Interpretation of Sophia the Wisdom of God in Russian Philosophical Sophiology

The article opens a number of studies devoted to the theme of Sophia the Wisdom of God in the history of Russian Christian fine art and sacred architecture. The Cathedral of Veliky Novgorod, built in the 11th century, is one of the oldest religious buildings dedicated to St. Sophia. The question abo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sergey Zolotarev
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Yaroslav-the-Wise Novgorod State University 2022-12-01
Series:Визуальная теология
Subjects:
Online Access:https://visualtheology.ru/index.php/journal/article/view/86
_version_ 1811175639557865472
author Sergey Zolotarev
author_facet Sergey Zolotarev
author_sort Sergey Zolotarev
collection DOAJ
description The article opens a number of studies devoted to the theme of Sophia the Wisdom of God in the history of Russian Christian fine art and sacred architecture. The Cathedral of Veliky Novgorod, built in the 11th century, is one of the oldest religious buildings dedicated to St. Sophia. The question about the name of the Novgorod cathedral a few centuries after its construction caused a theological discussion, and in the 19th and 20th centuries brought to life religious and philosophical Russian trend – the tradition of Sophiology. The icon of Sophia the Wisdom, which occupies a completely unique place in the history of Russian iconography, has not yet received a generally accepted interpretation. Various philosophical theories aimed at explaining the content of this icon, as well as at reconstructing the meaning of the very name of Sophia the Wisdom, are explored in this article. For Vladimir Solovyov, Sophia is the personification of the unity of cosmos, a character in his mystical poetry and a mythological “Soul of the World” within the framework of his philosophy of unity. The priest Pavel Florensky describes Sophia as the divine nature of all living beings, the “ideal personality of the world”, often merging with the Mother of God in minds of people. Sergei Bulgakov connects Sophia with the divine essence of the Trinity, and with the highest principle of the world order, and with the angel. All these philosophers try to arbitrarily interpret the plot of the icon of St. Sophia and the name of Russian churches in honor of St. Sophia to substantiate their religious and philosophical concepts, which are far from Christian orthodoxy.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T19:39:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-8bb3019f84e2402e9fe1ab3b50da3b1f
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2713-1610
2713-1955
language deu
last_indexed 2024-04-10T19:39:58Z
publishDate 2022-12-01
publisher Yaroslav-the-Wise Novgorod State University
record_format Article
series Визуальная теология
spelling doaj.art-8bb3019f84e2402e9fe1ab3b50da3b1f2023-01-29T14:40:40ZdeuYaroslav-the-Wise Novgorod State UniversityВизуальная теология2713-16102713-19552022-12-0142170181https://doi.org/10.34680/vistheo-2022-4-2-170-181Interpretation of Sophia the Wisdom of God in Russian Philosophical SophiologySergey Zolotarev0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5257-6306Saint Petersburg Theological AcademyThe article opens a number of studies devoted to the theme of Sophia the Wisdom of God in the history of Russian Christian fine art and sacred architecture. The Cathedral of Veliky Novgorod, built in the 11th century, is one of the oldest religious buildings dedicated to St. Sophia. The question about the name of the Novgorod cathedral a few centuries after its construction caused a theological discussion, and in the 19th and 20th centuries brought to life religious and philosophical Russian trend – the tradition of Sophiology. The icon of Sophia the Wisdom, which occupies a completely unique place in the history of Russian iconography, has not yet received a generally accepted interpretation. Various philosophical theories aimed at explaining the content of this icon, as well as at reconstructing the meaning of the very name of Sophia the Wisdom, are explored in this article. For Vladimir Solovyov, Sophia is the personification of the unity of cosmos, a character in his mystical poetry and a mythological “Soul of the World” within the framework of his philosophy of unity. The priest Pavel Florensky describes Sophia as the divine nature of all living beings, the “ideal personality of the world”, often merging with the Mother of God in minds of people. Sergei Bulgakov connects Sophia with the divine essence of the Trinity, and with the highest principle of the world order, and with the angel. All these philosophers try to arbitrarily interpret the plot of the icon of St. Sophia and the name of Russian churches in honor of St. Sophia to substantiate their religious and philosophical concepts, which are far from Christian orthodoxy.https://visualtheology.ru/index.php/journal/article/view/86russian religious philosophysophiologyst. sophia the wisdom of godiconcathedralvladimir solovyovpavel florenskysergei bulgakov
spellingShingle Sergey Zolotarev
Interpretation of Sophia the Wisdom of God in Russian Philosophical Sophiology
Визуальная теология
russian religious philosophy
sophiology
st. sophia the wisdom of god
icon
cathedral
vladimir solovyov
pavel florensky
sergei bulgakov
title Interpretation of Sophia the Wisdom of God in Russian Philosophical Sophiology
title_full Interpretation of Sophia the Wisdom of God in Russian Philosophical Sophiology
title_fullStr Interpretation of Sophia the Wisdom of God in Russian Philosophical Sophiology
title_full_unstemmed Interpretation of Sophia the Wisdom of God in Russian Philosophical Sophiology
title_short Interpretation of Sophia the Wisdom of God in Russian Philosophical Sophiology
title_sort interpretation of sophia the wisdom of god in russian philosophical sophiology
topic russian religious philosophy
sophiology
st. sophia the wisdom of god
icon
cathedral
vladimir solovyov
pavel florensky
sergei bulgakov
url https://visualtheology.ru/index.php/journal/article/view/86
work_keys_str_mv AT sergeyzolotarev interpretationofsophiathewisdomofgodinrussianphilosophicalsophiology