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Idolatry

Idolatry is the worship of a cult image or "idol" as though it were God.[1][2][3] In Abrahamic religions (namely Judaism, Samaritanism, Christianity, the Baháʼí Faith, and Islam) idolatry connotes the worship of something or someone other than the Abrahamic god as if it were God.[4][5] In these monotheistic religions, idolatry has been considered as the "worship of false gods" and is forbidden by texts such as the Ten Commandments.[4] Other monotheistic religions may apply similar rules.[6]

Moses Indignant at the Golden Calf, painting by William Blake, 1799–1800

For instance, the phrase false god is a derogatory term used in Abrahamic religions to indicate cult images or deities of non-Abrahamic Pagan religions, as well as other competing entities or objects to which particular importance is attributed.[7] Conversely, followers of animistic and polytheistic religions may regard the gods of various monotheistic religions as "false gods" because they do not believe that any real deity possesses the properties ascribed by monotheists to their sole deity. Atheists, who do not believe in any deities, do not usually use the term false god even though that would encompass all deities from the atheist viewpoint. Usage of this term is generally limited to theists, who choose to worship some deity or deities, but not others.[4]

In many Indian religions, which include both theistic and non-theistic branches of Hinduism, Buddhism, and Jainism, idols (murti) are considered as symbolism for the absolute but not the Absolute,[8] or icons of spiritual ideas,[8][9] or the embodiment of the divine.[10] It is a means to focus one's religious pursuits and worship (bhakti).[8][11][9] In the traditional religions of Ancient Egypt, Greece, Rome, Africa, Asia, the Americas and elsewhere, the reverence of cult images or statues has been a common practice since antiquity, and cult images have carried different meanings and significance in the history of religion.[7][1][12] Moreover, the material depiction of a deity or more deities has always played an eminent role in all cultures of the world.[7]

The opposition to the use of any icon or image to represent ideas of reverence or worship is called aniconism.[13] The destruction of images as icons of veneration is called iconoclasm,[14] and this has long been accompanied with violence between religious groups that forbid idol worship and those who have accepted icons, images and statues for veneration.[15][16] The definition of idolatry has been a contested topic within Abrahamic religions, with many Muslims and most Protestant Christians condemning the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox practice of venerating the Virgin Mary in many churches as a form of idolatry.[17][18]

The history of religions has been marked with accusations and denials of idolatry. These accusations have considered statues and images to be devoid of symbolism. Alternatively, the topic of idolatry has been a source of disagreements between many religions, or within denominations of various religions, with the presumption that icons of one's own religious practices have meaningful symbolism, while another person's different religious practices do not.[19][20]

Etymology and nomenclature

 
Moses breaks the original two stone tablets inscribed with the Ten Commandments in response to the Israelites' worship of the Golden Calf; woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld, 1860.

The term idolatry comes from the Ancient Greek word eidololatria (εἰδωλολατρία), which itself is a compound of two words: eidolon (εἴδωλον "image/idol") and latreia (λατρεία "worship", related to λάτρις).[21] The word eidololatria thus means "worship of idols", which in Latin appears first as idololatria, then in Vulgar Latin as idolatria, therefrom it appears in 12th century Old French as idolatrie, which for the first time in mid 13th century English appears as "idolatry".[22][23]

Although the Greek appears to be a loan translation of the Hebrew phrase avodat elilim, (עבודת אלילים) which is attested in rabbinic literature (e.g., bChul., 13b, Bar.), the Greek term itself is not found in the Septuagint, Philo, Josephus, or in other Hellenistic Jewish writings.[citation needed] The original term used in early rabbinic writings is oved avodah zarah (AAZ, worship in strange service, or "pagan"), while avodat kochavim umazalot (AKUM, worship of planets and constellations) is not found in its early manuscripts.[24] The later Jews used the term עֲבוֹדָה זָרָה‎, avodah zarah, meaning "foreign worship".[25]

Idolatry has also been called idolism,[26] iconolatry[27] or idolodulia in historic literature.[28]

Prehistoric and ancient civilizations

The earliest so-called Venus figurines have been dated to the prehistoric Upper Paleolithic era (35–40 ka onwards).[29] Archaeological evidence from the islands of the Aegean Sea have yielded Neolithic era Cycladic figures from 4th and 3rd millennium BC, idols in namaste[which?] posture from Indus Valley civilization sites from the 3rd millennium BC, and much older petroglyphs around the world show humans began producing sophisticated images.[30][31] However, because of a lack of historic texts describing these, it is unclear what, if any connection with religious beliefs, these figures had,[32] or whether they had other meaning and uses, even as toys.[33][34][35]

The earliest historic records confirming cult images are from the ancient Egyptian civilization, thereafter related to the Greek civilization.[36] By the 2nd millennium BC two broad forms of cult image appear, in one images are zoomorphic (god in the image of animal or animal-human fusion) and in another anthropomorphic (god in the image of man).[32] The former is more commonly found in ancient Egypt influenced beliefs, while the anthropomorphic images are more commonly found in Indo-European cultures.[36][37] Symbols of nature, useful animals or feared animals may also be included by both. The stelae from 4,000 to 2,500 BC period discovered in France, Ireland through Ukraine, and in Central Asia through South Asia, suggest that the ancient anthropomorphic figures included zoomorphic motifs.[37] In Nordic and Indian subcontinent, bovine (cow, ox, -*gwdus, -*g'ou) motifs or statues, for example, were common.[38][39] In Ireland, iconic images included pigs.[40]

The Ancient Egyptian religion was polytheistic, with large cult images that were either animals or included animal parts. Ancient Greek civilization preferred human forms, with idealized proportions, for divine representation.[36] The Canaanites of West Asia incorporated a golden calf in their pantheon.[41]

The ancient philosophy and practices of the Greeks, thereafter Romans, were imbued with polytheistic idolatry.[42][43] They debate what is an image and if the use of image is appropriate. To Plato, images can be a remedy or poison to the human experience.[44] To Aristotle, states Paul Kugler, an image is an appropriate mental intermediary that "bridges between the inner world of the mind and the outer world of material reality", the image is a vehicle between sensation and reason. Idols are useful psychological catalysts, they reflect sense data and pre-existing inner feelings. They are neither the origins nor the destinations of thought but the intermediary in the human inner journey.[44][45] Fervid opposition to the idolatry of the Greeks and Romans was of Early Christianity and later Islam, as evidenced by the widespread desecration and defacement of ancient Greek and Roman sculptures that have survived into the modern era.[46][47][48]

Abrahamic religions

Judaism

 
A 1768 synagogue parchment with the Ten Commandments by Jekuthiel Sofer. Among other things, it prohibits idolatry[49]

Judaism prohibits any form of idolatry[50] even if they are used to worship the one God of Judaism as occurred during the sin of the golden calf. According to the second word of the decalogue, Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image. The worship of foreign gods in any form or through icons is not allowed.[50][51]

Many Jewish scholars such as Rabbi Saadia Gaon, Rabbi Bahya ibn Paquda, and Rabbi Yehuda Halevi have elaborated on the issues of idolatry. One of the oft-cited discussions is the commentary of Rabbi Moshe ben Maimon (Maimonides) on idolatry.[51] According to the Maimonidean interpretation, idolatry in itself is not a fundamental sin, but the grave sin is the denial of God's omnipresence that occurs with the belief that God can be corporeal. In the Jewish belief, the only image of God is man, one who lives and thinks; God has no visible shape, and it is absurd to make or worship images; instead man must worship the invisible God alone.[51][52]

The commandments in the Hebrew Bible against idolatry forbade the practices and gods of ancient Akkad, Mesopotamia, and Egypt.[53][54] The Hebrew Bible states that God has no shape or form, is utterly incomparable, is everywhere and cannot be represented in a physical form of an idol.[55]

Biblical scholars have historically focused on the textual evidence to construct the history of idolatry in Judaism, a scholarship that post-modern scholars have increasingly begun deconstructing.[19] This biblical polemics, states Naomi Janowitz, a professor of Religious Studies, has distorted the reality of Israelite religious practices and the historic use of images in Judaism. The direct material evidence is more reliable, such as that from the archaeological sites, and this suggests that the Jewish religious practices have been far more complex than what biblical polemics suggest. Judaism included images and cultic statues in the First Temple period, the Second Temple period, Late Antiquity (2nd to 8th century CE), and thereafter.[19][56] Nonetheless, these sorts of evidence may be simply descriptive of Ancient Israelite practices in some—possibly deviant—circles, but cannot tell us anything about the mainstream religion of the Bible which proscribes idolatry.[57]

The history of Jewish religious practice has included cult images and figurines made of ivory, terracotta, faience and seals.[19][58] As more material evidence emerged, one proposal has been that Judaism oscillated between idolatry and iconoclasm. However, the dating of the objects and texts suggest that the two theologies and liturgical practices existed simultaneously. The claimed rejection of idolatry because of monotheism found in Jewish literature and therefrom in biblical Christian literature, states Janowitz, has been unreal abstraction and flawed construction of the actual history.[19] The material evidence of images, statues and figurines taken together with the textual description of cherub and "wine standing for blood", for example, suggests that symbolism, making religious images, icon and index has been integral part of Judaism.[19][59][60] Every religion has some objects that represent the divine and stand for something in the mind of the faithful, and Judaism too has had its holy objects and symbols such as the Menorah.[19]

Christianity

 
St. Benedict destroying a pagan idol, by Juan Rizi (1600–1681)

Ideas on idolatry in Christianity are based on the first of Ten Commandments.

You shall have no other gods before me.[61]

This is expressed in the Bible in Exodus 20:3, Matthew 4:10, Luke 4:8 and elsewhere, e.g.:[61]

Ye shall make you no idols nor graven image, neither rear you up a standing image, neither shall ye set up any image of stone in your land, to bow down unto it: for I am the Lord your God. Ye shall keep my sabbaths, and reverence my sanctuary.

— Leviticus 26:1–2, King James Bible[62]

The Christian view of idolatry may generally be divided into two general categories: the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox view which accepts the use of religious images,[63] and the views of many Protestant churches that considerably restrict their use. However, many Protestants have used the image of the cross as a symbol.[64][65]

Catholicism

 
 
The veneration of Mary, Jesus Christ, and the Black Madonna are common practices in the Catholic Church.

The Roman Catholic and particularly the Orthodox Churches have traditionally defended the use of icons. The debate on what images signify and whether reverence with the help of icons in church is equivalent to idolatry has lasted for many centuries, particularly from the 7th century until the Reformation in the 16th century.[66] These debates have supported the inclusion of icons of Jesus Christ, the Virgin Mary, and the Apostles, the iconography expressed in stained glass, regional saints and other symbols of Christian faith. It has also supported the practices such as the Catholic mass, burning of candles before pictures, Christmas decorations and celebrations, and festive or memorial processions with statues of religious significance to Christianity.[66][67][68]

St. John of Damascus, in his "On the Divine Image", defended the use of icons and images, in direct response to the Byzantine iconoclasm that began widespread destruction of religious images in the 8th century, with support from emperor Leo III and continued by his successor Constantine V during a period of religious war with the invading Umayyads.[69] John of Damascus wrote, "I venture to draw an image of the invisible God, not as invisible, but as having become visible for our sakes through flesh and blood", adding that images are expressions "for remembrance either of wonder, or an honor, or dishonor, or good, or evil" and that a book is also a written image in another form.[70][71] He defended the religious use of images based on the Christian doctrine of Jesus as an incarnation.[72]

St. John the Evangelist cited John 1:14, stating that "the Word became flesh" indicates that the invisible God became visible, that God's glory manifested in God's one and only Son as Jesus Christ, and therefore God chose to make the invisible into a visible form, the spiritual incarnated into the material form.[73][74]

 
Pope Pius V praying with a crucifix, painting by August Kraus

The early defense of images included exegesis of Old and New Testament. Evidence for the use of religious images is found in Early Christian art and documentary records. For example, the veneration of the tombs and statues of martyrs was common among early Christian communities. In 397 St. Augustine of Hippo, in his Confessions 6.2.2, tells the story of his mother making offerings for the tombs of martyrs and the oratories built in the memory of the saints.[75]

Images function as the Bible
for the illiterate, and
incite people to piety and virtue.

Pope Gregory I, 7th century[76]

The Catholic defense mentions textual evidence of external acts of honor towards icons, arguing that there are a difference between adoration and veneration and that the veneration shown to icons differs entirely from the adoration of God. Citing the Old Testament, these arguments present examples of forms of "veneration" such as in Genesis 33:3, with the argument that "adoration is one thing, and that which is offered in order to venerate something of great excellence is another". These arguments assert, "the honor given to the image is transferred to its prototype", and that venerating an image of Christ does not terminate at the image itself – the material of the image is not the object of worship – rather it goes beyond the image, to the prototype.[77][76][78]

According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church:

The Christian veneration of images is not contrary to the first commandment which proscribes idols. Indeed, "the honor rendered to an image passes to its prototype," and "whoever venerates an image venerates the person portrayed in it." The honor paid to sacred images is a "respectful veneration," not the adoration due to God alone:

Religious worship is not directed to images in themselves, considered as mere things, but under their distinctive aspect as images leading us on to God incarnate. The movement toward the image does not terminate in it as image, but tends toward that whose image it is.[79]

It also points out the following:

Idolatry not only refers to false pagan worship. It remains a constant temptation to faith. Idolatry consists in divinizing what is not God. Man commits idolatry whenever he honors and reveres a creature in place of God, whether this be gods or demons (for example, satanism), power, pleasure, race, ancestors, the state, money, etc.[80]

The manufacture of images of Jesus, the Virgin Mary and Christian saints, along with prayers directed to these has been widespread among the Catholic faithful.[81]

Orthodox Church

The Eastern Orthodox Church has differentiated between latria and dulia. A latria is the worship due God, and latria to anyone or anything other than God is doctrinally forbidden by the Orthodox Church; however dulia has been defined as veneration of religious images, statues or icons which is not only allowed but obligatory.[82] This distinction was discussed by Thomas Aquinas in section 3.25 of Summa Theologiae.[83]

 
The veneration of images of Mary is called Marian devotion (above: Lithuania), a practice questioned in the majority of Protestant Christianity.[84][85]

In Orthodox apologetic literature, the proper and improper use of images is extensively discussed. Exegetical Orthodox literature points to icons and the manufacture by Moses (under God's commandment) of the Bronze Snake in Numbers 21:9, which had the grace and power of God to heal those bitten by real snakes. Similarly, the Ark of the Covenant was cited as evidence of the ritual object above which Yahweh was present.[86][87]

Veneration of icons through proskynesis was codified in 787 AD by the Seventh Ecumenical Council.[88][89] This was triggered by the Byzantine Iconoclasm controversy that followed raging Christian-Muslim wars and a period of iconoclasm in West Asia.[88][90] The defense of images and the role of the Syrian scholar John of Damascus was pivotal during this period. The Eastern Orthodox Church has ever since celebrated the use of icons and images. Eastern Rite Catholics also accepts icons in their Divine Liturgy.[91]

