L
Lischou
Guest
Ok Brian, good answer as pertains to your not being “certain” of your own interpretation. Let me see if I can refine that question just a bit more. How do you know when you have arrived at a correct intrepretation of any given passage/reading? Especially since you are limited in what materials you can use in order to help you understand the scriptures…at least, I will assume this point at the moment based on your unwillingness to accept Webster’s definition of a word/phrase on account of the fact that Christ himself did not have access to this source. If approached from this angle, then no other source/scholar could be used to help shed light on the Bible. Now granted, I don’t go to Webster’s for every definition from the Bible; its function was not specifically designed for that purpose. However, graven image is not that difficult to define.
I’m not an OT expert, either, as you say. And you are exactly right, graven images are a very hot topic in the Old Testament. It’s so “hot” that God chose to make it one of His commandments (Ex.20:4). If one were to look at just that one passage, it might seem that “carving” an image, “sculpting” an image, “painting” an image, etc. would violate God’s command…even more so if one were to put that image/replica into one’s place of worship. How then, I ask you, could God make this one of the top ten and at the same time, a couple of chapters away, turn around and say, “You shall make a propitiatory of pure gold, two cubits and a half long, and one and a half cubits wide. Make two cherubim of beaten gold for the two ends of the propitiatory, fastening them so that one cherub springs direct from each end. The cherubim shall have their wings spread out above, covering the propitiatory with them; they shall be turned toward each other, but with their faces looking toward the propitiatory. This propitiatory you shall then place on top of the ark.” (Ex. 25:17-22). God has now commanded Isreal to make two angels (images) out of beaten gold (graven).
And where did God command them to place this ark with the two angels of beaten gold on it…in the Holy of Holies inside the temple (Ex.40:1-6). Why would God forbid graven images in his commandments and then command the making of graven images for the very container, the ark, of the commandents? Is it possible that graven image does not mean all images created/made?
Furthermore, how then do we explain (in light of the 10 commandments and graven images being forbidden) the story of the bronze serpent in Numbers 21:4 - 9? Just look upon it and you’ll be healed? Curious… Even more so, using that “graven image” from the Old Testament to teach and instruct in the New (John 3:14).
Perhaps Jesus (the Jewish man and our Savior) did define this point for us, so that there would be no need for us to try and discern from 2000 years away what he might think about our use of crucifixes/crosses, etc. He summed it up this way (something I know you are familiar with), “You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.” (Matt.22:34-40). Christ goes on to describe this, in conjunction with the Golden Rule, as being the summation of the “whole law and the prophets.”
If one loves someone/something to that extent (heart, soul, mind) that then is worship. God never commanded that kind of devotion for the cherubim on the cover for the ark, or for the bronze serpent. He did command the Isrealites (Jews) to make them and use them, and in the case of the ark - as a part of their worship, not as the object of their worship.
Interesting, huh?
Lisa
I’m not an OT expert, either, as you say. And you are exactly right, graven images are a very hot topic in the Old Testament. It’s so “hot” that God chose to make it one of His commandments (Ex.20:4). If one were to look at just that one passage, it might seem that “carving” an image, “sculpting” an image, “painting” an image, etc. would violate God’s command…even more so if one were to put that image/replica into one’s place of worship. How then, I ask you, could God make this one of the top ten and at the same time, a couple of chapters away, turn around and say, “You shall make a propitiatory of pure gold, two cubits and a half long, and one and a half cubits wide. Make two cherubim of beaten gold for the two ends of the propitiatory, fastening them so that one cherub springs direct from each end. The cherubim shall have their wings spread out above, covering the propitiatory with them; they shall be turned toward each other, but with their faces looking toward the propitiatory. This propitiatory you shall then place on top of the ark.” (Ex. 25:17-22). God has now commanded Isreal to make two angels (images) out of beaten gold (graven).
And where did God command them to place this ark with the two angels of beaten gold on it…in the Holy of Holies inside the temple (Ex.40:1-6). Why would God forbid graven images in his commandments and then command the making of graven images for the very container, the ark, of the commandents? Is it possible that graven image does not mean all images created/made?
Furthermore, how then do we explain (in light of the 10 commandments and graven images being forbidden) the story of the bronze serpent in Numbers 21:4 - 9? Just look upon it and you’ll be healed? Curious… Even more so, using that “graven image” from the Old Testament to teach and instruct in the New (John 3:14).
Perhaps Jesus (the Jewish man and our Savior) did define this point for us, so that there would be no need for us to try and discern from 2000 years away what he might think about our use of crucifixes/crosses, etc. He summed it up this way (something I know you are familiar with), “You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.” (Matt.22:34-40). Christ goes on to describe this, in conjunction with the Golden Rule, as being the summation of the “whole law and the prophets.”
If one loves someone/something to that extent (heart, soul, mind) that then is worship. God never commanded that kind of devotion for the cherubim on the cover for the ark, or for the bronze serpent. He did command the Isrealites (Jews) to make them and use them, and in the case of the ark - as a part of their worship, not as the object of their worship.
Interesting, huh?
Lisa