Idolatry

From New World Encyclopedia

Idolatry refers a major sin in the Abrahamic religions which involves improper use of images. In the Jewish and Islamic traditions, the creation of any imagery dedicated to portraying god Himself as well as the worship of such imagery constitutes idolatry. Christianity is more permissive, defining idolatry as the erroneous worship of an image, idea or object in place of the worship of a supreme being. However, images of Jesus, the human personification of god, are not forbidden. In other religions where such activity is not considered as sin, the term "idolatry" itself is absent. Some religious authorities and groups have used the term idolatry as a general category for classifying all religions other than their own. The term is derived from the Greek word eidololatria, a compound of eidolon (image) and latreia ("adoration" or "worship"), translating to "adoration of images." Although the Greek appears to be a loan translation of the Hebrew phrase avodat elilim, which is attested in rabbinic literature (e.g., bChul., 13b, Bar.), the Greek term itself is not found in the Septuagint, Philo, Josephus, or any other Hellenistic Jewish writings. Nor is it found in Greek pagan literature. In the New Testament, the Greek word appears only in the letters of Paul, Peter, and Revelation, where it has a decidedly derogatory meaning. Hebrew terms for idolatory include avodah zarah which refers to "foreign worship" and avodat kochavim umazalot, referring to the worship of planets and constellations.

"The Adoration of the Golden Calf" by Nicolas Poussin

Forms of Idolatry

The majority of religions hold that the purpose of worship is to bring one into connection with divinity. Any set of beliefs or practices which significantly interferes with this may, at some point, be termed idolatry. Some general examples might include:

  • A very strong belief in the inerrancy of a holy book which equates the book with God
  • A very strong attachment to one's nation or country which supercedes religious beliefs. In such a case nationalism could be considered a form of idolatry.
  • A very strong desire to gain sex and/or wealth that a religion considers inappropriate. In this case greed could be considered a form of idolatry.
  • A very strong desire to gain fame or recognition that a religion considers inappropriate. In this case egocentrism could be considered a form of idolatry.
  • Worshipping one of an aspect of God's creations (such as the Sun, moon, water, a cow, sheep, or king) instead of the One God who created them.
  • An obsessive desire to earn money could also be classified as idolatry.

Idolatry in Judaism

Hebrew Bible

The Hebrew Bible presents one of the first conceptualizations of idolatry known to humanity. According to the Hebrew Bible, idolatry originated in the age of Eber, though some interpret the text to mean in the time of Serug. Image worship persisted into the time of Abraham, the patriarch called upon to spread the true knowledge of God, which is evident in the book of Genesis. Abraham's father, Terah, was both an idol manufacturer and worshipper who served a multiplicity of gods (as told in Joshua 24:2). When Abraham discovered the oneness of the true God, he destroyed his father's idols. Abraham's grandson Jacob dealt with similar idol worship. For example, when his second wife Rachel leaves her father's house, she takes images along with her. A significant portion of the Torah goes on to records a struggle between the various partiarch's attempt to spread pure monotheism, and the tendency of some people, especially rulers such as Ahab, to accept or to encourage others into polytheistic or idolatrous beliefs. The struggle enjoyed little success, as it was necessary to include the commandment prohibiting idolatry among the others delivered in Exodus.

The concept of idolatry as sin was introduced to humanity through the Second Commandment delivered by Moses upon Mount Sinai, recorded in Exodus as follows: "Thou shalt not make unto me any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth. Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them..." (Exodus 20.4-5). This of course follows the First Commandment in which god decrees that the Isrealites must acknowledge no gods other than he. Thus, the conceptual link is clear: denyial of idols is closely related to the rising Semitic tide of monotheism. The commandments in the Hebrew Bible were a direct vituperative toward the beliefs and practices of pagans who lived amongst the Israelites at the time, especially the religions of ancient Canaan, Mesopotamia, and Egypt, which were largely polytheistic. Each of these religions used icons in order to worship their various gods. The Canaanites, for examle, were said to worship fertility icons (Leviticus 18:27). In Mesopotamia, immense temples called ziggurats were built for purposes of worshipping each of the individual gods, while in Egypt numerous statuettes and paintings depict gods, goddesses, and even pharaohs. Some of these religions, it is claimed in the Bible, followed practices prohibited under Jewish law, such as sexual rites, cultic male and female prostitution, and child sacrifice.