Protestantism

The idolatry debate has been one of the defining differences between papal Catholicism and anti-papal Protestantism.[92] The anti-papal writers have prominently questioned the worship practices and images supported by Catholics, with many Protestant scholars listing it as the "one religious error larger than all others". The sub-list of erring practices have included among other things the veneration of Virgin Mary, the Catholic mass, the invocation of saints, and the reverence expected for and expressed to pope himself.[92] The charges of supposed idolatry against the Roman Catholics were leveled by a diverse group of Protestants, from Anglicans to Calvinists in Geneva.[92][93]

 
Altar with Christian Bible and crucifix on it, in a Lutheran Protestant church

Protestants did not abandon all icons and symbols of Christianity. They typically avoid the use of images, except the cross, in any context suggestive of veneration. The cross remained their central icon.[64][65] Technically both major branches of Christianity have had their icons, states Carlos Eire, a professor of religious studies and history, but its meaning has been different to each and "one man's devotion was another man's idolatry".[94] This was particularly true not only in the intra-Christian debate, states Eire, but also when soldiers of Catholic kings replaced "horrible Aztec idols" in the American colonies with "beautiful crosses and images of Mary and the saints".[94]

Protestants often accuse Catholics of idolatry, iconolatry, and even paganism; in the Protestant Reformation such language was common to all Protestants. In some cases, such as the Puritan groups denounced all forms of religious objects, regardless of whether it was a statue or scultpure, or image, including the Christian cross.[95] The Waldensians were accused of idolatry by inquisitors.[96]

The body of Christ on the cross is an ancient symbol used within the Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, Anglican, and Lutheran Churches, in contrast with some Protestant groups, which use only a simple cross. In Judaism, the reverence to the icon of Christ in the form of cross has been seen as idolatry.[97] However, some Jewish scholars disagree and consider Christianity to be based on Jewish belief and not truly idolatrous.[98]

Islam

In Islamic sources, the concept of shirk (triliteral root: sh-r-k) can refer to "idolatry", though it is most widely used to denote "association of partners with God".[99] The concept of Kufr (k-f-r) can also include idolatry (among other forms of disbelief).[100][101] The one who practices shirk is called mushrik (plural mushrikun) in the Islamic scriptures.[102] The Quran forbids idolatry.[102] Over 500 mentions of kufr and shirk are found in the Quran,[100][103] and both concepts are strongly forbidden.[99]

The Islamic concept of idolatry extends beyond polytheism, and includes some Christians and Jews as muširkūn (idolaters) and kafirun (infidels).[104][105] For example:

Those who say, “Allah is the Messiah, son of Mary,” have certainly fallen into disbelief. The Messiah ˹himself˺ said, “O Children of Israel! Worship Allah—my Lord and your Lord.” Whoever associates others with Allah ˹in worship˺ will surely be forbidden Paradise by Allah. Their home will be the Fire. And the wrongdoers will have no helpers.

— Surah Al-Ma'idah 5:72

Shia classical theology differs in the concept of Shirk. According to Twelver theologians, the attributes and names of God have no independent and hypostatic existence apart from the being and essence of God. Any suggestion of these attributes and names being conceived of as separate is thought to entail polytheism. It would be even incorrect to say God knows by his knowledge which is in his essence but God knows by his knowledge which is his essence. Also God has no physical form and he is insensible.[106] The border between theoretical Tawhid and Shirk is to know that every reality and being in its essence, attributes and action are from him (from Him-ness), it is Tawhid. Every supernatural action of the prophets is by God's permission as Quran points to it. The border between the Tawhid and Shirk in practice is to assume something as an end in itself, independent from God, not as a road to God (to Him-ness).[107] Ismailis go deeper into the definition of Shirk, declaring they don't recognize any sort of ground of being by the esoteric potential to have intuitive knowledge of the human being. Hence, most Shias have no problem with religious symbols and artworks, and with reverence for Walis, Rasūls and Imams.

Islam strongly prohibits all form of idolatry, which is part of the sin of shirk (Arabic: شرك); širk comes from the Arabic root Š-R-K (ش ر ك), with the general meaning of "to share". In the context of the Qur'an, the particular sense of "sharing as an equal partner" is usually understood as "attributing a partner to Allah". Shirk is often translated as idolatry and polytheism.[99] In the Qur'an, shirk and the related word (plural Stem IV active participle) mušrikūn (مشركون) "those who commit shirk" often refers to the enemies of Islam (as in verse 9.1–15) but sometimes it also refers to erring Muslims.[citation needed]

Within Islam, shirk is sin that can only be forgiven if the person who commits it asks God for forgiveness; if the person who committed it dies without repenting God may forgive any sin except for committing shirk.[citation needed] In practice, especially among strict conservative interpretations of Islam, the term has been greatly extended and means deification of anyone or anything other than the singular God.[citation needed] In Salafi-Wahhabi interpretation, it may be used very widely to describe behaviour that does not literally constitute worship, including use of images of sentient beings, building a structure over a grave, associating partners with God, giving his characteristics to others beside him, or not believing in his characteristics.[citation needed] 19th century Wahhabis regarded idolatry punishable with the death penalty, a practice that was "hitherto unknown" in Islam.[108][109] However, Classical Orthodox Sunni thought used to be rich in Relics and Saint veneration, as well as pilgrimage to their shrines. Ibn Taymiyya, a medieval theologian that influenced modern days Salafists, was put in prison for his negation of veneration of relics and Saints, as well as pilgrimage to Shrines, which was considered unorthodox by his contemporary theologians.

The Kaaba during Hajj

According to Islamic tradition, over the millennia after Ishmael's death, his progeny and the local tribes who settled around the oasis of Zam-Zam gradually turned to polytheism and idolatry. Several idols were placed within the Kaaba representing deities of different aspects of nature and different tribes. Several heretical rituals were adopted in the Pilgrimage (Hajj) including doing naked circumambulation.[110]

In her book, Islam: A Short History, Karen Armstrong asserts that the Kaaba was officially dedicated to Hubal, a Nabatean deity, and contained 360 idols that probably represented the days of the year.[111] But by Muhammad's day, it seems that the Kaaba was venerated as the shrine of Allah, the High God. Allah was never represented by an idol.[112] Once a year, tribes from all around the Arabian peninsula, whether Christian or pagan, would converge on Mecca to perform the Hajj, marking the widespread conviction that Allah was the same deity worshiped by monotheists.[111] Guillaume in his translation of Ibn Ishaq, an early biographer of Muhammad, says the Ka'aba might have been itself addressed using a feminine grammatical form by the Quraysh.[113] Circumambulation was often performed naked by men and almost naked by women,[110] It is disputed whether Allah and Hubal were the same deity or different. Per a hypothesis by Uri Rubin and Christian Robin, Hubal was only venerated by Quraysh and the Kaaba was first dedicated to Allah, a supreme god of individuals belonging to different tribes, while the pantheon of the gods of Quraysh was installed in Kaaba after they conquered Mecca a century before Muhammad's time.[114]

Indian religions

The oldest forms of the ancient religions of India apparently made no use of cult images. While the Vedic literature leading up to Hinduism is extensive, in the form of Samhitas, Brahmanas, Aranyakas and Upanishads, and has been dated to have been composed over a period of centuries (1200 BC to 200 BC),[115] historical Vedic religion appears not to have used cult images up to around 500 BC at least. The early Buddhist and Jain (pre-200 BC) traditions suggest no evidence of idolatry. The Vedic literature mentions many gods and goddesses, as well as the use of Homa (votive ritual using fire), but it does not mention images or their worship.[115][116] The ancient Buddhist, Hindu and Jaina texts discuss the nature of existence, whether there is or is not a creator deity such as in the Nasadiya Sukta of the Rigveda, they describe meditation, they recommend the pursuit of simple monastic life and self-knowledge, they debate the nature of absolute reality as Brahman or Śūnyatā, yet the ancient Indian texts mention no use of images. Indologists such as the Max Muller, Jan Gonda, Pandurang Vaman Kane, Ramchandra Narayan Dandekar, Horace Hayman Wilson, Stephanie Jamison and other scholars state that "there is no evidence for icons or images representing god(s)" in the ancient religions of India. Use of cult images developed among the Indian religions later,[115][117] perhaps first in Buddhism, where large images of the Buddha appear by the 1st century AD.

According to John Grimes, a professor of Indian philosophy, Indian thought denied even dogmatic idolatry of its scriptures. Everything has been left to challenge, arguments and enquiry, with the medieval Indian scholar Vācaspati Miśra stating that not all scripture is authoritative, only scripture which "reveals the identity of the individual self and the supreme self as the non-dual Absolute".[118]

Buddhism

 
 
Buddhists praying before a statue in Tibet (left) and Vietnam.

According to Eric Reinders, icons and idolatry have been an integral part of Buddhism throughout its later history.[119] Buddhists, from Korea to Vietnam, Thailand to Tibet, Central Asia to South Asia, have long produced temples and idols, altars and rosaries, relics to amulets, images to ritual implements.[119][120][121] The images or relics of Buddha are found in all Buddhist traditions, but they also feature gods and goddesses such as those in Tibetan Buddhism.[119][122]

Bhakti (called Bhatti in Pali) has been a common practice in Theravada Buddhism, where offerings and group prayers are made to Cetiya and particularly images of Buddha.[123][124] Karel Werner notes that Bhakti has been a significant practice in Theravada Buddhism, and states, "there can be no doubt that deep devotion or bhakti / bhatti does exist in Buddhism and that it had its beginnings in the earliest days".[125]

According to Peter Harvey – a professor of Buddhist Studies, Buddha idols and idolatry spread into northwest Indian subcontinent (now Pakistan and Afghanistan) and into Central Asia with Buddhist Silk Road merchants.[126] The Hindu rulers of different Indian dynasties patronized both Buddhism and Hinduism from 4th to 9th century, building Buddhist icons and cave temples such as the Ajanta Caves and Ellora Caves which featured Buddha idols.[127][128][129] From the 10th century, states Harvey, the raids into northwestern parts of South Asia by Muslim Turks destroyed Buddhist idols, given their religious dislike for idolatry. The iconoclasm was so linked to Buddhism, that the Islamic texts of this era in India called all idols as Budd.[126] The desecration of idols in cave temples continued through the 17th century, states Geri Malandra, from the offense of "the graphic, anthropomorphic imagery of Hindu and Buddhist shrines".[129][130]

In East Asia and Southeast Asia, worship in Buddhist temples with the aid of icons and sacred objects has been historic.[131] In Japanese Buddhism, for example, Butsugu (sacred objects) have been integral to the worship of the Buddha (kuyo), and such idolatry considered a part of the process of realizing one's Buddha nature. This process is more than meditation, it has traditionally included devotional rituals (butsudo) aided by the Buddhist clergy.[131] These practices are also found in Korea and China.[121][131]

Hinduism

 
 
Ganesh statue during a contemporary festival (left), and Bhakti saint Meera singing before an image of Krishna.

In Hinduism, an icon, image or statue is called Murti or Pratima.[8][132] Major Hindu traditions such as Vaishnavism, Shaivism, Shaktism and Smartaism favor the use of Murti (idol). These traditions suggest that it is easier to dedicate time and focus on spirituality through anthropomorphic or non-anthropomorphic icons. The Bhagavad Gita – a Hindu scripture, in verse 12.5, states that only a few have the time and mind to ponder and fix on the unmanifested Absolute (abstract formless Brahman), and it is much easier to focus on qualities, virtues, aspects of a manifested representation of god, through one's senses, emotions and heart, because the way human beings naturally are.[133][134]

A murti in Hinduism, states Jeaneane Fowler – a professor of Religious Studies specializing on Indian Religions, is itself not god, it is an "image of god" and thus a symbol and representation.[8] A Murti is a form and manifestation, states Fowler, of the formless Absolute.[8] Thus a literal translation of Murti as idol is incorrect, when idol is understood as superstitious end in itself. Just like the photograph of a person is not the real person, a Murti is an image in Hinduism but not the real thing, but in both cases the image reminds of something of emotional and real value to the viewer.[8] When a person worships a Murti, it is assumed to be a manifestation of the essence or spirit of the deity, the worshipper's spiritual ideas and needs are meditated through it, yet the idea of ultimate reality – called Brahman in Hinduism – is not confined in it.[8]

Devotional (bhakti movement) practices centered on cultivating a deep and personal bond of love with God, often expressed and facilitated with one or more Murti, and includes individual or community hymns, japa or singing (bhajan, kirtan or aarti). Acts of devotion, in major temples particularly, are structured on treating the Murti as the manifestation of a revered guest,[11] and the daily routine can include awakening the murti in the morning and making sure that it "is washed, dressed, and garlanded."[135][136][Note 1]

In Vaishnavism, the building of a temple for the murti is considered an act of devotion, but non-Murti symbolism is also common wherein the aromatic Tulsi plant or Saligrama is an aniconic reminder of the spiritualism in Vishnu.[135] In the Shaivism tradition of Hinduism, Shiva may be represented as a masculine idol, or half-man half woman ardhanarishvara form, in an anicon Linga-Yoni form. The worship rituals associated with the Murti, correspond to ancient cultural practices for a beloved guest, and the Murti is welcomed, taken care of, and then requested to retire.[137][138]

Christopher John Fuller states that an image in Hinduism cannot be equated with a deity and the object of worship is the divine whose power is inside the image, and the image is not the object of worship itself, Hindus believe everything is worthy of worship as it contains divine energy.[139] The idols are neither random nor intended as superstitious objects, rather they are designed with embedded symbolism and iconographic rules which sets the style, proportions, the colors, the nature of items the images carry, their mudra and the legends associated with the deity.[139][140][141] The Vāstusūtra Upaniṣad states that the aim of the Murti art is to inspire a devotee towards contemplating the Ultimate Supreme Principle (Brahman).[141] This text adds (abridged):

From the contemplation of images grows delight, from delight faith, from faith steadfast devotion, through such devotion arises that higher understanding (parāvidyā) that is the royal road to moksha. Without the guidance of images, the mind of the devotee may go ashtray and form wrong imaginations. Images dispel false imaginations. (... ) It is in the mind of Rishis (sages), who see and have the power of discerning the essence of all created things of manifested forms. They see their different characters, the divine and the demoniac, the creative and the destructive forces, in their eternal interplay. It is this vision of Rishis, of gigantic drama of cosmic powers in eternal conflict, which the Sthapakas (Silpins, murti and temple artists) drew the subject-matter for their work.

