Darron Steele
New Member
Correct. Orthodox and Catholic worship-like veneration of images is not idolatry when done according to the guidelines of their leaderships. The images are considered `worship aids' in worship of the one true God.Aash said:As for the “graven image” of Exodus 20:4: what God was forbidding was idolatry: making a stone or block of wood God. The Jews were forbidden to have idols (like all their neighbors had), and God told them not to make an image of Him because He revealed Himself as a spirit. The KJV and RSV Bible versions use the term graven image at Exodus 20:4, but many of the more recent translations render the word as idol (e.g., NASB, NRSV, NIV, CEV). Context makes it very clear that idolatry is being condemned. The next verse states: “You shall not bow down to them or worship them” (NIV, NRSV).
In other words, mere blocks of stone or wood ("them") are not to be worshiped, as that is gross idolatry, and the inanimate objects are not God. This does not absolutely preclude, however, the notion of an icon, where God is worshiped with the help of a visual aid.
Idolatry is a matter of disobedience in the heart towards the one true God. ....
However, Exodus 20:4-5a says "Thou shalt not make unto thee a graven image, nor any manner of likeness, of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; thou shalt not bow down unto them, nor serve them" (JPS 1917).
I believe that this prohibition would include images of Jesus Christ, or of the Father, or of the Holy Spirit, or of people believed to have special favor before the Lord. Orthodox and Catholic use of religious images may not be idolatry, but it is still wrong.
The practice does not appear in records from or about the New Testament-era church either. The reason for that is that it was not practiced. They knew it would have been wrong.