Apparently, the long history of teaching against idolatry started by Abraham still had difficulty coming into effect even as late as the times of the prophets, whose books reflect a continuing struggle against idol worship. For example, the Biblical prophet Jeremiah complains: "According to the number of thy cities are thy gods, O Judah" (2:28). The prophets fought the use of images in worship mostly because they feared the development of superstitions. Images, they claimed, were dangerous since they existed distinct from god. Furthermore, after the trial of exile in 587, the prophets rallied the Jewish people again, making another call to reform importance of monotheism. This time, the prophets claimed that distancing themselves from idolatry was of the utmost imporatance in retaining Jewish monotheism and keeping Jewish culture and religion discernable from those surrounding polytheists in Palestine and Sumeria. Faith in the single god without the aid of idols helped the Jews unite, especially given Emperor Antiochus IV Epiphanes' attempt to syncretize the numerous gods which existed within his empire. In addition, the prophet's repeatedly speak of the ephemeral nature of false gods; that is, they note the fact that idols are made of mere wood or stone, rather than any divine essence. Isaiah, for example, satirizes the Babylonian gods, claiming "they are a burden to the weary beast" (46:1-2). The Wisdom of Solomon provides a synthesis of all these previous polemics against idolatry, claiming that idols seduce the consciousness of the idolator, leading to a lowering of moral standards.

There is no one section of the Torah that clearly defines idolatry; instead there are a number of admonishments on this subject spread through its books, some of which were written in different historical eras, in response to different issues. The Bible has many terms for idolatry, and their usage represents the horror with which they filled the writers of the Bible. Thus idols are stigmatized as "non-God" (Deut. 32:17, 21 [1]; Jer. 2:11 [2]), "things of naught" (Lev. 19:4 et passim [3]), "vanity" (Deut. 32), "iniquity" (1 Sam. 15:23 [4] ), "wind and confusion" (Isa. 41:29 [5]), "the dead" (Ps. 106:28 [6]), "carcasses" (Lev. 26:30; Jer. 16:18), "a lie" (Isa. 44:20 et passim [7]), and similar epithets. Taking these verses together, idolatry in the Hebrew Bible can be summarily defined as: the worship of idols (or images), the worship of polytheistic gods by use of idols (or images), the general worship of animals or people, the use of idols in the worship of the one God. The last category, the use of idols in the worship of God, is the basis of Judaism' strict monotheism. In a number of places the Hebrew Bible makes clear that God has no shape or form; thus no idol or image could ever capture God's essence. For example, when the Israelites are visited by God in Deut. 4:15, they see no shape or form. Many verses in the Bible use anthropomorphisms to describe God, (e.g. referring to God's mighty hand or God's finger, etc.) but these verses have consistently been understood as poetic images rather than literal descriptions.

Idols were either designated in Hebrew by a term of general significance, or were named according to their material and manner in which they were made. They are said to have been were placed upon pedestals, and fastened with chains of silver or nails of iron lest they should fall over or be carried off (Isa. 40:19, 41:7; Jer. 10:14; Wisdom 13:15), and they were frequently clothed and colored (Jer. 10:9; Ezek. 16:18; Wisdom 15:4). Pagan idols, meanwhile, are generally described as being made of gold, silver, wood, and stone. They are described as being no more than the work of men's hands, unable to speak, see, hear, smell, eat, grasp, or feel, and powerless either to injure or to benefit. At first the gods and their images were conceived of as identical; but in later times a distinction was drawn between the god and the image. Nevertheless it was customary to take away the gods of the vanquished (Isa. 10:10-11, 36:19, 46:1; Jer. 48:7, 49:3; Hosea 10:5; Dan. 11:8), and a similar custom is frequently mentioned in the cuneiform texts. Most contemporary interpreters, such as Orestes Brownson, have concluded that the pagans in the Hebrew Bible did not literally worship the objects themselves; thus, the issue of idolatry becomes whether one is pursuing a false god or the true God.

Rabbinnic Tradition

Although the battle against idolatry was a central theme in the Hebrew Bible, it gradually faded into the background of Judaic thought during the period of the Second Temple. During this time, the temples of Astarte and Baal were no longer considered significant enemies to Judaic religion. However, passages in the Talmud, the Rabbinical commentaries on the Torah, still maintain the strong sentiments opposed to idolatry. For instance, the Talmudic Tractate Avodah Zarah (translating to "Idolatry") still provides a thorough criticism of the pagan culture in which idolatry was spawned, and formulates the types of contact permissable between Jews and Pagans. Rabbis composing the biblical exegesis instruct Jews that they should not ascribe any attactive terms to idolators. Another Talmudic commentary from Sifre Deuteronmium 28 claims that "Whoever endorses idolatry, rejects the entire Torah; and whoever renounces idolatry, accepts the entire Torah." Hence, one's opinion toward idolatrous behaviour is portrayed, in these instances, as the single determinant factor of one's status as a Jew.