— Pippalada, Vāstusūtra Upaniṣad, Introduction by Alice Boner et al.[142]

Some Hindu movements founded during the colonial era, such as the Arya Samaj and Satya Mahima Dharma reject idolatry.[143][144][145]

Jainism

Devotional idolatry has been a prevalent ancient practice in various Jaina sects, wherein learned Tirthankara (Jina) and human gurus have been venerated with offerings, songs and Āratī prayers.[146] Like other major Indian religions, Jainism has premised its spiritual practices on the belief that "all knowledge is inevitably mediated by images" and human beings discover, learn and know what is to be known through "names, images and representations". Thus, idolatry has been a part of the major sects of Jainism such as Digambara and Shvetambara.[147] The earliest archaeological evidence of the idols and images in Jainism is from Mathura, and has been dated to be from the first half of the 1st millennium AD.[148]

The creation of idols, their consecration, the inclusion of Jaina layperson in idols and temples of Jainism by the Jaina monks has been a historic practice.[147] However, during the iconoclastic era of Islamic rule, between the 15th and 17th century, a Lonka sect of Jainism emerged that continued pursuing their traditional spirituality but without the Jaina arts, images and idols.[149]

Sikhism

Sikhism is a monotheistic Indian religion, and Sikh temples are devoid of idols and icons for God.[150][151] Yet, Sikhism strongly encourages devotion to God.[152][153] Some scholars call Sikhism a Bhakti sect of Indian traditions.[154][155]

In Sikhism, "nirguni Bhakti" is emphasised – devotion to a divine without Gunas (qualities or form),[155][156][157] but its scripture also accepts representations of God with formless (nirguni) and with form (saguni), as stated in Adi Granth 287.[158][159] Sikhism condemns worshipping images or statues as if it were God,[160] but have historically challenged the iconoclastic policies and Hindu temple destruction activities of Islamic rulers in India.[161] Sikhs house their scripture and revere the Guru Granth Sahib as the final Guru of Sikhism.[162] It is installed in Sikh Gurdwara (temple), many Sikhs bow or prostrate before it on entering the temple.[Note 1] Guru Granth Sahib is ritually installed every morning, and put to bed at night in many Gurdwaras.[169][170][171] In the Dasam Bani, Guru Gobind Singh wrote "I am idol-breaker" on line 95 of his Zafarnamah.[172]

Chinese and Sinosphere Traditions

Confucianism

Chinese Folk Religion

Daoism

North Korean Juche

Kim Il-Sung instituted worship of himself amongst the citizens and it is considered the only modern country to deify its ruler.[173][174][175] As many citizens frequently bow before statues and portraits of him, scholars have considered it to be a form of idolatry.[176][177][178]

Traditional religions

Africa

 
 
An Orisha deity (left) and an artwork depicting a kneeling female worshipper with child, by Yoruba people.

Africa has numerous ethnic groups, and their diverse religious idea have been grouped as African Traditional Religions, sometimes abbreviated to ATR. These religions typically believe in a Supreme Being which goes by different regional names, as well as spirit world often linked to ancestors, and mystical magical powers through divination.[179] Idols and their worship have been associated with all three components in the African Traditional Religions.[180]

According to J.O. Awolalu, proselytizing Christians and Muslims have mislabelled idol to mean false god, when in the reality of most traditions of Africa, the object may be a piece of wood or iron or stone, yet it is "symbolic, an emblem and implies the spiritual idea which is worshipped".[181] The material objects may decay or get destroyed, the emblem may crumble or substituted, but the spiritual idea that it represents to the heart and mind of an African traditionalist remains unchanged.[181] Sylvester Johnson – a professor of African American and Religious Studies, concurs with Awolalu, and states that the colonial era missionaries who arrived in Africa, neither understood the regional languages nor the African theology, and interpreted the images and ritualism as "epitome of idolatry", projecting the iconoclastic controversies in Europe they grew up with, onto Africa.[182]

First with the arrival of Islam in Africa, then during the Christian colonial efforts, the religiously justified wars, the colonial portrayal of idolatry as proof of savagery, the destruction of idols and the seizure of idolaters as slaves marked a long period of religious intolerance, which supported religious violence and demeaning caricature of the African Traditional Religionists.[183][184][185] The violence against idolaters and idolatry of Traditional Religion practicers of Africa started in the medieval era and continued into the modern era.[186][187][188] The charge of idolatry by proselytizers, state Michael Wayne Cole and Rebecca Zorach, served to demonize and dehumanize local African populations, and justify their enslavement and abuse locally or far off plantations, settlements or for forced domestic labor.[189][190]

Americas

 
Inti Raymi, a winter solstice festival of the Inca people, reveres Inti – the sun deity. Offerings include round bread and maize beer.[191]

Statues, images and temples have been a part of the Traditional Religions of the indigenous people of the Americas.[192][193][194] The Incan, Mayan and Aztec civilizations developed sophisticated religious practices that incorporated idols and religious arts.[194] The Inca culture, for example, has believed in Viracocha (also called Pachacutec) as the creator deity and nature deities such as Inti (sun deity), and Mama Cocha the goddess of the sea, lakes, rivers and waters.[195][196][197]

 
The Aztec Tula Atlantean statues (above) have been called as symbols of idolatry, but may have just been stone images of warriors.[198]

In Mayan culture, Kukulkan has been the supreme creator deity, also revered as the god of reincarnation, water, fertility and wind.[199] The Mayan people built step pyramid temples to honor Kukulkan, aligning them to the Sun's position on the spring equinox.[200] Other deities found at Mayan archaeological sites include Xib Chac – the benevolent male rain deity, and Ixchel – the benevolent female earth, weaving and pregnancy goddess.[200] A deity with aspects similar to Kulkulkan in the Aztec culture has been called Quetzalcoatl.[199]

Missionaries came to the Americas with the start of Spanish colonial era, and the Catholic Church did not tolerate any form of native idolatry, preferring that the icons and images of Jesus and Mary replace the native idols.[94][201][192] Aztec, for example, had a written history which included those about their Traditional Religion, but the Spanish colonialists destroyed this written history in their zeal to end what they considered as idolatry, and to convert the Aztecs to Catholicism. The Aztec Indians, however, preserved their religion and religious practices by burying their idols under the crosses, and then continuing their idol worship rituals and practices, aided by the syncretic composite of atrial crosses and their idols as before.[202]

During and after the imposition of Catholic Christianity during Spanish colonialism, the Incan people retained their original beliefs in deities through syncretism, where they overlay the Christian God and teachings over their original beliefs and practices.[203][204][205] The male deity Inti became accepted as the Christian God, but the Andean rituals centered around idolatry of Incan deities have been retained and continued thereafter into the modern era by the Incan people.[205][206]

Polynesia

The Polynesian people have had a range of polytheistic theologies found across the Pacific Ocean. The Polynesian people produced idols from wood, and congregated around these idols for worship.[207][208]

The Christian missionaries, particularly from the London Missionary Society such as John Williams, and others such as the Methodist Missionary Society, characterized these as idolatry, in the sense of islanders worshipping false gods. They sent back reports which primarily focussed on "overthrow of pagan idolatry" as evidence of their Christian sects triumph, with fewer mentions of actual converts and baptism.[209][210]

Religious tolerance and intolerance

The term false god is often used throughout the Abrahamic scriptures (Torah, Tanakh, Bible, and Quran) to compare Yahweh[211] (interpreted by Jews, Samaritans, and Christians) or Elohim/Allah[212] (interpreted by Muslims) as the only true God.[4] Nevertheless, the Hebrew Bible/Old Testament itself recognizes and reports that originally the Israelites were not monotheists but actively engaged in idolatry and worshipped many foreign, non-Jewish Gods besides Yahweh and/or instead of him,[213] such as Baal, Astarte, Asherah, Chemosh, Dagon, Moloch, Tammuz, and more, and continued to do so until their return from the Babylonian exile[211] (see Ancient Hebrew religion). Judaism, the oldest Abrahamic religion, eventually shifted into a strict, exclusive monotheism,[5] based on the sole veneration of Yahweh,[214][215][216] the predecessor to the Abrahamic conception of God.[Note 2]

The vast majority of religions in history have been and/or are still polytheistic, worshipping many diverse deities.[220] Moreover, the material depiction of a deity or more deities has always played an eminent role in all cultures of the world.[7] The claim to worship the "one and only true God" came to most of the world with the arrival of Abrahamic religions and is the distinguishing characteristic of their monotheistic worldview,[5][220][221][222] whereas virtually all the other religions in the world have been and/or are still animistic and polytheistic.[220] Some Neopagan religions such as Wicca utilize statues of deities within their worship experience.[223]

The accusations and presumption that all idols and images are devoid of symbolism, or that icons of one's own religion are "true, healthy, uplifting, beautiful symbolism, mark of devotion, divine", while of other person's religion are "false, an illness, superstitious, grotesque madness, evil addiction, satanic, and cause of all incivility" is more a matter of subjective personal interpretation, rather than objective impersonal truth.[19] Regina Schwartz and some other contemporary scholars state allegations that idols only represent false gods, followed by iconoclastic destruction is only little more than religious intolerance.[224][225] The Scottish Enlightenment philosopher David Hume wrote in his essay Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion (1779) that the worship of different gods and cult images in Pagan religions is premised on religious pluralism, tolerance, and acceptance of diverse representations of the divine, whereas Abrahamic monotheistic religions are intolerant, have attempted to destroy freedom of expression, and have violently forced others to accept and worship their conception of God.[20]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Such idol caring practices are found in other religions. For example, the Infant Jesus of Prague is venerated in many countries of the Catholic world. In the Prague Church it is housed, it is ritually cared for, cleaned and dressed by the sisters of the Carmelites Church, changing the Infant Jesus' clothing to one of the approximately hundred costumes donated by the faithfuls as gift of devotion.[163][164] The idol is worshipped with the faithful believing that it renders favors to those who pray to it.[164][165][166] Such ritualistic caring of the image of baby Jesus is found in other churches and homes in Central Europe and Portugual / Spain influenced Christian communities with different names, such as Menino Deus.[165][167][168]
  2. ^ Although the Semitic god El is indeed the most ancient predecessor to the Abrahamic god,[213][214][217][218] this specifically refers to the ancient ideas Yahweh once encompassed in the Ancient Hebrew religion, such as being a storm- and war-god, living on mountains, or controlling the weather.[213][214][217][218][219] Thus, in this page's context, "Yahweh" is used to refer to God as conceived in the Ancient Hebrew religion, and should not be referenced when describing his later worship in today's Abrahamic religions.

References

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  215. ^ Betz, Arnold Gottfried (2000). "Monotheism". In Freedman, David Noel; Myer, Allen C. (eds.). Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans. pp. 916–917. ISBN 9053565035.
  216. ^ Gruber, Mayer I. (2013). "Israel". In Spaeth, Barbette Stanley (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Mediterranean Religions. New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 76–94. doi:10.1017/CCO9781139047784.007. ISBN 978-0-521-11396-0. LCCN 2012049271.
  217. ^ a b Smith, Mark S. (2000). "El". In Freedman, David Noel; Myer, Allen C. (eds.). Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Wm. B. Eerdmans. pp. 384–386. ISBN 9053565035.
  218. ^ a b Smith, Mark S. (2003). "El, Yahweh, and the Original God of Israel and the Exodus". The Origins of Biblical Monotheism: Israel's Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 133–148. doi:10.1093/019513480X.003.0008. ISBN 9780195134803.
  219. ^ Niehr, Herbert (1995). "The Rise of YHWH in Judahite and Israelite Religion: Methodological and Religio-Historical Aspects". In Edelman, Diana Vikander (ed.). The Triumph of Elohim: From Yahwisms to Judaisms. Leuven: Peeters Publishers. pp. 45–72. ISBN 978-9053565032. OCLC 33819403.
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  221. ^ Hayes, Christine (2012). "Understanding Biblical Monotheism". Introduction to the Bible. The Open Yale Courses Series. New Haven and London: Yale University Press. pp. 15–28. ISBN 9780300181791. JSTOR j.ctt32bxpm.6.
  222. ^ Bernard, David K. (2019) [2016]. "Monotheism in Paul's Rhetorical World". The Glory of God in the Face of Jesus Christ: Deification of Jesus in Early Christian Discourse. Journal of Pentecostal Theology: Supplement Series. Vol. 45. Leiden and Boston: Brill Publishers. pp. 53–82. ISBN 978-90-04-39721-7. ISSN 0966-7393.
  223. ^ Raeburn, J. (2001). Celtic Wicca: Ancient Wisdom for the 21st Century. Kensington Publishing Corporation. p. 24. ISBN 978-0-8065-2229-6. Retrieved 28 February 2023.
  224. ^ Regina Schwartz (2016). Loving Justice, Living Shakespeare. Oxford University Press. pp. 32–34. ISBN 978-0-19-251460-8.
  225. ^ Josh Ellenbogen; Aaron Tugendhaft (2011). Idol Anxiety. Stanford University Press. pp. 29–35, 60–74. ISBN 978-0-8047-8181-7.

Further reading

  • Swagato Ganguly (2017). Idolatry and The Colonial Idea of India: Visions of Horror, Allegories of Enlightenment. Routledge. ISBN 978-1138106161
  • Reuven Chaim Klein (2018). God versus Gods: Judaism in the Age of Idolatry. Mosaica Press. ISBN 978-1946351463.
  • Yechezkel Kaufmann (1960). The Religion of Israel: From its Beginnings to the Babylonin Exile. Univ. of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0805203646.
  • Faur, José; Faur, Jose (1978), "The Biblical Idea of Idolatry", The Jewish Quarterly Review, 69 (1): 1–15, doi:10.2307/1453972, JSTOR 1453972
  • Brichto, Herbert Chanan (1983), "The Worship of the Golden Calf: A Literary Analysis of a Fable on Idolatry", Hebrew Union College Annual, 54: 1–44, JSTOR 23507659
  • Pfeiffer, Robert H. (1924), "The Polemic against Idolatry in the Old Testament", Journal of Biblical Literature, 43 (3/4): 229–240, doi:10.2307/3259257, JSTOR 3259257
  • Bakan, David (1961), "Idolatry in Religion and Science", The Christian Scholar, 44 (3): 223–230, JSTOR 41177237
  • Siebert, Donald T. (1984), "Hume on Idolatry and Incarnation", Journal of the History of Ideas, 45 (3): 379–396, doi:10.2307/2709231, JSTOR 2709231
  • Orellana, Sandra L. (1981), "Idols and Idolatry in Highland Guatemala", Ethnohistory, 28 (2): 157–177, doi:10.2307/481116, JSTOR 481116

