Embodied Holiness: A Contemporary Theological Appraisal of St. John Damascene on the Veneration of Saints and Relics

Authors

Okigbo, Ferdinand Chukwunwike

Department of Philosophy, Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu University, Igbariam (Nigeria)

Article Information

DOI: 10.51244/IJRSI.2026.13010115

Subject Category: Social science

Volume/Issue: 13/1 | Page No: 1310-1322

Publication Timeline

Submitted: 2026-01-07

Accepted: 2026-01-12

Published: 2026-02-06

Abstract

This research offers a critical and ecumenically framed theological appraisal of St. John Damascene’s doctrine of the veneration of saints and relics, examining its coherence, limits, and contemporary relevance within a plural Christian context. While deeply rooted in patristic tradition, this doctrine has remained contested, particularly within Protestant and secular frameworks that regard relic devotion as superstitious or as a displacement of Christ’s unique mediatorship. Rather than reproducing Damascene’s teaching as confessional apologetics, the study reconstructs his theology within its eighth-century Byzantine context, situates it within broader patristic and sacramental anthropology, and tests its coherence against Protestant and secular objections. Methodologically, the article adopts a qualitative historical-theological and comparative approach, combining close textual analysis of De Fide Orthodoxa (Book IV, Chapter XV) with engagement in patristic scholarship, contemporary sacramental theology, and ecumenical perspectives. The analysis examines Damascene’s incarnational anthropology, his theology of embodied holiness, and his logic of material mediation, while critically engaging concerns about idolatry, superstition, devotional excess, and the instrumentalization of sacred objects. It argues that Damascene’s theology becomes theologically viable when reframed within a symbolic and sacramental grammar rather than a magical or sensationalist one, and that relic veneration can be interpreted as a sacramental sign of embodied holiness, ecclesial memory, and the continuity of divine grace in material reality. From an ecumenical standpoint, the research proposes that Damascene’s theology need not function as a confessional imposition but as a conceptual resource for contemporary theological reflection on embodiment, holiness, and the communion of saints across Christian traditions.

Keywords

Veneration of Saints, Relics, Embodied Holiness, Incarnational Anthropology

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