A similar line of thought was propounded by Jewish philosopher Moses Maimonides (1135–1204), who invoked once again the biblical battle against idolatry, this time taking on the more and more anthropomorphized conceptions of god which were developing within the Christianity of his European counterparts. Such conceptions were also having effects of European Jews at the time. In hopes of clearly formulating of Jewish principles of faith, Moses Maimonides laid out his thirteen principles characteristic of Judaism. The third of these is an affirmation that "I believe with perfect faith that the Creator, blessed be His Name, is not a body, and that He is free from all the properties of matter, and that there can be no (physical) comparison to Him whatsoever." This seems to reiterate the centrality of avoiding idolotrous acts in the proper observance of Judaism. The fact that Maimonide's denigration of idolatry has been to this day widely accepted as authorotative by diverse Jewish groups illustrates the importance that the sin of idolatry has maintained within contemporary Judaism.

Contemporary Judaism

Contemporary Judaism strongly prohibits any form of idolatry, however, there has been much debate throughout the history of Judaism as to what constitutes this sin. The general consensus as to the definition is that idolatry involves the worship a particular power (such as the Sun or moonlight) or a thing (water, sheep, etc.) instead of attributing the power to the One God who created these material things. It is considered a great insult to God to worship one of His creations instead of Him in his plenitude. Judaism holds that any beliefs or practices which significantly interfere with a Jew's relationship with God may, at some point, be deemed idolatry. In addition, Jews believe that idolatry is not limited to the worship of an idol itself, but also worship involving any artistic representations of God. Jews do not produce paintings, sculptures or drawings of God. Most Jews will even neglect writing out the full name of God, as the written word itself implies a kind of depiction which could be considered idolatrous. Hence, the spelling "G-d" is commonly used to represent the supreme entity. This is a modern extension of the Tetragrammaton, the ineffable name of God which is not to be read aloud and appears in biblical scripture as the four letter combination YHWH. When scripture is read aloud, the Tetragrammaton is replaced with the phrase Adonai ("My Lords", commonly rendered as "the Lord"). Even non-Jews are subject to scrutiny in the context of idolatry, as Judaism forbids them from worshipping more than one god, or a non-divine object or person, by the Noahide Laws.

Idolatry in Christianity

Apostolic & Patristic Periods

Early Christianity adopted negative sentiments toward idolatry that were reminiscent of its Jewish roots. These developed not only because many of the early converts came by way of Judaism, but also because another large portion of converts came from pagan traditions and wanted to separate themselves from the idols they were leaving behind. The Second Testament also provides opposition to the use of idols. In Paul's first letter to the Corinthians (10:19), he notes that the veneration of idols is essentially the veneration of demons, reiterating the First Testament motif that it is demons which lie behind idols. Both the Greek and Latin apologists held similar viewpoints. Justin Martyr upheld most of his predecessor's diatribes against the emptiness of constructed idols, but came down even harder upon upon those who worshipped natural entities such as the earth, water and son. Tertullian, meanwhile, reiterates the point that statues are only matter, comparing them to the banal, everyday objects of domestic life. Further, he denigrates the value of painting, sculpture and other artistic endeavours, claiming these are merely shrouds for idolotrous yearnings. None of the early church fathers had a greater influence than St. Augustine of Hippo, whose own displeasure with idolatry held particular levity in the early Christian consciousness. For Augustine, all pagan gods were merely extensions of mortal men, which entered into the hearts of human beings and compelled them to confound parts of god's creation with parts of god Himself. Like Paul, Augustine claimed that idolatry presented an opportunity for demons to become animate in the person of the idolator.

Byzantine Iconoclasm

By the eighth century, Christianity was well-established in many areas, including the Byzantine empire. In a 730 edict, Byzantine Emperor Leo III outlawed the worship of all religious images save for religious symbols such as the cross. This came shortly after he caused uproar among the Christian population by ordering the removal of an image of Jesus placed over the palace gate of Constantinople which he considered to be idolotrous. Leo may have implicated the image in evoking some divine wrath which in turn caused his losses to Muslims on the battlefield. The ban on icons was maintained under Leo's son Constantine V who summoned a council of bishops in Hieria in 754 dubbed the Iconoclast Council. Monasteries argued vehemently in favour of icon veneration, producing such works as St. John of Damascus' "On the Divine Image" which puts forth the thesis that the incarnation of Christ indicates a shift in god's nature from invisibile to visible. As a result, he deems it permissible to depict Jesus Christ. He also defends external acts of honour towards icons, since the act goes beyond the mere image and connects with the prototype of Christ within. In reply to such arguments, Constantine V ordered the destruction of all icons and halted the invocation of saints. Such iconoclasm continued until Leo IV's (775-80) wife Irene took power and initiated the Second Council of Nicaea (or the Seventh Ecumenical Council) which eventually codified terms for the proper veneration of icons, reversing the decrees of the previous iconoclast council unanimously to the approval of the papacy. This lasted until Emperor Leo V instituted a second period of Iconoclasm in 813, again with fear that icons were becoming idolotrous and sullying his military fortunes. Leo was succeeded by Michael II, who confirmed the decrees of the Iconoclast Council of 754. Michael was in turn succeeded by his son, Theophilus, whose wife Theodora took the throne after his death and restored the use of icons in 843.