External links

  • Idolatry and iconoclasm 12 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine, Tufts University
  • Iconoclasm and idolatry, Columbia University

idolatry, false, idols, redirects, here, tricky, album, false, idols, veil, maya, album, false, idol, album, worship, cult, image, idol, though, were, abrahamic, religions, namely, judaism, samaritanism, christianity, baháʼí, faith, islam, idolatry, connotes, . False idols redirects here For the Tricky album see False Idols For the Veil of Maya album see False Idol album Idolatry is the worship of a cult image or idol as though it were God 1 2 3 In Abrahamic religions namely Judaism Samaritanism Christianity the Bahaʼi Faith and Islam idolatry connotes the worship of something or someone other than the Abrahamic god as if it were God 4 5 In these monotheistic religions idolatry has been considered as the worship of false gods and is forbidden by texts such as the Ten Commandments 4 Other monotheistic religions may apply similar rules 6 Moses Indignant at the Golden Calf painting by William Blake 1799 1800 For instance the phrase false god is a derogatory term used in Abrahamic religions to indicate cult images or deities of non Abrahamic Pagan religions as well as other competing entities or objects to which particular importance is attributed 7 Conversely followers of animistic and polytheistic religions may regard the gods of various monotheistic religions as false gods because they do not believe that any real deity possesses the properties ascribed by monotheists to their sole deity Atheists who do not believe in any deities do not usually use the term false god even though that would encompass all deities from the atheist viewpoint Usage of this term is generally limited to theists who choose to worship some deity or deities but not others 4 In many Indian religions which include both theistic and non theistic branches of Hinduism Buddhism and Jainism idols murti are considered as symbolism for the absolute but not the Absolute 8 or icons of spiritual ideas 8 9 or the embodiment of the divine 10 It is a means to focus one s religious pursuits and worship bhakti 8 11 9 In the traditional religions of Ancient Egypt Greece Rome Africa Asia the Americas and elsewhere the reverence of cult images or statues has been a common practice since antiquity and cult images have carried different meanings and significance in the history of religion 7 1 12 Moreover the material depiction of a deity or more deities has always played an eminent role in all cultures of the world 7 The opposition to the use of any icon or image to represent ideas of reverence or worship is called aniconism 13 The destruction of images as icons of veneration is called iconoclasm 14 and this has long been accompanied with violence between religious groups that forbid idol worship and those who have accepted icons images and statues for veneration 15 16 The definition of idolatry has been a contested topic within Abrahamic religions with many Muslims and most Protestant Christians condemning the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox practice of venerating the Virgin Mary in many churches as a form of idolatry 17 18 The history of religions has been marked with accusations and denials of idolatry These accusations have considered statues and images to be devoid of symbolism Alternatively the topic of idolatry has been a source of disagreements between many religions or within denominations of various religions with the presumption that icons of one s own religious practices have meaningful symbolism while another person s different religious practices do not 19 20 Contents 1 Etymology and nomenclature 2 Prehistoric and ancient civilizations 3 Abrahamic religions 3 1 Judaism 3 2 Christianity 3 2 1 Catholicism 3 2 2 Orthodox Church 3 2 3 Protestantism 3 3 Islam 4 Indian religions 4 1 Buddhism 4 2 Hinduism 4 3 Jainism 4 4 Sikhism 5 Chinese and Sinosphere Traditions 5 1 Confucianism 5 2 Chinese Folk Religion 5 3 Daoism 5 4 North Korean Juche 6 Traditional religions 6 1 Africa 6 2 Americas 6 3 Polynesia 7 Religious tolerance and intolerance 8 Gallery 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksEtymology and nomenclature Edit Moses breaks the original two stone tablets inscribed with the Ten Commandments in response to the Israelites worship of the Golden Calf woodcut by Julius Schnorr von Carolsfeld 1860 The term idolatry comes from the Ancient Greek word eidololatria eἰdwlolatria which itself is a compound of two words eidolon eἴdwlon image idol and latreia latreia worship related to latris 21 The word eidololatria thus means worship of idols which in Latin appears first as idololatria then in Vulgar Latin as idolatria therefrom it appears in 12th century Old French as idolatrie which for the first time in mid 13th century English appears as idolatry 22 23 Although the Greek appears to be a loan translation of the Hebrew phrase avodat elilim עבודת אלילים which is attested in rabbinic literature e g bChul 13b Bar the Greek term itself is not found in the Septuagint Philo Josephus or in other Hellenistic Jewish writings citation needed The original term used in early rabbinic writings is oved avodah zarah AAZ worship in strange service or pagan while avodat kochavim umazalot AKUM worship of planets and constellations is not found in its early manuscripts 24 The later Jews used the term ע בו ד ה ז ר ה avodah zarah meaning foreign worship 25 Idolatry has also been called idolism 26 iconolatry 27 or idolodulia in historic literature 28 Prehistoric and ancient civilizations EditThe earliest so called Venus figurines have been dated to the prehistoric Upper Paleolithic era 35 40 ka onwards 29 Archaeological evidence from the islands of the Aegean Sea have yielded Neolithic era Cycladic figures from 4th and 3rd millennium BC idols in namaste which posture from Indus Valley civilization sites from the 3rd millennium BC and much older petroglyphs around the world show humans began producing sophisticated images 30 31 However because of a lack of historic texts describing these it is unclear what if any connection with religious beliefs these figures had 32 or whether they had other meaning and uses even as toys 33 34 35 The earliest historic records confirming cult images are from the ancient Egyptian civilization thereafter related to the Greek civilization 36 By the 2nd millennium BC two broad forms of cult image appear in one images are zoomorphic god in the image of animal or animal human fusion and in another anthropomorphic god in the image of man 32 The former is more commonly found in ancient Egypt influenced beliefs while the anthropomorphic images are more commonly found in Indo European cultures 36 37 Symbols of nature useful animals or feared animals may also be included by both The stelae from 4 000 to 2 500 BC period discovered in France Ireland through Ukraine and in Central Asia through South Asia suggest that the ancient anthropomorphic figures included zoomorphic motifs 37 In Nordic and Indian subcontinent bovine cow ox gwdus g ou motifs or statues for example were common 38 39 In Ireland iconic images included pigs 40 The Ancient Egyptian religion was polytheistic with large cult images that were either animals or included animal parts Ancient Greek civilization preferred human forms with idealized proportions for divine representation 36 The Canaanites of West Asia incorporated a golden calf in their pantheon 41 The ancient philosophy and practices of the Greeks thereafter Romans were imbued with polytheistic idolatry 42 43 They debate what is an image and if the use of image is appropriate To Plato images can be a remedy or poison to the human experience 44 To Aristotle states Paul Kugler an image is an appropriate mental intermediary that bridges between the inner world of the mind and the outer world of material reality the image is a vehicle between sensation and reason Idols are useful psychological catalysts they reflect sense data and pre existing inner feelings They are neither the origins nor the destinations of thought but the intermediary in the human inner journey 44 45 Fervid opposition to the idolatry of the Greeks and Romans was of Early Christianity and later Islam as evidenced by the widespread desecration and defacement of ancient Greek and Roman sculptures that have survived into the modern era 46 47 48 Abrahamic religions EditJudaism Edit Main articles Idolatry in Judaism and Aniconism in Judaism A 1768 synagogue parchment with the Ten Commandments by Jekuthiel Sofer Among other things it prohibits idolatry 49 Judaism prohibits any form of idolatry 50 even if they are used to worship the one God of Judaism as occurred during the sin of the golden calf According to the second word of the decalogue Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image The worship of foreign gods in any form or through icons is not allowed 50 51 Many Jewish scholars such as Rabbi Saadia Gaon Rabbi Bahya ibn Paquda and Rabbi Yehuda Halevi have elaborated on the issues of idolatry One of the oft cited discussions is the commentary of Rabbi Moshe ben Maimon Maimonides on idolatry 51 According to the Maimonidean interpretation idolatry in itself is not a fundamental sin but the grave sin is the denial of God s omnipresence that occurs with the belief that God can be corporeal In the Jewish belief the only image of God is man one who lives and thinks God has no visible shape and it is absurd to make or worship images instead man must worship the invisible God alone 51 52 The commandments in the Hebrew Bible against idolatry forbade the practices and gods of ancient Akkad Mesopotamia and Egypt 53 54 The Hebrew Bible states that God has no shape or form is utterly incomparable is everywhere and cannot be represented in a physical form of an idol 55 Biblical scholars have historically focused on the textual evidence to construct the history of idolatry in Judaism a scholarship that post modern scholars have increasingly begun deconstructing 19 This biblical polemics states Naomi Janowitz a professor of Religious Studies has distorted the reality of Israelite religious practices and the historic use of images in Judaism The direct material evidence is more reliable such as that from the archaeological sites and this suggests that the Jewish religious practices have been far more complex than what biblical polemics suggest Judaism included images and cultic statues in the First Temple period the Second Temple period Late Antiquity 2nd to 8th century CE and thereafter 19 56 Nonetheless these sorts of evidence may be simply descriptive of Ancient Israelite practices in some possibly deviant circles but cannot tell us anything about the mainstream religion of the Bible which proscribes idolatry 57 The history of Jewish religious practice has included cult images and figurines made of ivory terracotta faience and seals 19 58 As more material evidence emerged one proposal has been that Judaism oscillated between idolatry and iconoclasm However the dating of the objects and texts suggest that the two theologies and liturgical practices existed simultaneously The claimed rejection of idolatry because of monotheism found in Jewish literature and therefrom in biblical Christian literature states Janowitz has been unreal abstraction and flawed construction of the actual history 19 The material evidence of images statues and figurines taken together with the textual description of cherub and wine standing for blood for example suggests that symbolism making religious images icon and index has been integral part of Judaism 19 59 60 Every religion has some objects that represent the divine and stand for something in the mind of the faithful and Judaism too has had its holy objects and symbols such as the Menorah 19 Christianity Edit Main articles Religious images in Christian theology and Aniconism in Christianity St Benedict destroying a pagan idol by Juan Rizi 1600 1681 Ideas on idolatry in Christianity are based on the first of Ten Commandments You shall have no other gods before me 61 This is expressed in the Bible in Exodus 20 3 Matthew 4 10 Luke 4 8 and elsewhere e g 61 Ye shall make you no idols nor graven image neither rear you up a standing image neither shall ye set up any image of stone in your land to bow down unto it for I am the Lord your God Ye shall keep my sabbaths and reverence my sanctuary Leviticus 26 1 2 King James Bible 62 The Christian view of idolatry may generally be divided into two general categories the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox view which accepts the use of religious images 63 and the views of many Protestant churches that considerably restrict their use However many Protestants have used the image of the cross as a symbol 64 65 Catholicism Edit The veneration of Mary Jesus Christ and the Black Madonna are common practices in the Catholic Church The Roman Catholic and particularly the Orthodox Churches have traditionally defended the use of icons The debate on what images signify and whether reverence with the help of icons in church is equivalent to idolatry has lasted for many centuries particularly from the 7th century until the Reformation in the 16th century 66 These debates have supported the inclusion of icons of Jesus Christ the Virgin Mary and the Apostles the iconography expressed in stained glass regional saints and other symbols of Christian faith It has also supported the practices such as the Catholic mass burning of candles before pictures Christmas decorations and celebrations and festive or memorial processions with statues of religious significance to Christianity 66 67 68 St John of Damascus in his On the Divine Image defended the use of icons and images in direct response to the Byzantine iconoclasm that began widespread destruction of religious images in the 8th century with support from emperor Leo III and continued by his successor Constantine V during a period of religious war with the invading Umayyads 69 John of Damascus wrote I venture to draw an image of the invisible God not as invisible but as having become visible for our sakes through flesh and blood adding that images are expressions for remembrance either of wonder or an honor or dishonor or good or evil and that a book is also a written image in another form 70 71 He defended the religious use of images based on the Christian doctrine of Jesus as an incarnation 72 St John the Evangelist cited John 1 14 stating that the Word became flesh indicates that the invisible God became visible that God s glory manifested in God s one and only Son as Jesus Christ and therefore God chose to make the invisible into a visible form the spiritual incarnated into the material form 73 74 Pope Pius V praying with a crucifix painting by August Kraus The early defense of images included exegesis of Old and New Testament Evidence for the use of religious images is found in Early Christian art and documentary records For example the veneration of the tombs and statues of martyrs was common among early Christian communities In 397 St Augustine of Hippo in his Confessions 6 2 2 tells the story of his mother making offerings for the tombs of martyrs and the oratories built in the memory of the saints 75 Images function as the Bible for the illiterate and incite people to piety and virtue Pope Gregory I 7th century 76 The Catholic defense mentions textual evidence of external acts of honor towards icons arguing that there are a difference between adoration and veneration and that the veneration shown to icons differs entirely from the adoration of God Citing the Old Testament these arguments present examples of forms of veneration such as in Genesis 33 3 with the argument that adoration is one thing and that which is offered in order to venerate something of great excellence is another These arguments assert the honor given to the image is transferred to its prototype and that venerating an image of Christ does not terminate at the image itself the material of the image is not the object of worship rather it goes beyond the image to the prototype 77 76 78 According to the Catechism of the Catholic Church The Christian veneration of images is not contrary to the first commandment which proscribes idols Indeed the honor rendered to an image passes to its prototype and whoever venerates an image venerates the person portrayed in it The honor paid to sacred images is a respectful veneration not the adoration due to God alone Religious worship is not directed to images in themselves considered as mere things but under their distinctive aspect as images leading us on to God incarnate The