeling respecting him and, in view of what he is, this thought
or feeling will be worshipful. We cannot avoid making the picture a medium of
worship. But since the materials for this medium of worship are not derived from
the only revelation we possess respecting Jesus, namely, Scripture, the worship
is constrained by a creation of the human mind that has no revelatory warrant.
This is will worship. For the principle of the second commandment is that we are
to worship God only in ways prescribed and authorized by him. It is a grievous
sin to have worship constrained by a human figment, and that is what a picture
of the Saviour involves.
Thirdly, the second commandment forbids bowing down to an image or likeness of
anything in heaven above, or in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under
the earth. A picture of the Saviour purports to be a representation or likeness
of him who is now in heaven or, at least, of him when he sojourned upon the
earth. It is plainly forbidden, therefore, to bow down in worship before such a
representation or likeness. This exposes the iniquity involved in the practice
of exhibiting pictorial representations of the Saviour in places of worship.
When we worship before a picture of our Lord, whether it be in the form of a
mural, or on canvas, or in stained glass, we are doing what the second
commandment expressly forbids. This is rendered all the more apparent when we
bear in mind that the only reason why a picture of him should be exhibited in a
place is the supposition that it contributes to the worship of him who is our
Lord. The practice only demonstrates how insensitive we readily become to the
commandments of God and to the inroads of idolatry. May the Churches of Christ
be awake to the deceptive expedients by which the archenemy ever seeks to
corrupt the worship of the Saviour.
In summary, what is at stake in this question is the unique place which Jesus
Christ as the God-man occupies in our faith and worship and the unique place
which the Scripture occupies as the only revelation, the only medium of
communication, respecting him whom we worship as Lord and Saviour. The incarnate
Word and the written Word are correlative. We dare not use other media of
impression or of sentiment but those of his institution and prescription. Every
thought and impression of him should evoke worship. We worship him with the
Father and the Holy Spirit, one God. To use a likeness of Christ as an aid to
worship is forbidden by the second commandment as much in his case as in that of
the Father and Spirit.
Reprinted from Reformed Herald, February 1961.
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