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  2. Religious images in Christian theology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_images_in...

    Religious images in Christian theology have a role within the liturgical and devotional life of adherents of certain Christian denominations. The use of religious images has often been a contentious issue in Christian history. Concern over idolatry is the driving force behind the various traditions of aniconism in Christianity.

  3. Catholic art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_art

    Christian art is nearly as old as Christianity itself. The oldest Christian sculptures are from Roman sarcophagi, dating to the beginning of the 2nd century. As a persecuted sect, however, the earliest Christian images were arcane and meant to be intelligible only to the initiated.

  4. List of canonically crowned images - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_canonically...

    The following list enumerates a selection of Marian, Josephian, and Christological images venerated in the Roman Catholic Church, authorised by a Pope who has officially granted a papal bull of Pontifical coronation to be carried out either by the Pontiff, his papal legate or a papal nuncio.

  5. Marian art in the Catholic Church - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marian_art_in_the_Catholic...

    The Madonna of humility by Domenico di Bartolo 1433 has been described as one of the most innovative devotional images from the early Renaissance [35]. Catholic Marian art has expressed a wide range of theological topics that relate to Mary, often in ways that are far from obvious, and whose meaning can only be recovered by detailed scholarly analysis.

  6. Stations of the Cross - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stations_of_the_Cross

    The objective of the stations is to help the Christian faithful to make a spiritual pilgrimage through contemplation of the Passion of Christ. It has become one of the most popular devotions and the stations can be found in many Western Christian churches, including those in the Roman Catholic, [1] Lutheran, [2] [3] Anglican, [4] and Methodist ...

  7. Icon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icon

    Such images functioned as powerful relics as well as icons, and their images were naturally seen as authoritative as to the true appearance of the subject: naturally and especially because of the reluctance to accept mere human productions as embodying anything of the divine, a commonplace of Christian deprecation of man-made "idols". Like ...

  8. Depiction of Jesus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Depiction_of_Jesus

    The establishment of these images as Catholic devotions traces back to Sister Marie of St Peter and the Venerable Leo Dupont who started and promoted them from 1844 to 1874 in Tours France, and Sister Maria Pierina De Micheli who associated the image from the Shroud of Turin with the devotion in 1936 in Milan Italy.

  9. Religious image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_image

    Images flourished within the Christian world, but by the 6th century, certain factions arose within the Eastern Church to challenge the use of icons, and in 726-30 they won Imperial support. [ citation needed ] The Iconoclasts actively destroyed icons in most public places, replacing them with the only religious depiction allowed, the cross .