movement toward the image does not terminate in it as image but tends toward that whose image it is 79 It also points out the following Idolatry not only refers to false pagan worship It remains a constant temptation to faith Idolatry consists in divinizing what is not God Man commits idolatry whenever he honors and reveres a creature in place of God whether this be gods or demons for example satanism power pleasure race ancestors the state money etc 80 The manufacture of images of Jesus the Virgin Mary and Christian saints along with prayers directed to these has been widespread among the Catholic faithful 81 Orthodox Church Edit The Eastern Orthodox Church has differentiated between latria and dulia A latria is the worship due God and latria to anyone or anything other than God is doctrinally forbidden by the Orthodox Church however dulia has been defined as veneration of religious images statues or icons which is not only allowed but obligatory 82 This distinction was discussed by Thomas Aquinas in section 3 25 of Summa Theologiae 83 The veneration of images of Mary is called Marian devotion above Lithuania a practice questioned in the majority of Protestant Christianity 84 85 In Orthodox apologetic literature the proper and improper use of images is extensively discussed Exegetical Orthodox literature points to icons and the manufacture by Moses under God s commandment of the Bronze Snake in Numbers 21 9 which had the grace and power of God to heal those bitten by real snakes Similarly the Ark of the Covenant was cited as evidence of the ritual object above which Yahweh was present 86 87 Veneration of icons through proskynesis was codified in 787 AD by the Seventh Ecumenical Council 88 89 This was triggered by the Byzantine Iconoclasm controversy that followed raging Christian Muslim wars and a period of iconoclasm in West Asia 88 90 The defense of images and the role of the Syrian scholar John of Damascus was pivotal during this period The Eastern Orthodox Church has ever since celebrated the use of icons and images Eastern Rite Catholics also accepts icons in their Divine Liturgy 91 Protestantism Edit The idolatry debate has been one of the defining differences between papal Catholicism and anti papal Protestantism 92 The anti papal writers have prominently questioned the worship practices and images supported by Catholics with many Protestant scholars listing it as the one religious error larger than all others The sub list of erring practices have included among other things the veneration of Virgin Mary the Catholic mass the invocation of saints and the reverence expected for and expressed to pope himself 92 The charges of supposed idolatry against the Roman Catholics were leveled by a diverse group of Protestants from Anglicans to Calvinists in Geneva 92 93 Altar with Christian Bible and crucifix on it in a Lutheran Protestant church Protestants did not abandon all icons and symbols of Christianity They typically avoid the use of images except the cross in any context suggestive of veneration The cross remained their central icon 64 65 Technically both major branches of Christianity have had their icons states Carlos Eire a professor of religious studies and history but its meaning has been different to each and one man s devotion was another man s idolatry 94 This was particularly true not only in the intra Christian debate states Eire but also when soldiers of Catholic kings replaced horrible Aztec idols in the American colonies with beautiful crosses and images of Mary and the saints 94 Protestants often accuse Catholics of idolatry iconolatry and even paganism in the Protestant Reformation such language was common to all Protestants In some cases such as the Puritan groups denounced all forms of religious objects regardless of whether it was a statue or scultpure or image including the Christian cross 95 The Waldensians were accused of idolatry by inquisitors 96 The body of Christ on the cross is an ancient symbol used within the Catholic Eastern Orthodox Anglican and Lutheran Churches in contrast with some Protestant groups which use only a simple cross In Judaism the reverence to the icon of Christ in the form of cross has been seen as idolatry 97 However some Jewish scholars disagree and consider Christianity to be based on Jewish belief and not truly idolatrous 98 Islam Edit Main articles Shirk Islam and Taghut See also Aniconism in Islam and Blasphemy and Islam In Islamic sources the concept of shirk triliteral root sh r k can refer to idolatry though it is most widely used to denote association of partners with God 99 The concept of Kufr k f r can also include idolatry among other forms of disbelief 100 101 The one who practices shirk is called mushrik plural mushrikun in the Islamic scriptures 102 The Quran forbids idolatry 102 Over 500 mentions of kufr and shirk are found in the Quran 100 103 and both concepts are strongly forbidden 99 The Islamic concept of idolatry extends beyond polytheism and includes some Christians and Jews as musirkun idolaters and kafirun infidels 104 105 For example Those who say Allah is the Messiah son of Mary have certainly fallen into disbelief The Messiah himself said O Children of Israel Worship Allah my Lord and your Lord Whoever associates others with Allah in worship will surely be forbidden Paradise by Allah Their home will be the Fire And the wrongdoers will have no helpers Surah Al Ma idah 5 72 Shia classical theology differs in the concept of Shirk According to Twelver theologians the attributes and names of God have no independent and hypostatic existence apart from the being and essence of God Any suggestion of these attributes and names being conceived of as separate is thought to entail polytheism It would be even incorrect to say God knows by his knowledge which is in his essence but God knows by his knowledge which is his essence Also God has no physical form and he is insensible 106 The border between theoretical Tawhid and Shirk is to know that every reality and being in its essence attributes and action are from him from Him ness it is Tawhid Every supernatural action of the prophets is by God s permission as Quran points to it The border between the Tawhid and Shirk in practice is to assume something as an end in itself independent from God not as a road to God to Him ness 107 Ismailis go deeper into the definition of Shirk declaring they don t recognize any sort of ground of being by the esoteric potential to have intuitive knowledge of the human being Hence most Shias have no problem with religious symbols and artworks and with reverence for Walis Rasuls and Imams Islam strongly prohibits all form of idolatry which is part of the sin of shirk Arabic شرك sirk comes from the Arabic root S R K ش ر ك with the general meaning of to share In the context of the Qur an the particular sense of sharing as an equal partner is usually understood as attributing a partner to Allah Shirk is often translated as idolatry and polytheism 99 In the Qur an shirk and the related word plural Stem IV active participle musrikun مشركون those who commit shirk often refers to the enemies of Islam as in verse 9 1 15 but sometimes it also refers to erring Muslims citation needed Within Islam shirk is sin that can only be forgiven if the person who commits it asks God for forgiveness if the person who committed it dies without repenting God may forgive any sin except for committing shirk citation needed In practice especially among strict conservative interpretations of Islam the term has been greatly extended and means deification of anyone or anything other than the singular God citation needed In Salafi Wahhabi interpretation it may be used very widely to describe behaviour that does not literally constitute worship including use of images of sentient beings building a structure over a grave associating partners with God giving his characteristics to others beside him or not believing in his characteristics citation needed 19th century Wahhabis regarded idolatry punishable with the death penalty a practice that was hitherto unknown in Islam 108 109 However Classical Orthodox Sunni thought used to be rich in Relics and Saint veneration as well as pilgrimage to their shrines Ibn Taymiyya a medieval theologian that influenced modern days Salafists was put in prison for his negation of veneration of relics and Saints as well as pilgrimage to Shrines which was considered unorthodox by his contemporary theologians source source source source source source source source The Kaaba during Hajj According to Islamic tradition over the millennia after Ishmael s death his progeny and the local tribes who settled around the oasis of Zam Zam gradually turned to polytheism and idolatry Several idols were placed within the Kaaba representing deities of different aspects of nature and different tribes Several heretical rituals were adopted in the Pilgrimage Hajj including doing naked circumambulation 110 In her book Islam A Short History Karen Armstrong asserts that the Kaaba was officially dedicated to Hubal a Nabatean deity and contained 360 idols that probably represented the days of the year 111 But by Muhammad s day it seems that the Kaaba was venerated as the shrine of Allah the High God Allah was never represented by an idol 112 Once a year tribes from all around the Arabian peninsula whether Christian or pagan would converge on Mecca to perform the Hajj marking the widespread conviction that Allah was the same deity worshiped by monotheists 111 Guillaume in his translation of Ibn Ishaq an early biographer of Muhammad says the Ka aba might have been itself addressed using a feminine grammatical form by the Quraysh 113 Circumambulation was often performed naked by men and almost naked by women 110 It is disputed whether Allah and Hubal were the same deity or different Per a hypothesis by Uri Rubin and Christian Robin Hubal was only venerated by Quraysh and the Kaaba was first dedicated to Allah a supreme god of individuals belonging to different tribes while the pantheon of the gods of Quraysh was installed in Kaaba after they conquered Mecca a century before Muhammad s time 114 Indian religions EditThe oldest forms of the ancient religions of India apparently made no use of cult images While the Vedic literature leading up to Hinduism is extensive in the form of Samhitas Brahmanas Aranyakas and Upanishads and has been dated to have been composed over a period of centuries 1200 BC to 200 BC 115 historical Vedic religion appears not to have used cult images up to around 500 BC at least The early Buddhist and Jain pre 200 BC traditions suggest no evidence of idolatry The Vedic literature mentions many gods and goddesses as well as the use of Homa votive ritual using fire but it does not mention images or their worship 115 116 The ancient Buddhist Hindu and Jaina texts discuss the nature of existence whether there is or is not a creator deity such as in the Nasadiya Sukta of the Rigveda they describe meditation they recommend the pursuit of simple monastic life and self knowledge they debate the nature of absolute reality as Brahman or Sunyata yet the ancient Indian texts mention no use of images Indologists such as the Max Muller Jan Gonda Pandurang Vaman Kane Ramchandra Narayan Dandekar Horace Hayman Wilson Stephanie Jamison and other scholars state that there is no evidence for icons or images representing god s in the ancient religions of India Use of cult images developed among the Indian religions later 115 117 perhaps first in Buddhism where large images of the Buddha appear by the 1st century AD According to John Grimes a professor of Indian philosophy Indian thought denied even dogmatic idolatry of its scriptures Everything has been left to challenge arguments and enquiry with the medieval Indian scholar Vacaspati Misra stating that not all scripture is authoritative only scripture which reveals the identity of the individual self and the supreme self as the non dual Absolute 118 Buddhism Edit See also Aniconism in Buddhism Buddhists praying before a statue in Tibet left and Vietnam According to Eric Reinders icons and idolatry have been an integral part of Buddhism throughout its later history 119 Buddhists from Korea to Vietnam Thailand to Tibet Central Asia to South Asia have long produced temples and idols altars and rosaries relics to amulets images to ritual implements 119 120 121 The images or relics of Buddha are found in all Buddhist traditions but they also feature gods and goddesses such as those in Tibetan Buddhism 119 122 Bhakti called Bhatti in Pali has been a common practice in Theravada Buddhism where offerings and group prayers are made to Cetiya and particularly images of Buddha 123 124 Karel Werner notes that Bhakti has been a significant practice in Theravada Buddhism and states there can be no doubt that deep devotion or bhakti bhatti does exist in Buddhism and that it had its beginnings in the earliest days 125 According to Peter Harvey a professor of Buddhist Studies Buddha idols and idolatry spread into northwest Indian subcontinent now Pakistan and Afghanistan and into Central Asia with Buddhist Silk Road merchants 126 The Hindu rulers of different Indian dynasties patronized both Buddhism and Hinduism from 4th to 9th century building Buddhist icons and cave temples such as the Ajanta Caves and Ellora Caves which featured Buddha idols 127 128 129 From the 10th century states Harvey the raids into northwestern parts of South Asia by Muslim Turks destroyed Buddhist idols given their religious dislike for idolatry The iconoclasm was so linked to Buddhism that the Islamic texts of this era in India called all idols as Budd 126 The desecration of idols in cave temples continued through the 17th century states Geri Malandra from the offense of the graphic anthropomorphic imagery of Hindu and Buddhist shrines 129 130 In East Asia and Southeast Asia worship in Buddhist temples with the aid of icons and sacred objects has been historic 131 In Japanese Buddhism for example Butsugu sacred objects have been integral to the worship of the Buddha kuyo and such idolatry considered a part of the process of realizing one s Buddha nature This process is more than meditation it has traditionally included devotional rituals butsudo aided by the Buddhist clergy 131 These practices are also found in Korea and China 121 131 Hinduism Edit Main article Murti Ganesh statue during a contemporary festival left and Bhakti saint Meera singing before an image of Krishna In Hinduism an icon image or statue is called Murti or Pratima 8 132 Major Hindu traditions such as Vaishnavism Shaivism Shaktism and Smartaism favor the use of Murti idol These traditions suggest that it is easier to dedicate time and focus on spirituality through anthropomorphic or non anthropomorphic icons The Bhagavad Gita a Hindu scripture in verse 12 5 states that only a few have the time and mind to ponder and fix on the unmanifested Absolute abstract formless Brahman and it is much easier to focus on qualities virtues aspects of a manifested representation of god through one s senses emotions and heart because the way human beings naturally are 133 134 A murti in Hinduism states Jeaneane Fowler a professor of Religious Studies specializing on Indian Religions is itself not god it is an image of god and thus a symbol and representation 8 A Murti is a form and manifestation states Fowler of the formless Absolute 8 Thus a literal translation of Murti as idol is incorrect when idol is understood as superstitious end in itself Just like the photograph of a person is not the real person a Murti is an image in Hinduism but not the real thing but in both cases the image reminds of something of emotional and real value to the viewer 8 When a person worships a Murti it is assumed to be a manifestation of the essence or spirit of the deity the worshipper s spiritual ideas and needs are meditated through it yet the idea of ultimate reality called Brahman in Hinduism is not confined in it 8 Devotional bhakti movement practices centered on cultivating a deep and personal bond of love with God often expressed and facilitated with one or more Murti and includes individual or community hymns japa or singing bhajan kirtan or aarti Acts of devotion in major temples particularly are structured on treating the Murti as the manifestation of a revered guest 11 and the daily routine can include awakening the murti in the morning and making sure that it is washed dressed and garlanded 135 136 Note 1 In Vaishnavism the building of a temple for the murti is considered an act of devotion but non Murti symbolism is also common wherein the aromatic Tulsi plant or Saligrama