Canonum De Lex Ecclesium
Canons of Ecclesiastical Law

one heaven iconIII.   Sacred

3.1 Sacred Form

Article 63 - Sacred Art

Canon 3881 (link)

Sacred art is defined as some kind of object depicting imagery considered sacred by one or more Religions and Cult. The Sacred art itself may also be venerated as sacred.

Canon 3882 (link)

The oldest and most important Sacred Art are those abstract carvings, paintings and drawings variously known as Rock Art by the ancestors of Homo Sapiens and related species such as Neanderthals found in caves and rocky grottos throughout the world.

Canon 3883 (link)

The uniform characteristics of Rock Art, including the unmistakable and obvious reproduction of imagery associated with Halluciogenic Entoptic Phenomena permits the logical conclusion that the earliest Sacred Art was associated not only with the earliest religious ceremonies but the consumption of hallucinogenic substances.

Canon 3884 (link)

Halluciogenic Entoptic Phenomena is the consistent distortions of the human optic system from the eyeball to the cortex when one or more powerful hallucinogens have been consumed. These naturally occurring and universally consistent distortions include lattice and expanding hexagonal patterns, parallel lines, dots and short flecks, zig-zag lines and serpents, triangles and more complex geometric shapes.

Canon 3885 (link)

The reproduction and interpretation of universally consistent distortions of Halluciogenic Entoptic Phenomena is also a feature of the earliest Sacred Art of the earliest civilizations, especially Sumarian, Akkadian, Egyptian and Asian civilizations, while Sacred Art evolved past the literal of these phenomena in sacred Ireland and ancient Europe under the influence of the Cuilliaéan, also known as the Holly, also known as the Da’vid and Druvid.

Canon 3886 (link)

Since the 11th century and the appearance of the Roman Cult, also known as the Vatican, also known as the Roman Catholic Church, Sacred Art has become focused primarily on idolatry, whereby any idols created for worship for the ignorant followers of the Cult are renamed “sacramentals”, while any idol artwork not approved by the Cult is slandered as “idolatry”.