P
pablope
Guest
First…let me ask, what do you mean by idolatry? What is idolatry to you?I gave my opinion and it is my opinion, regarding the video of what was presented. My last response was edited to include: For the record, I think there are those in all denominations that get at least some things wrong. I have no opinion what the net result of those mistakes would be.
I never said that I was judging the Catholic Church on a few and I thought I made it very clear, respectfully that I didn’t think that.
My only points were that it appeared to me that some had taken things a bit too far and it is my opinion that it was Idolatry. I think it went beyond what the church and most of her members believe is correct.
Peace be with you
And…I think what you see as idolatry…is more a belief in relics. We believe those statues have no power on their own, but are channels of God’s grace.
There is wide gulf in catholic practice and lingo when compared to that of protestants.
The belief in relics is ancient, is rooted in Jewish roots and the OT:
calledtocommunion.com/201…ption-of-mary/
The first real blow to this interpretation came when I read Peter Brown’s book, The Cult of Saints: Its Rise and Function in Latin Christianity.
Brown challenged my view that the place of saints and relics in the church was a mere holdover from paganism, and that the practice was somehow peripheral to true Christianity. Instead, Brown painted a picture of ancient Christianity and paganism in which relics were indispensable to the former, and repulsive to the latter. Far from a holdover from paganism, the place of relics in the Church appeared as something intensely Jewish, Hebraic, and Old Testament. Pagans, like Julian-the-Apostate, found the practice revolting and legislated against it. (Paganism, with its notions of ritual purity, had strictly delimited the realm of divine worship and neatly separated it from the realm of corpses and the dead.)
Peter Brown:
On this point, the rise of Christianity in the pagan world was met by deep religious anger. We can chart the rise to prominence of the Christian church most faithfully by listening to pagan reactions to the cult of martyrs. For the progress of this cult spelled out for the pagans a slow and horrid crumbling of ancient barriers.1
Brown and others have shown that these practices continued in Judaism into the era of the New Testament, and of the Midrash and Talmud. Especially important in this regard is J. Jeremias’s untranslated work, Heiligengräber in Jesu Umwelt. (Göttingen, 1958) Jeremias shows that this cult was both extremely important to Jews, and of great significance for the development of the relic cult in early Christianity. Likewise, Josef W. Meri in The Cult of Saints among Muslims and Jews in Medieval Syria shows that the Jewish practice continued with Jews in Babylon, Syrian, North Africa, and elsewhere, and included pilgrimages to the tombs not only of Biblical figures, but even more contemporary “saints,” like Maimonides. Cultic visits to the resting place of the ancestors continue in Israel to this day.
Why?
Why did the Jews believe and practice such things? And why were Christians so amenable? There are two important Hebraic and biblical concepts to understand: that of the Zaddiqim (or saints) and the doctrine of zekhut avot (or merits of the ancestors).
Zaddiqim:
In Judaism, the Zaddiqim are the “Holy Men of Old” who are given special powers because of their close relationship to God. Think of Moses with his Shekinah glory, and of Elijah with all his miracles. As we saw from the passage of 2 Kings, these powers were understood to endure after death. And, given the Hebrew view of the body, its sanctity, and dignity, and the concomitant belief in resurrection, it is no wonder that these powers were believed to inhere even in the flesh.
The key to the New Testament doctrine of the saints is not to destroy the older Hebraic doctrine of shared merit and responsibility, but to elevate it to an even greater place. Through Christ, and because of his infinite merits, the finite merits of the saints can now take on an eternal significance. This is why, far from detracting from Christ, the Christian belief in the intercession of saints enhances, fulfills, and completes the doctrine of Christ’s infinite and sufficient intercession.