is an aniconic reminder of the spiritualism in Vishnu 135 In the Shaivism tradition of Hinduism Shiva may be represented as a masculine idol or half man half woman ardhanarishvara form in an anicon Linga Yoni form The worship rituals associated with the Murti correspond to ancient cultural practices for a beloved guest and the Murti is welcomed taken care of and then requested to retire 137 138 Christopher John Fuller states that an image in Hinduism cannot be equated with a deity and the object of worship is the divine whose power is inside the image and the image is not the object of worship itself Hindus believe everything is worthy of worship as it contains divine energy 139 The idols are neither random nor intended as superstitious objects rather they are designed with embedded symbolism and iconographic rules which sets the style proportions the colors the nature of items the images carry their mudra and the legends associated with the deity 139 140 141 The Vastusutra Upaniṣad states that the aim of the Murti art is to inspire a devotee towards contemplating the Ultimate Supreme Principle Brahman 141 This text adds abridged From the contemplation of images grows delight from delight faith from faith steadfast devotion through such devotion arises that higher understanding paravidya that is the royal road to moksha Without the guidance of images the mind of the devotee may go ashtray and form wrong imaginations Images dispel false imaginations It is in the mind of Rishis sages who see and have the power of discerning the essence of all created things of manifested forms They see their different characters the divine and the demoniac the creative and the destructive forces in their eternal interplay It is this vision of Rishis of gigantic drama of cosmic powers in eternal conflict which the Sthapakas Silpins murti and temple artists drew the subject matter for their work Pippalada Vastusutra Upaniṣad Introduction by Alice Boner et al 142 Some Hindu movements founded during the colonial era such as the Arya Samaj and Satya Mahima Dharma reject idolatry 143 144 145 Jainism Edit Gomateshwara Bahubali statue in Jainism Devotional idolatry has been a prevalent ancient practice in various Jaina sects wherein learned Tirthankara Jina and human gurus have been venerated with offerings songs and Arati prayers 146 Like other major Indian religions Jainism has premised its spiritual practices on the belief that all knowledge is inevitably mediated by images and human beings discover learn and know what is to be known through names images and representations Thus idolatry has been a part of the major sects of Jainism such as Digambara and Shvetambara 147 The earliest archaeological evidence of the idols and images in Jainism is from Mathura and has been dated to be from the first half of the 1st millennium AD 148 The creation of idols their consecration the inclusion of Jaina layperson in idols and temples of Jainism by the Jaina monks has been a historic practice 147 However during the iconoclastic era of Islamic rule between the 15th and 17th century a Lonka sect of Jainism emerged that continued pursuing their traditional spirituality but without the Jaina arts images and idols 149 Sikhism Edit Main article Idolatry in Sikhism Sikhism is a monotheistic Indian religion and Sikh temples are devoid of idols and icons for God 150 151 Yet Sikhism strongly encourages devotion to God 152 153 Some scholars call Sikhism a Bhakti sect of Indian traditions 154 155 In Sikhism nirguni Bhakti is emphasised devotion to a divine without Gunas qualities or form 155 156 157 but its scripture also accepts representations of God with formless nirguni and with form saguni as stated in Adi Granth 287 158 159 Sikhism condemns worshipping images or statues as if it were God 160 but have historically challenged the iconoclastic policies and Hindu temple destruction activities of Islamic rulers in India 161 Sikhs house their scripture and revere the Guru Granth Sahib as the final Guru of Sikhism 162 It is installed in Sikh Gurdwara temple many Sikhs bow or prostrate before it on entering the temple Note 1 Guru Granth Sahib is ritually installed every morning and put to bed at night in many Gurdwaras 169 170 171 In the Dasam Bani Guru Gobind Singh wrote I am idol breaker on line 95 of his Zafarnamah 172 Chinese and Sinosphere Traditions EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it August 2022 Confucianism Edit Chinese Folk Religion Edit Daoism Edit North Korean Juche Edit Kim Il Sung instituted worship of himself amongst the citizens and it is considered the only modern country to deify its ruler 173 174 175 As many citizens frequently bow before statues and portraits of him scholars have considered it to be a form of idolatry 176 177 178 Traditional religions EditAfrica Edit See also Traditional African religions An Orisha deity left and an artwork depicting a kneeling female worshipper with child by Yoruba people Africa has numerous ethnic groups and their diverse religious idea have been grouped as African Traditional Religions sometimes abbreviated to ATR These religions typically believe in a Supreme Being which goes by different regional names as well as spirit world often linked to ancestors and mystical magical powers through divination 179 Idols and their worship have been associated with all three components in the African Traditional Religions 180 According to J O Awolalu proselytizing Christians and Muslims have mislabelled idol to mean false god when in the reality of most traditions of Africa the object may be a piece of wood or iron or stone yet it is symbolic an emblem and implies the spiritual idea which is worshipped 181 The material objects may decay or get destroyed the emblem may crumble or substituted but the spiritual idea that it represents to the heart and mind of an African traditionalist remains unchanged 181 Sylvester Johnson a professor of African American and Religious Studies concurs with Awolalu and states that the colonial era missionaries who arrived in Africa neither understood the regional languages nor the African theology and interpreted the images and ritualism as epitome of idolatry projecting the iconoclastic controversies in Europe they grew up with onto Africa 182 First with the arrival of Islam in Africa then during the Christian colonial efforts the religiously justified wars the colonial portrayal of idolatry as proof of savagery the destruction of idols and the seizure of idolaters as slaves marked a long period of religious intolerance which supported religious violence and demeaning caricature of the African Traditional Religionists 183 184 185 The violence against idolaters and idolatry of Traditional Religion practicers of Africa started in the medieval era and continued into the modern era 186 187 188 The charge of idolatry by proselytizers state Michael Wayne Cole and Rebecca Zorach served to demonize and dehumanize local African populations and justify their enslavement and abuse locally or far off plantations settlements or for forced domestic labor 189 190 Americas Edit Inti Raymi a winter solstice festival of the Inca people reveres Inti the sun deity Offerings include round bread and maize beer 191 Statues images and temples have been a part of the Traditional Religions of the indigenous people of the Americas 192 193 194 The Incan Mayan and Aztec civilizations developed sophisticated religious practices that incorporated idols and religious arts 194 The Inca culture for example has believed in Viracocha also called Pachacutec as the creator deity and nature deities such as Inti sun deity and Mama Cocha the goddess of the sea lakes rivers and waters 195 196 197 The Aztec Tula Atlantean statues above have been called as symbols of idolatry but may have just been stone images of warriors 198 In Mayan culture Kukulkan has been the supreme creator deity also revered as the god of reincarnation water fertility and wind 199 The Mayan people built step pyramid temples to honor Kukulkan aligning them to the Sun s position on the spring equinox 200 Other deities found at Mayan archaeological sites include Xib Chac the benevolent male rain deity and Ixchel the benevolent female earth weaving and pregnancy goddess 200 A deity with aspects similar to Kulkulkan in the Aztec culture has been called Quetzalcoatl 199 Missionaries came to the Americas with the start of Spanish colonial era and the Catholic Church did not tolerate any form of native idolatry preferring that the icons and images of Jesus and Mary replace the native idols 94 201 192 Aztec for example had a written history which included those about their Traditional Religion but the Spanish colonialists destroyed this written history in their zeal to end what they considered as idolatry and to convert the Aztecs to Catholicism The Aztec Indians however preserved their religion and religious practices by burying their idols under the crosses and then continuing their idol worship rituals and practices aided by the syncretic composite of atrial crosses and their idols as before 202 During and after the imposition of Catholic Christianity during Spanish colonialism the Incan people retained their original beliefs in deities through syncretism where they overlay the Christian God and teachings over their original beliefs and practices 203 204 205 The male deity Inti became accepted as the Christian God but the Andean rituals centered around idolatry of Incan deities have been retained and continued thereafter into the modern era by the Incan people 205 206 Polynesia Edit The Polynesian people have had a range of polytheistic theologies found across the Pacific Ocean The Polynesian people produced idols from wood and congregated around these idols for worship 207 208 The Christian missionaries particularly from the London Missionary Society such as John Williams and others such as the Methodist Missionary Society characterized these as idolatry in the sense of islanders worshipping false gods They sent back reports which primarily focussed on overthrow of pagan idolatry as evidence of their Christian sects triumph with fewer mentions of actual converts and baptism 209 210 Religious tolerance and intolerance EditThe term false god is often used throughout the Abrahamic scriptures Torah Tanakh Bible and Quran to compare Yahweh 211 interpreted by Jews Samaritans and Christians or Elohim Allah 212 interpreted by Muslims as the only true God 4 Nevertheless the Hebrew Bible Old Testament itself recognizes and reports that originally the Israelites were not monotheists but actively engaged in idolatry and worshipped many foreign non Jewish Gods besides Yahweh and or instead of him 213 such as Baal Astarte Asherah Chemosh Dagon Moloch Tammuz and more and continued to do so until their return from the Babylonian exile 211 see Ancient Hebrew religion Judaism the oldest Abrahamic religion eventually shifted into a strict exclusive monotheism 5 based on the sole veneration of Yahweh 214 215 216 the predecessor to the Abrahamic conception of God Note 2 The vast majority of religions in history have been and or are still polytheistic worshipping many diverse deities 220 Moreover the material depiction of a deity or more deities has always played an eminent role in all cultures of the world 7 The claim to worship the one and only true God came to most of the world with the arrival of Abrahamic religions and is the distinguishing characteristic of their monotheistic worldview 5 220 221 222 whereas virtually all the other religions in the world have been and or are still animistic and polytheistic 220 Some Neopagan religions such as Wicca utilize statues of deities within their worship experience 223 The accusations and presumption that all idols and images are devoid of symbolism or that icons of one s own religion are true healthy uplifting beautiful symbolism mark of devotion divine while of other person s religion are false an illness superstitious grotesque madness evil addiction satanic and cause of all incivility is more a matter of subjective personal interpretation rather than objective impersonal truth 19 Regina Schwartz and some other contemporary scholars state allegations that idols only represent false gods followed by iconoclastic destruction is only little more than religious intolerance 224 225 The Scottish Enlightenment philosopher David Hume wrote in his essay Dialogues Concerning Natural Religion 1779 that the worship of different gods and cult images in Pagan religions is premised on religious pluralism tolerance and acceptance of diverse representations of the divine whereas Abrahamic monotheistic religions are intolerant have attempted to destroy freedom of expression and have violently forced others to accept and worship their conception of God 20 Gallery EditChristian depictions of idolatry The Ten Commandments on a monument on the grounds of the Texas State Capitol The first commandment listed is interpreted as prohibiting idolatry but the nature of the meaning of idolatry in the Biblical law in Christianity is disputed Bronze snake formerly believed to be the one set up by Moses in the main nave of Sant Ambrogio basilica in Milan Italy a gift from Byzantine emperor Basil II 1007 It stands on an Ancient Roman granite pillar Picture by Giovanni Dall Orto 25 April 2007 The Adoration of the Golden Calf by Nicolas Poussin See also EditBuddhist devotion prayer ritual in Buddhism Dambana Deity El Tio Fetishism Jezebel Perceptions of religious imagery in natural phenomena Puja Hinduism prayer ritual in HinduismNotes Edit a b Such idol caring practices are found in other religions For example the Infant Jesus of Prague is venerated in many countries of the Catholic world In the Prague Church it is housed it is ritually cared for cleaned and dressed by the sisters of the Carmelites Church changing the Infant Jesus clothing to one of the approximately hundred costumes donated by the faithfuls as gift of devotion 163 164 The idol is worshipped with the faithful believing that it renders favors to those who pray to it 164 165 166 Such ritualistic caring of the image of baby Jesus is found in other churches and homes in Central Europe and Portugual Spain influenced Christian communities with different names such as Menino Deus 165 167 168 Although the Semitic god El is indeed the most ancient predecessor to the Abrahamic god 213 214 217 218 this specifically refers to the ancient ideas Yahweh once encompassed in the Ancient Hebrew religion such as being a storm and war god living on mountains or controlling the weather 213 214 217 218 219 Thus in this page s context Yahweh is used to refer to God as conceived in the Ancient Hebrew religion and should not be referenced when describing his later worship in today s Abrahamic religions References Edit a b Moshe Halbertal Avishai Margalit Naomi Goldblum 1992 Idolatry Harvard University Press pp 1 8 85 86 146 148 ISBN 978 0 674 44313 6 DiBernardo Sabatino 2008 American Idol atry A Religious Profanation The Journal of Religion and Popular Culture 19 1 1 2 doi 10 3138 jrpc 19 1 001 Quote Idolatry in the first commandment denotes the notion of worship adoration or reverence of an image of God Poorthuis Marcel 2007 6 Idolatry and the Mirror Iconoclasm as a Prerequisite for Inter Human Relations Iconoclasm and Iconoclash Chapter 6 Idolatry and the Mirror Iconoclasm As A Prerequisite For Inter Human Relations BRILL Academic pp 125 140 doi 10 1163 ej 9789004161955 i 538 53 ISBN 9789004161955 a b c d Angelini Anna 2021 Les dieux des autres entre demons et idoles L imaginaire du demoniaque dans la Septante Une analyse comparee de la notion de demon dans la Septante et dans la Bible Hebraique Supplements to the Journal for the Study of Judaism in French Vol 197 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 184 224 doi 10 1163 9789004468474 008 ISBN 978 90 04 46847 4 a b c Leone Massimo Spring 2016 Asif Agha ed Smashing Idols A Paradoxical Semiotics PDF Signs and Society Chicago University of Chicago Press on behalf of the Semiosis Research Center at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies 4 1 30 56 doi 10 1086 684586 eISSN 2326 4497 hdl 2318 1561609 ISSN 2326 4489 S2CID 53408911 Archived PDF from the original on 23 September 2017 Retrieved 28 July 2021 Wendy Doniger 1999 Merriam Webster s Encyclopedia of World Religions Merriam Webster p 497 ISBN 978 0 87779 044 0 a b c d Frohn Elke Sophie Lutzenkirchen H Georg 2007 Idol In von Stuckrad Kocku ed The Brill Dictionary of Religion Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1872 5287 bdr SIM 00041 ISBN 9789004124332 S2CID 240180055 a b c d e f g h Jeaneane D