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the Eucharistic bread, art historians, theologians and historians argue that the leaven debate was
dogmatically irrelevant, serving only as a pretext in a church political conflict. Accordingly, recent
scholarly consensus is that there were multiple factors – liturgical, theological and social – which
influenced Byzantine sanctuary iconography after the first Millennium, amongst which the Anti-
Latin Eucharistic debate is one, but definitely not the most important.
In this paper, I challenge this stance and suggest a reconsideration of the so-called Azyme
Controversy: although it seemingly touched upon only formal and ritual questions, it was a complex
debate which brought to the surface some fundamental disagreements between the West and the
East regarding the Eucharist. An overlooked aspect of the Azyme Controversy revolved around the
principal Byzantine concept of Christ’s Life-giving body as the source of deification of man. The
foundations of this doctrine was elaborated by Cyril of Alexandria and constituted the basis of the
Eucharistic theology of Symeon the New Theologian, whose biographer and follower was Niketas
Stethatos, a protagonist of the leaven debate. Consequently, what the Byzantines defended in this
symbolical debate is their doctrine of theosis which is inseparably intertwined with the Eucharist
in Symeon’s theology: the leaven is the soul “in the dough of our human nature” which was taken
by Christ to deify the human nature completely. So the unleavened Host cannot be an antitype
of Christ’s body as it is dead, without living force and unable to deify. The texts of the Azyme
Controversy suggest that this debate was not only relevant, but became the main stimulator of
Byzantine theological thought, as well as an important driving force of liturgical and iconographic
developments after 1054.
Accordingly, the principal message of Byzantine and Post-Byzantine apse decoration after the
Schism is that it is only the leavened bread, the life-giving body of Christ which elevates the deified
human nature to the right of the Father. This message is expressed by an emphasized central axis
leading the eye up from the real altar through the painted altar with leavened bread in the centre
of the Communion of the Apostles to the gold-robed Christ of the Ascension. In later decorations,
this central axis is further emphasized by another painted altar: the Church Fathers in the lower
register, hitherto frontally depicted, turn towards it, some holding the scroll with the text of the
Anaphora prayer, others the Eucharistic lance. The Melismos, the naked living Child-Christ on this
altar, strikingly reflects Niketas Stethatos’s words: when Christ’s flesh “being pierced by the lance…
the living and Holy Spirit remained in his deified flesh, which in eating… we live in him”.
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