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27lw
Guest
Thanks for the clarification @Vico and @(name removed by moderator)!
Actually that’s the claim that a lot of other religions make ABOUT Catholics, not a claim that we go around making about Buddhists, Hindus, etc.Despite the constant claims to the contrary I see on CAF I have yet to see any evidence at all, outside scriptural claims about golden calves, that anyone, anywhere has ever worshipped any statue or similar object believing the object to be itself a god rather than the residence of a god, or as a symbol of a god.
Not sure where you live, but I see it all the time at every Marian shrine ever.I don’t think Catholics really bow towards the statue and make a show of reverence to the actual statue the way that lady is doing.
Thank you for these interesting points but they do not respond to my question. Do you have an example of anyone worshipping and object?
Driscoll, J.T. (1909). Fetishism. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. Retrieved October 14, 2020 from New Advent: http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06052b.htmMenzies (History of Religion, p. 129) holds that primitive man, like the untutored savage of today, in worshipping a tree, a snake, or an idol, worshipped the very objects themselves.
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Fetishism contents itself with particular objects in which it is supposed a spirit has for a longer or a shorter time taken up its abode. In spiritism, spirits are not bound up with certain objects, but may change their mode of revelation …
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A fetish may be an image, e.g. the New Zealand wakapakoko, or not, but the divine power or spirit is supposed to be wholly incorporated in it. Farnell says an image may be viewed as a symbol, or as infused with divine power, or as the divinity itself. Idolatry in this sense is a higher form of fetishism.
“Inca”.Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Online.Encyclopædia Britannica Inc., 2017The Inca religion combined features of animism, fetishism, and the worship of nature gods. The pantheon was headed by Inti, the sun god, and included also Viracocha, a creator god and culture hero, and Apu Illapu, the rain god.