Fowler 1996 Hinduism Beliefs and Practices Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1 898723 60 8 pages 41 45 a b Karel Werner 1995 Love Divine Studies in Bhakti and Devotional Mysticism Routledge ISBN 978 0700702350 pages 45 46 John Cort 2011 Jains in the World Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 979664 9 pages 80 85 Klaus Klostermaier 2010 A Survey of Hinduism State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0 7914 7082 4 pages 264 267 a b Lindsay Jones ed 2005 Gale Encyclopedia of Religion Vol 11 Thompson Gale pp 7493 7495 ISBN 978 0 02 865980 0 Smart Ninian 10 November 2020 26 July 1999 Polytheism Encyclopaedia Britannica Edinburgh Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Archived from the original on 11 November 2020 Retrieved 28 July 2021 Aniconism Encyclopaedia Britannica Marina Prusac Kristine Kolrud 2014 Iconoclasm from Antiquity to Modernity Ashgate pp 1 3 ISBN 978 1 4094 7033 5 Willem J van Asselt Paul Van Geest Daniela Muller 2007 Iconoclasm and Iconoclash Struggle for Religious Identity BRILL Academic pp 8 9 52 60 ISBN 978 90 04 16195 5 Andre Wink 1997 Al Hind the Making of the Indo Islamic World BRILL Academic pp 317 324 ISBN 978 90 04 10236 1 Barbara Roggema 2009 The Legend of Sergius Bahira Eastern Christian Apologetics and Apocalyptic in Response to Islam BRILL Academic pp 204 205 ISBN 978 90 04 16730 8 Erich Kolig 2012 Conservative Islam A Cultural Anthropology Rowman amp Littlefield pp 71 with footnote 2 ISBN 978 0 7391 7424 1 a b c d e f g h Janowitz Naomi 2007 Good Jews Don t Historical and Philosophical Constructions of Idolatry History of Religions 47 2 3 239 252 doi 10 1086 524212 S2CID 170216039 a b Moshe Halbertal Donniel Hartman 2007 Monotheism and Violence Vol Judaism and the Challenges of Modern Life Bloomsbury Academic pp 105 112 ISBN 978 0 8264 9668 3 John Bowker 2005 Idolatry The Concise Oxford Dictionary of World Religions Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 acref 9780192800947 001 0001 ISBN 978 0 19 861053 3 Douglas Harper 2015 Etymology Dictionary Idolatry Noah Webster 1841 An American Dictionary of the English Language BL Hamlen p 857 Stern Sacha 1994 Jewish Identity in Early Rabbinic Writings BRILL p 9 with footnotes 47 48 ISBN 978 9004100121 Retrieved 18 October 2013 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Idolatry Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 14 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 288 idolism Merriam Webster Anthony Ephirim Donkor 2012 African Religion Defined A Systematic Study of Ancestor Worship among the Akan University Press of America p 4 ISBN 978 0 7618 6058 7 iconolatry Merriam Webster Elmar Waibl 1997 Dictionary of philosophical terms Walter de Gruyter pp 42 see Bilderverehrung ISBN 978 3 11 097454 6 John F Thornton Susan B Varenne 2006 Steward of God s Covenant Selected Writings Random House p 11 ISBN 978 1 4000 9648 0 See John Calvin 1537 The Institutes of the Christian Religion Quote The worship which they pay to their images they cloak with the name of eἰdwlodyleia idolodulia and deny to be eἰdwlolatreia idolatria So they speak holding that the worship which they call dulia may without insult to God be paid to statues and pictures For the Greek word latreyein having no other meaning than to worship what they say is just the same as if they were to confess that they worship their images without worshipping them They cannot object that I am quibbling upon words But how eloquent soever they may be they will never prove by their eloquence that one and the same thing makes two Let them show how the things differ if they would be thought different from ancient idolaters The Cave Art Debate Smithsonian Magazine March 2012 Richard G Lesure 2011 Interpreting Ancient Figurines Context Comparison and Prehistoric Art Cambridge University Press pp 11 12 ISBN 978 1 139 49615 5 National Museum Seated Male in Namaskar pose New Delhi Government of India S Kalyanaraman 2007 Indus Script Cipher Hieroglyphs of Indian Linguistic Area Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 0982897102 pages 234 236 a b Peter Roger Stuart Moorey 2003 Idols of the People Miniature Images of Clay in the Ancient Near East Oxford University Press pp 1 15 ISBN 978 0 19 726280 1 S Diamant 1974 A Prehistoric Figurine from Mycenae The Annual of the British School at Athens Vol 69 1974 pages 103 107 JURGEN THIMME 1965 DIE RELIGIOSE BEDEUTUNG DER KYKLADENIDOLE Antike Kunst 8 Jahrg H 2 1965 pages 72 86 in German Colin Beckley Elspeth Waters 2008 Who Holds the Moral High Ground Societas Imprint Academic pp 10 11 ISBN 978 1 84540 103 0 a b c Barbara Johnson 2010 Moses and Multiculturalism University of California Press pp 50 52 ISBN 978 0 520 26254 6 a b Douglas Q Adams 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Routledge pp 44 125 133 544 545 ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 Boria Sax 2001 The Mythical Zoo An Encyclopedia of Animals in World Myth Legend and Literature ABC CLIO pp 48 49 ISBN 978 1 57607 612 5 Douglas Q Adams 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Routledge pp 124 129 130 134 137 138 ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 James Bonwick 1894 Irish Druids and Old Irish Religions Griffith Farran pp 230 231 Barbara Johnson 2010 Moses and Multiculturalism University of California Press pp 21 22 50 51 ISBN 978 0 520 26254 6 Sylvia Estienne 2015 Rubina Raja and Jorg Rupke ed A Companion to the Archaeology of Religion in the Ancient World John Wiley amp Sons pp 379 384 ISBN 978 1 4443 5000 5 Arthur P Urbano 2013 The Philosophical Life Catholic University of America Press pp 212 213 with footnotes 25 26 ISBN 978 0 8132 2162 5 a b Paul Kugler 2008 Polly Young Eisendrath Terence Dawson eds The Cambridge Companion to Jung Cambridge University Press pp 78 79 ISBN 978 1 139 82798 0 Christopher Norris 1997 New Idols of the Cave On the Limits of Anti realism Manchester University Press pp 106 110 ISBN 978 0 7190 5093 0 David Sansone 2016 Ancient Greek Civilization Wiley pp 275 276 ISBN 978 1 119 09814 0 Sidney H Griffith 2012 The Church in the Shadow of the Mosque Christians and Muslims in the World of Islam Princeton University Press pp 143 145 ISBN 978 1 4008 3402 0 King G R D 1985 Islam iconoclasm and the declaration of doctrine Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 48 2 267 doi 10 1017 s0041977x00033346 S2CID 162882785 UBA Rosenthaliana 1768 English 1768 The Ten Commandments copied in Amsterdam Jekuthiel Sofer in Dutch Retrieved 26 April 2012 a b Barry Kogan 1992 Proceedings of the Academy for Jewish Philosophy University Press of America pp 169 170 ISBN 978 0 8191 7925 8 a b c David Novak 1996 Leo Strauss and Judaism Jerusalem and Athens Critically Revisited Rowman amp Littlefield pp 72 73 ISBN 978 0 8476 8147 1 Hava Tirosh Samuelson Aaron W Hughes 2015 Arthur Green Hasidism for Tomorrow BRILL Academic p 231 ISBN 978 90 04 30842 8 Shalom Goldman 2012 Wiles of Women The Wiles of Men The Joseph and Potiphar s Wife in Ancient Near Eastern Jewish and Islamic Folklore State University of New York Press pp 64 68 ISBN 978 1 4384 0431 8 Abraham Joshua Heschel 2005 Heavenly Torah As Refracted Through the Generations Bloomsbury Academic pp 73 75 ISBN 978 0 8264 0802 0 Frank L Kidner Maria Bucur Ralph Mathisen et al 2007 Making Europe People Politics and Culture Volume I To 1790 Cengage p 40 ISBN 978 0 618 00480 5 Timothy Insoll 2002 Archaeology and World Religion Routledge pp 112 113 ISBN 978 1 134 59798 7 Reuven Chaim Klein 2018 God versus Gods Judaism in the Age of Idolatry Mosaica Press ISBN 978 1946351463 Allen Shapiro 2011 Judean pillar figurines a study MA Thesis Advisor Barry Gittlen Towson University United States Rachel Neis 29 August 2013 The Sense of Sight in Rabbinic Culture Cambridge University Press pp 99 100 with footnotes ISBN 978 1 107 03251 4 Kalman Bland 2001 Lawrence Fine ed Judaism in Practice From the Middle Ages Through the Early Modern Period Princeton University Press pp 290 291 ISBN 978 0 691 05787 3 a b T J Wray 2011 What the Bible Really Tells Us The Essential Guide to Biblical Literacy Rowman amp Littlefield Publishers pp 164 165 ISBN 978 1 4422 1293 0 Terrance Shaw 2010 The Shaw s Revised King James Holy Bible Trafford Publishing p 74 ISBN 978 1 4251 1667 5 Frank K Flinn 2007 Encyclopedia of Catholicism Infobase pp 358 359 ISBN 978 0 8160 7565 2 a b Leora Batnitzky 2009 Idolatry and Representation The Philosophy of Franz Rosenzweig Reconsidered Princeton University Press pp 147 156 ISBN 978 1 4008 2358 1 a b Ryan K Smith 2011 Gothic Arches Latin Crosses Anti Catholicism and American Church Designs in the Nineteenth Century University of North Carolina Press pp 79 81 ISBN 978 0 8078 7728 9 a b Moshe Halbertal Avishai Margalit Naomi Goldblum 1992 Idolatry Harvard University Press pp 39 40 102 103 116 119 ISBN 978 0 674 44313 6 L A Craighen 1914 The Practice of Idolatry Taylor amp Taylor pp 21 26 30 31 William L Vance 1989 America s Rome Catholic and contemporary Rome Yale University Press pp 5 8 12 17 18 ISBN 978 0 300 04453 9 Stephen Gero 1973 Byzantine Iconoclasm During the Reign of Leo III With Particular Attention to the Oriental Sources Corpus scriptorum Christianorum Orientalium Subsidia pp 1 7 44 45 ISBN 9789042903876 Saint John of Damascus 1898 St John Damascene on Holy Images pros Tous Diaballontas Tas Agias Eikonas T Baker pp 5 6 12 17 Hans J Hillerbrand 2012 A New History of Christianity Abingdon pp 131 133 367 ISBN 978 1 4267 1914 1 Benedict Groschel 2010 I Am with You Always A Study of the History and Meaning of Personal Devotion to Jesus Christ for Catholic Orthodox and Protestant Christians Ignatius pp 58 60 ISBN 978 1 58617 257 2 Jeffrey F Hamburger 2002 St John the Divine The Deified Evangelist in Medieval Art and Theology University of California Press pp 3 18 24 30 31 ISBN 978 0 520 22877 1 Ronald P Byars 2002 The Future of Protestant Worship Beyond the Worship Wars Westminster John Knox Press pp 43 44 ISBN 978 0 664 22572 8 Kenelm Henry Digby 1841 Mores Catholici Or Ages of Faith Catholic Society pp 408 410 a b Natasha T Seaman Hendrik Terbrugghen 2012 The Religious Paintings of Hendrick Ter Brugghen Reinventing Christian Painting After the Reformation in Utrecht Ashgate pp 23 29 ISBN 978 1 4094 3495 5 Horst Woldemar Janson Anthony F Janson 2003 History of Art The Western Tradition Prentice Hall p 386 ISBN 978 0 13 182895 7 Henry Ede Eze 2011 Images in Catholicism idolatry Discourse on the First Commandment With Biblical Citations St Paul Press pp 11 14 ISBN 978 0 9827966 9 6 Catechism of the Catholic Church Paragraph 2132 Retrieved 26 May 2021 Catechism of The Catholic Church passage 2113 p 460 Geoffrey Chapman 1999 Thomas W L Jones 1898 The Queen of Heaven Mamma Schiavona the Black Mother the Madonna of the Pignasecea a Delineation of the Great Idolatry pp 1 2 Kathleen M Ashley Robert L A Clark 2001 Medieval Conduct University of Minnesota Press pp 211 212 ISBN 978 0 8166 3576 4 Bernard Lonergan 2016 The Incarnate Word The Collected Works of Bernard Lonergan Volume 8 University of Toronto Press pp 310 314 ISBN 978 1 4426 3111 3 Rev Robert William Dibdin 1851 England warned and counselled 4 lectures on popery and tractarianism James Nisbet p 20 Gary Waller 2013 Walsingham and the English Imagination Ashgate p 153 ISBN 978 1 4094 7860 7 Sebastian Dabovich 1898 The Holy Orthodox Church Or The Ritual Services and Sacraments of the Eastern Apostolic Greek Russian Church American Review of Eastern Orthodoxy pp 21 22 ISBN 9780899810300 Ulrich Broich Theo Stemmler Gerd Stratmann 1984 Functions of Literature Niemeyer pp 120 121 ISBN 978 3 484 40106 8 a b Ambrosios Giakalis 2005 Images of the Divine The Theology of Icons at the Seventh Ecumenical Council Brill Academic pp viii ix 1 3 ISBN 978 90 04 14328 9 Gabriel Balima 2008 Satanic Christianity and the Creation of the Seventh Day Dorrance pp 72 73 ISBN 978 1 4349 9280 2 Patricia Crone 1980 Islam Judeo Christianity and Byzantine Iconoclasm Jerusalem Studies in Arabic and Islam Volume 2 pages 59 95 James Leslie Houlden 2003 Jesus in History Thought and Culture An Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 369 370 ISBN 978 1 57607 856 3 a b c Anthony Milton 2002 Catholic and Reformed The Roman and Protestant Churches in English Protestant Thought Cambridge University Press pp 186 195 ISBN 978 0 521 89329 9 James Noyes 2013 The Politics of Iconoclasm Religion Violence and the Culture of Image Breaking in Christianity and Islam Tauris pp 31 37 ISBN 978 0 85772 288 1 a b c Carlos M N Eire 1989 War Against the Idols The Reformation of Worship from Erasmus to Calvin Cambridge University Press pp 5 7 ISBN 978 0 521 37984 7 Richardson R C 1972 Puritanism in north west England a regional study of the diocese of Chester to 1642 Manchester England Manchester University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 7190 0477 3 Mankey J 2022 The Witches Sabbath An Exploration of History Folklore amp Modern Practice Llewellyn Worldwide Limited p 24 ISBN 978 0 7387 6717 8 Retrieved 14 March 2023 Leora Faye Batnitzky 2000 Idolatry and Representation The Philosophy of Franz Rosenzweig Reconsidered Princeton University Press p 145 ISBN 978 0 691 04850 5 Steinsaltz Rabbi Adin Introduction Masechet Avodah Zarah The Coming Week s Daf Yomi Retrieved 31 May 2013 Quote Over time however new religions developed whose basis is in Jewish belief such as Christianity and Islam which are based on belief in the Creator and whose adherents follow commandments that are similar to some Torah laws see the uncensored Rambam in his Mishneh Torah Hilkhot Melakhim 11 4 All of the rishonim agree that adherents of these religions are not idol worshippers and should not be treated as the pagans described in the Torah a b c Shirk Encyclopaedia Britannica Quote Shirk Arabic making a partner of someone in Islam idolatry polytheism and the association of God with other deities The definition of Shirk differs in Islamic Schools from Shiism and some classical Sunni Sufism accepting sometimes images pilgrimage to shrines and veneration of relics and saints to the more puritan Salafi Wahhabi current that condemns all the previous mentioned practices The Quran stresses in many verses that God does not share his powers with any partner sharik It warns those who believe their idols will intercede for them that they together with the idols will become fuel for hellfire on the Day of Judgment 21 98 a b Waldman Marilyn Robinson 1968 The Development of the Concept of Kufr in the Qur an Journal of the American Oriental Society 88 3 442 455 doi 10 2307 596869 JSTOR 596869 Juan Eduardo Campo 2009 Encyclopedia of Islam Infobase pp 420 421 ISBN 978 1 4381 2696 8 Quote Kafir They included those who practiced idolatry did not accept the absolute oneness of God denied that Muhammad was a prophet ignored God s commandments and signs singular aya and rejected belief in a resurrection and final judgment a b G R Hawting 1999 The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam From Polemic to History Cambridge University Press pp 47 51 67 70 ISBN 978 1 139 42635 0 Reuven Firestone 1999 Jihad The Origin of Holy War in Islam Oxford University Press pp 88 89 ISBN 978 0 19 535219 1 Hugh Goddard 2000 A History of Christian Muslim Relations Rowman amp Littlefield p 28 ISBN 978 1 56663 340 6 Quote in some verses it does appear to be suggested that Christians are guilty of both kufr and shirk This is particularly the case in 5 72 In addition to 9 29 therefore which has been discussed above and which refers to both Jews and Christians other verses are extremely hostile to both Jews and Christians other verses are extremely hostile to Christians in particular suggesting that they both disbelieve kafara and are guilty of shirk Oliver Leaman 2006 The Qur an An Encyclopedia Routledge pp 144 146 ISBN 978 0 415 32639 1 Momen 1985 p 176 Motahari 1985harvnb error no target CITEREFMotahari1985 help Simon Ross Valentine 2014 Force and Fanaticism Wahhabism in Saudi Arabia and Beyond Oxford University Press pp 47 48 ISBN 978 1 84904 464 6 Quote In reference to Wahhabi strictness in applying their moral code Corancez writes that the distinguishing feature of the Wahhabis was their intolerance which they pursued to hitherto unknown extremes holding idolatry as a crime punishable by death G R Hawting 1999 The Idea of Idolatry and the Emergence of Islam From Polemic to History Cambridge University Press pp 1 6 80 86 ISBN 978 1 139 42635 0 a b Ibn Ishaq Muhammad 1955 Ibn Ishaq s Sirat Rasul Allah The Life of Muhammad Translated by A Guillaume Oxford Oxford University Press pp 88 9 ISBN 9780196360331 a b Karen Armstrong 2002 Islam A