Origins, Meaning, and Global Dissemination of Icons as Windows to Heaven in the Byzantine Orthodox Tradition
Icons and the Bible Message in the Past and Present: Origins, Meaning, and Global Dissemination of Icons as Windows to Heaven in the Byzantine Orthodox Tradition
Through a series of educational panels featuring leading scholars and clergy, this program aims to deepen public understanding of the spiritual and cultural significance of Byzantine icons. Throughout 2026, these discussions will illuminate the Orthodox traditions contributions to sacred art and foster appreciation for its historical and theological context.
This panel will address the origins of the icon as central to the history of Christianity and to the transmission of the message and teachings of the Bible. The panel will explore the deep wellsprings of iconography, or, the writing of the Bible, in the Byzantine Orthodox Christian experience. With historical analysis and illustrative examples, the panel will introduce the ways through which the breathtakingly beautiful tradition of Byzantine iconography has disseminated the Bible worldwide, through a sacred aesthetic that describes icons as a window to heaven. Drawing on their respective expertise in the nature and practice of Orthodox theology and the relationship between monastic practice and the visual arts in the Christian East, the scholars on this panel will introduce the crucial role of icons globally for understanding, apprehending, and living the biblical message.
This panel is the first in a series that is part of the icon exhibition, Revealing the Hidden: Byzantine Icons from Thessaloniki and Patmos, that will bring extraordinary icons to the museum from November 2026 through February 2027, from two holy, stavropegial monasteries of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, Vlatadon Monastery in Thessaloniki and the Monastery of St. John the Theologian on Patmos. This exhibition celebrates the 35th anniversary of the enthronement of His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I.
Header image accreditation:
Icon of the Hospitality of Abraham, end of 15th century. © The Holy Monastery of Vlatadon, ThessalonikiHellenic Ministry of Culture/Ephorate of Antiquities of Thessaloniki City, 2026.