HIST-102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 41: Irene Of Athens, Reccared I, Filioque
Document Summary
God"s truth can be known only through the holy scriptures. But the very fact that images are not divine frees them from strictures on what they may or may not represent; human artistic expression, like human will, is entirely free. The dispute over icons was not the only doctrinal issue to come before the court: it even issued edicts about the nature of the holy trinity. From at least the fourth century, latin and greek christians had opposing ideas about the three-inone nature of god. The arian heresy was largely responsible for this; since the confrontation with arianism necessitated further refinements of the basic orthodox position established at the council of nicaea. The greeks had developed the position that the trinity is indeed a union of three inseparable persons but that these persons act, and interact, in a particular way.