Short History p 11 ISBN 978 0 8129 6618 3 Allah Oxford Islamic Studies Online www oxfordislamicstudies com Retrieved 25 August 2018 Only god in Mecca not represented by idol Ibn Ishaq Muhammad 1955 Ibn Ishaq s Sirat Rasul Allah The Life of Muhammad Translated by A Guillaume The text reads O God do not be afraid the second footnote reads The feminine form indicates the Ka ba itself is addressed Oxford Oxford University Press p 85 footnote 2 ISBN 9780196360331 Christian Julien Robin 2012 Arabia and Ethiopia In The Oxford Handbook of Late Antiquity OUP USA pp 304 305 ISBN 9780195336931 a b c Noel Salmond 2006 Hindu Iconoclasts Rammohun Roy 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Journal of Religious Studies Vol 12 No 2 3 pages 207 231 a b Pori Park 2012 Devotionalism Reclaimed Re mapping Sacred Geography in Contemporary Korean Buddhism Journal of Korean Religions Vol 3 No 2 pages 153 171 Allan Andrews 1993 Lay and Monastic Forms of Pure Land Devotionalism Typology and History Numen Vol 40 No 1 pages 16 37 Donald Swearer 2003 Buddhism in the Modern World Adaptations of an Ancient Tradition Editors Heine and Prebish Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195146981 pages 9 25 Karen Pechelis 2011 The Bloomsbury Companion to Hindu Studies Editor Jessica Frazier Bloomsbury ISBN 978 1472511515 pages 109 112 Karel Werner 1995 Love Divine Studies in Bhakti and Devotional Mysticism Routledge ISBN 978 0700702350 pages 45 46 a b Peter Harvey 2013 An Introduction to Buddhism Teachings History and Practices Cambridge University Press pp 194 195 ISBN 978 0 521 85942 4 Richard Cohen 2006 Beyond Enlightenment Buddhism Religion Modernity Routledge pp 83 84 ISBN 978 1 134 19205 2 Quote Hans Bakker s political history of the Vakataka dynasty observed that Ajanta caves belong to the Buddhist not the Hindu tradition That this should be so is already remarkable in itself By all we know of Harisena he was a Hindu Spink Walter M 2006 Ajanta History and Development Volume 5 Cave by Cave Leiden Brill Academic pp 179 180 ISBN 978 90 04 15644 9 a b Geri Hockfield Malandra 1993 Unfolding A Mandala The Buddhist Cave Temples at Ellora State University of New York Press pp 1 4 ISBN 978 0 7914 1355 5 Trudy Ring Noelle Watson Paul Schellinger 2012 Asia and Oceania International Dictionary of Historic Places Routledge p 256 ISBN 978 1 136 63979 1 Quote Some had been desecrated by zealous Muslims during their occupation of Maharashtra in the fifteenth sixteenth and seventeenth centuries a b c Fabio Rambelli Eric Reinders 2012 Buddhism and Iconoclasm in East Asia A History Bloomsbury Academic pp 17 19 23 24 89 93 ISBN 978 1 4411 8168 8 pratima Hinduism Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 21 August 2011 Brant Cortright 2010 Integral Psychology Yoga Growth and Opening the Heart State University of New York Press pp 106 107 ISBN 978 0 7914 8013 7 Bhagavad Gita Chapter 12 Verse 5 a b Klaus Klostermaier 2007 Hinduism A Beginner s Guide 2nd Edition Oxford OneWorld Publications ISBN 978 1 85168 163 1 pages 63 65 Fuller C J 2004 The Camphor Flame Popular Hinduism and Society in India Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 67 68 ISBN 978 0 691 12048 5 Michael Willis 2009 The Archaeology of Hindu Ritual Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 51874 1 pages 96 112 123 143 168 172 Paul Thieme 1984 Indische Worter und Sitten in Kleine Schriften Wiesbaden Vol 2 pages 343 370 a b Christopher John Fuller 2004 The Camphor Flame Popular Hinduism and Society in India Princeton University Press pp 58 61 ISBN 978 0 691 12048 5 PK Acharya A summary of the Mansara a treatise on architecture and cognate subjects PhD Thesis awarded by Rijksuniversiteit te Leiden published by BRILL OCLC 898773783 pages 49 56 63 65 a b Alice Boner Sadasiva Rath Sarma and Bettina Baumer 2000 Vastusutra Upaniṣad Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0090 8 pages 7 9 for context see 1 10 Alice Boner Sadasiva Rath Sarma and Bettina Baumer 2000 Vastusutra Upaniṣad Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 81 208 0090 8 page 9 Naidoo Thillayvel 1982 The Arya Samaj Movement in South Africa Motilal Banarsidass p 158 ISBN 978 81 208 0769 3 Lata Prem 1990 Swami Dayananda Sarasvati Sumit Publications p x ISBN 978 81 7000 114 0 Bhagirathi Nepak Mahima Dharma Bhima Bhoi and Biswanathbaba Archived 10 April 2009 at the Wayback Machine John Cort Jains in the World Religious Values and Ideology in India Oxford University Press ISBN pages 64 68 86 90 100 112 a b John Cort 2010 Framing the Jina Narratives of Icons and Idols in Jain History Oxford University Press pp 3 8 12 45 46 219 228 234 236 ISBN 978 0 19 045257 5 Paul Dundas 2002 The Jains 2nd Edition Routledge pp 39 40 48 53 ISBN 978 0 415 26606 2 Suresh K Sharma Usha Sharma 2004 Cultural and Religious Heritage of India Jainism Mittal pp 53 54 ISBN 978 81 7099 957 7 W Owen Cole Piara Singh Sambhi 1993 Sikhism and Christianity A Comparative Study Themes in Comparative Religion Wallingford United Kingdom Palgrave Macmillan pp 117 118 ISBN 978 0333541074 Mark Juergensmeyer Gurinder Singh Mann 2006 The Oxford Handbook of Global Religions US Oxford University Press p 41 ISBN 978 0 19 513798 9 S Deol 1998 Japji The Path of Devotional Meditation ISBN 978 0 9661027 0 3 page 11 HS Singha 2009 The Encyclopedia of Sikhism Hemkunt Press ISBN 978 81 7010 301 1 page 110 W Owen Cole and Piara Singh Sambhi 1997 A Popular Dictionary of Sikhism Sikh Religion and Philosophy Routledge ISBN 978 0700710485 page 22 a b David Lorenzen 1995 Bhakti Religion in North India Community Identity and Political Action State University of New York Press ISBN 978 0791420256 pages 1 3 Hardip Syan 2014 in The Oxford Handbook of Sikh Studies Editors Pashaura Singh 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Gale p Idolatry ISBN 978 0 8103 9488 9 Alternate Link a b Regis Bertrand 2003 La Nativite et le temps de Noel XVIIe XXe siecle in French Publ de l Universite de Provence pp 87 95 ISBN 978 2 85399 552 8 Margarita Simon Guillory 2011 Creating Selves An Interdisciplinary Exploration of Self and Creativity in African American Religion PhD Thesis Awarded by Rice University Advisor Anthony Pinn pages 122 128 Reinhardt Steven G 2008 Review La Nativite et le temps de Noel XVIIe XXe siecle The Catholic Historical Review 94 1 147 149 doi 10 1353 cat 2008 0002 S2CID 159896901 Francois Soyer 2012 Ambiguous Gender in Early Modern Spain and Portugal Inquisitors Doctors and the Transgression of Gender Norms BRILL Academic pp 212 213 ISBN 978 90 04 23278 5 Avessadas and the Infant Jesus of Prague Archived 25 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Portugal William Owen Cole and Piara Singh Sambhi 1995 The Sikhs Their Religious Beliefs and Practices Sussex Academic Press ISBN 978 1898723134 page 44 Torkel Brekke 2014 Religion War and Ethics A Sourcebook of Textual Traditions Editors Gregory M Reichberg and Henrik Syse Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521450386 page 675 Gerald Parsons 1993 The Growth of Religious Diversity Traditions Routledge p 211 ISBN 978 0 415 08326 3 Shabad the Lord is One and His Word is True ਵ ਹ ਗ ਰ ਜ ਕ ਫ ਤਹ SikhiToTheMax He K Feng H 2013 Prospect Theory and Foreign Policy Analysis in the Asia Pacific Rational Leaders and Risky Behavior Foreign Policy Analysis Taylor amp Francis p 62 ISBN 978 1 135 13119 7 Retrieved 12 February 2023 Floru JP 2017 The Sun Tyrant A Nightmare Called North Korea Biteback Publishing p 7 ISBN 978 1 78590 288 8 Retrieved 13 February 2023 Vantage Point Naewoe Press 1982 Retrieved 13 February 2023 Becker J 2005 Rogue Regime Kim Jong Il and the Looming Threat of North Korea Oxford University Press p 182 ISBN 978 0 19 029099 3 Retrieved 17 February 2023 Yeo A Chubb D 2018 North Korean Human Rights Activists and Networks Cambridge University Press p 262 ISBN 978 1 108 69284 7 Retrieved 17 February 2023 Rees D 1976 North Korea Undermining the Truce Conflict studies Institute for the Study of Conflict ISBN 978 0 903366 43 4 Retrieved 17 February 2023 Richard Gehman 2005 African Traditional Religion in Biblical Perspective East African Publishers pp xi xii ISBN 978 9966 25 354 5 Richard Gehman 2005 African Traditional Religion in Biblical Perspective East African Publishers pp 189 190 ISBN 978 9966 25 354 5 a b J O Awolalu 1976 What is African Traditional Religion Studies in Comparative Religion Vol 10 No 2 pages 8 1 10 Sylvester A Johnson 2015 African American Religions 1500 2000 Colonialism Democracy and Freedom Cambridge University Press pp 49 51 ISBN 978 1 316 36814 5 Rubies Joan Pau 2006 Theology Ethnography and the Historicization of Idolatry Journal of the History of Ideas 67 4 571 596 doi 10 1353 jhi 2006 0038 S2CID 170863835 Ranger Terence O 1986 Religious Movements and Politics in Sub Saharan Africa 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providing a moral buttress for European religious and human trade practices on the continent Patrick Taylor Frederick I Case 2013 The Encyclopedia of Caribbean Religions University of Illinois Press pp 1002 1003 ISBN 978 0 252 09433 0 Janet Parker Julie Stanton 2007 Mythology Myths Legends and Fantasies Struik Publishers p 501 ISBN 978 1 77007 453 8 a b B Morrill J Ziegler S Rodgers 2006 Practicing Catholic Ritual Body and Contestation in Catholic Faith Springer pp 79 80 ISBN 978 1 4039 8296 4 Rebecca M Seaman 2013 Conflict in the Early Americas An Encyclopedia of the Spanish Empire s Aztec Incan and Mayan Conquests ABC CLIO pp 140 141 251 ISBN 978 1 59884 777 2 a b Michael Wayne Cole Rebecca Zorach 2009 The Idol in the Age of Art Objects Devotions and the Early Modern World Ashgate pp 77 81 ISBN 978 0 7546 5290 8 Alan L Kolata 2013 Ancient Inca Cambridge University Press p 164 ISBN 978 0 521 86900 3 C Scott Littleton 2005 Gods Goddesses and Mythology Marshall Cavendish pp 726 729 ISBN 978 0 7614 7565 1 Greg Roza 2008 Incan Mythology and Other Myths of the Andes The Rosen Publishing Group pp 27 30 ISBN 978 1 4042 0739 4 Benjamin Keen 1990 The Aztec Image in Western Thought Rutgers University Press pp 239 240 ISBN 978 0 8135 1572 4 a b C Scott Littleton 2005 Gods Goddesses and Mythology Marshall Cavendish pp 797 798 ISBN 978 0 7614 7565 1 a b C Scott Littleton 2005 Gods Goddesses and Mythology Marshall Cavendish pp 843 844 ISBN 978 0 7614 7565 1 Patrick Taylor Frederick I Case 30 April 2013 The Encyclopedia of Caribbean Religions University of Illinois Press pp 560 562 ISBN 978 0 252 09433 0 Manuel Aguilar Moreno 2007 Handbook to Life in the Aztec World Oxford University Press pp 24 203 204 ISBN 978 0 19 533083 0 J Gordon Melton Martin Baumann 2010 Religions of the World ABC CLIO pp 2243 2244 ISBN 978 1 59884 204 3 Klaus Koschorke Frieder Ludwig Mariano Delgado 2007 A History of Christianity in Asia Africa and Latin America 1450 1990 Wm B Eerdmans Publishing pp 323 325 ISBN 978 0 8028 2889 7 a b Lawrence A Kuznar 2001 Ethnoarchaeology of Andean South America Contributions to Archaeological Method and Theory Indiana University Press pp 45 47 ISBN 978 1 879621 29 9 Brian M Fagan 1996 The Oxford Companion to Archaeology Oxford University Press p 345 ISBN 978 0 19 507618 9 Robert W Williamson 2013 Religion and Social Organization in Central Polynesia Cambridge University Press pp 5 6 ISBN 978 1 107 62569 3 Robert W Williamson 2013 Religion and Social Organization in Central Polynesia Cambridge University Press pp 6 14 37 38 113 323 ISBN 978 1 107 62569 3 Steven Hooper 2006 Pacific Encounters Art amp Divinity in Polynesia 1760 1860 University of Hawaii Press pp 27 65 71 ISBN 978 0 8248 3084 7 J Mezies 1841 Abolition of Idolatry in Polynesia Vol XXIV The Journal of civilization ed Society for the Advancement of Civilization pp 370 373 a b Kohler Kaufmann Blau Ludwig 1906 Idol Worship Jewish Encyclopedia Kopelman Foundation Archived from the original on 4 May 2013 Retrieved 18 April 2021 Bosworth C E van Donzel E J Heinrichs W P Lewis B Pellat Ch Schacht J eds 1971 Idol Idolatry Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Vol 3 Leiden Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 1573 3912 islam DUM 1900 ISBN 978 90 04 16121 4 a b c Stahl Michael J 2021 The God of Israel and the Politics of Divinity in Ancient Israel The God of Israel in History and Tradition Vetus Testamentum Supplements Vol 187 Leiden Brill Publishers pp 52 144 doi 10 1163 9789004447721 003 ISBN 978 90 04 44772 1 S2CID 236752143 a b c Van der Toorn Karel 1999 God I In Van der Toorn Karel Becking Bob Van der Horst Pieter W eds Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible 2nd ed Leiden Brill Publishers pp 352 365 doi 10 1163 2589 7802 DDDO DDDO Godi ISBN 90 04 11119 0 Betz Arnold Gottfried 2000 Monotheism In Freedman David Noel Myer Allen C eds Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Grand Rapids Michigan Wm B Eerdmans pp 916 917 ISBN 9053565035 Gruber Mayer I 2013 Israel In Spaeth Barbette Stanley ed The Cambridge Companion to Ancient Mediterranean Religions New York Cambridge University Press pp 76 94 doi 10 1017 CCO9781139047784 007 ISBN 978 0 521 11396 0 LCCN 2012049271 a b Smith Mark S 2000 El In Freedman David Noel Myer Allen C eds Eerdmans Dictionary of the Bible Grand Rapids Michigan Wm B Eerdmans pp 384 386 ISBN 9053565035 a b Smith Mark S 2003 El Yahweh and the Original God of Israel and the Exodus The Origins of Biblical Monotheism Israel s Polytheistic Background and the Ugaritic Texts Oxford Oxford University Press pp 133 148 doi 10 1093 019513480X 003 0008 ISBN 9780195134803 Niehr Herbert 1995 The Rise of YHWH in Judahite and Israelite Religion Methodological and Religio Historical Aspects In Edelman Diana Vikander ed The Triumph of Elohim From Yahwisms to Judaisms Leuven Peeters Publishers pp 45 72 ISBN 978 9053565032 OCLC 33819403 a b c Smart Ninian 10 November 2020 26 July 1999 Polytheism Encyclopaedia Britannica Edinburgh Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc Archived from the original on 11 November 2020 Retrieved 25 April 2021 Hayes Christine 2012 Understanding Biblical Monotheism Introduction to the Bible The Open Yale Courses Series New Haven and London Yale University Press pp 15 28 ISBN 9780300181791 JSTOR j ctt32bxpm 6 Bernard David K 2019 2016 Monotheism in Paul s Rhetorical World The Glory of God in the Face of Jesus Christ Deification of Jesus in Early Christian Discourse Journal of Pentecostal Theology Supplement Series Vol 45 Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers pp 53 82 ISBN 978 90 04 39721 7 ISSN 0966 7393 Raeburn J 2001 Celtic Wicca Ancient Wisdom for the 21st Century Kensington Publishing Corporation p 24 ISBN 978 0 8065 2229 6 Retrieved 28 February 2023 Regina Schwartz 2016 Loving Justice Living Shakespeare Oxford University Press pp 32 34 ISBN 978 0 19 251460 8 Josh Ellenbogen Aaron Tugendhaft 2011 Idol Anxiety Stanford University Press pp 29 35 60 74 ISBN 978 0 8047 8181 7 Further reading EditSwagato Ganguly 2017 Idolatry and The Colonial Idea of India Visions of Horror Allegories of Enlightenment Routledge ISBN 978 1138106161 Reuven Chaim Klein 2018 God versus Gods Judaism in the Age of Idolatry Mosaica Press ISBN 978 1946351463 Yechezkel Kaufmann 1960 The Religion of Israel From its Beginnings to the Babylonin Exile Univ of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0805203646 Faur Jose Faur Jose 1978 The Biblical Idea of Idolatry The Jewish Quarterly Review 69 1 1 15 doi 10 2307 1453972 JSTOR 1453972 Brichto Herbert Chanan 1983 The Worship of the Golden Calf A Literary Analysis of a Fable on Idolatry Hebrew Union College Annual 54 1 44 JSTOR 23507659 Pfeiffer Robert H 1924 The Polemic against Idolatry in the Old Testament Journal of Biblical Literature 43 3 4 229 240 doi 10 2307 3259257 JSTOR 3259257 Bakan David 1961 Idolatry in Religion and Science The Christian Scholar 44 3 223 230 JSTOR 41177237 Siebert Donald T 1984 Hume on Idolatry and Incarnation Journal of the History of Ideas 45 3 379 396 doi 10 2307 2709231 JSTOR 2709231 Orellana Sandra L 1981 Idols and Idolatry in Highland Guatemala Ethnohistory 28 2 157 177 doi 10 2307 481116 JSTOR 481116External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Idolatry Wikisource has the text of the 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia article Idolatry Look up idolatry in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Idolatry Idolatry and iconoclasm Archived 12 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine Tufts University Iconoclasm and idolatry Columbia University Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Idolatry amp oldid 1144509807, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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