I have a quick question for any non-Catholics.
I know that in the Catholic tradition, alongside the Orthodox Church traditions, place the veneration of relics and the bodies of various saints (and any remaining body parts also, including bone fragments) to be of great importance.
Code:
What does the non-Catholic/Orthodox church actually teach regarding relics and their veneration? I certainly was never told anything whilst in my Baptist churches, and I've never come across any sort of material which talk about them.
The question is much more vast.
Let’s see whether I can put 3000 years of history in short.
We think of God in many ways but I highlight 2: God transcendent and God Immanent. In Genesis, it is called Elohim(the one who said one word and Light, Earth, the Universe all was done) and Yahweh(the one close to us, that make man with his hands, that walked in Paradise enjoying the breeze of the afternoon).
Now, when God called Abraham, he chose a People who, among polytheists (look: many idols (idol means image)), would be His People and know God as the Only One, see the wonderful Shemaa. (Islam took this idea and does not allow images)
Now, Jews are forbidden to represent God as it would be confused with idols. We see the Old Testament full of the fight polytheists and the Monotheist Jews.
Jesus came and no more God was the Transcendent, the unattainable One. He took our shape, the shape of Man. People could touch Him, and we still eat His Body and drink His Blood.
So, since the catacombs, we see images, the fish (Ἰησοῦς Χριστός, Θεοῦ Υἱός, Σωτήρ), the good shepherd, and so on. So it went on, and it was not a discovery of the Eastern Churches. Then came the the Iconoclasts (see
here). they came in the ideology of God Eloist, you should not have icons for you were “adoring idols” and “you cannot despict God”.
I realize that Eastern Churches exaggerate a little bit in the question of the number of images, but that is not heresy, it is taste. I have got a theory that hot countries (India, Italy) have a very colorful taste and cold countries (Germany, Japan) have more linear and simple (IKEA!) designs.
See lorries in India.
There were wars and people died with the iconoclasts and with Reformation that put the hot countries of the south against the cold countries of the north it was the same. The cold countries did not understand the proliferation of images and so abolished them as protestant do. It is interesting how cold countries are protestant and abolished images.
Is it right or not? It depends on taste. My children have got posters of Bayern players in the wall and singers and surf. I gave a little money to Mother Teresa of Calcutta and She sent a postal thanking an with her signature. My wife framed it. But my wife framed also her great-grandmother’s marriage veil.
Why both? Because she loved both: the ancestor and Mother Theresa. That’s why: we love them, our saints.
Of course times change, and sincerely, relics of bones and hair are not for me. But in the old times, it was OK. A question of taste.