The Protestant Reformation

Idolatry did not prove to be a dire issue for several centuries in both the Catholic and Orthodox churches, each of which freely used images and icons of angels and saints as objects of veneration. However, with the onset of the Protestant Reformation the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, dissidents were able to voice their discontents with the Catholic church. Among these qualms put forward by Protestant reformers such as Andreas Karlstadt, Huldrych Zwingli and John Calvin was the Church's use of icons and images for purposes of worshipping the numerous saints and martyrs in addition to god. For these thinkers, apparently, such actions bore resemblance to the idolatry and polytheism described in the Bible. This often lead to calculated efforts to suppress images. Calvin, for instance, insisted that the interior of churches be unadorned and devoid of icons. Often, he called for the white-washing of church walls to cover images of saints and other religious figures. In addition, each of these Reformers proclaimed seperately that these images should be destroyed. As the Reformation grew in momentum throughout Europe, some icons and images were damaged by riotous groups, while others were removed in a more orderly fashion by civil authorities. Protestant Reformers, however, were not ubiquitously hostile to the use of religious images. In fact, Martin Luther, who spurred the Reformation, actually supported the use of religious images, so long as said images did not displace God in the act of worship.

Contemporary Christianity

The Christian view of idolatry may be divided into two general categories. The Catholic and Orthodox use images and icons for the purpose of worship, while some Protestant groups have maintained a mistrust of such iconography as idolatry. The Roman Catholic and particularly the Orthodox Churches cite St. John of Damascus' work "On the Divine Image" to defend the use of icons.Catholic and Orthodox Christians use physical objects such as Icons, incense, the Gospel, the Bible, candles and religious vestments in their services. Icons are mainly in two dimensional form yet sometimes are present in three dimensional form and typically portray religious saints or martyrs. These are in dogmatic theory venerated as objects filled with God's grace and power — (therefore Eastern Orthodoxy declares they are not "hollow forms" {see idol} and hence, not idols). Evidence for the use of these, they claim, is found in the Old Testament and in Early Christian worship (see Iconography). For instance, in the justifying their own use of icons, the Orthodox Church identifies similarity between their own images and the manufacture by Moses (under God's commandment) of The Bronze Snake, which was, Orthodoxy says, given the grace and power of God to heal those bitten by real snakes.

Iconography is of course particularly important in the Eastern Orthodox tradition, which to this day considers the Seventh Ecumenical Council the last genuine ecumenical council. The offering of veneration in the form of latreía (the veneration due God) is doctrinally forbidden by the Orthodox Church; however veneration of highly stylized religious pictures is not only allowed but obligatory. In the Byzantine tradition, the focal points of paintings is the spiritual beauty of the saints. What is contemplated in the icon is not a work of art but a window to the transcendent truth of god. As a result, Orthodox churches are adorned on both the outside and the inside with frescoes and icons. The icons are often placed on an iconostasis, a wall of icons separating the nave and the congregation from the sanctuary in a church. Icon veneration is also practiced in the Catholic Church, which accepts the declarations of the Seventh Ecumenical Council, but it is practiced to a lesser extent, since Catholics today do not usually prostrate and kiss icons, and the Second Vatican Council enjoined moderation in the use of images. Eastern-Rite Catholics still use icons in their Divine Liturgy however.

Fundamentalist Protestants often accuse Catholic and Orthodox Christians of Traditionalism, Idolatry, Paganism and Iconolatry since they do not excised of the use of images from their worship. Most Protestant groups avoid the use of images in any context suggestive of veneration. Protestantism from its beginnings treated images as objects of inspiration and education rather than of veneration and worship. Occasionally icons may be seen among some "high" church communities such as Anglicans, but they are not employed in the same manner or degree as in the Orthodox doctrine, and their presence sometimes causes controversy. Some of the more conservative Protestant groups have maintained the strain of iconoclasm from the Reformation periond and avoid any use of religious images, even for inspiration or instruction, as incitement to what they view as idolatry. The Puritan Protestant groups, for example, have adopted a view comparable to Islam, denouncing all forms of religious objects whether in three dimensional or two dimensional form.

Christianity and Other Religions

Christian theology requires proselytizing, the effort of trained missionaries in order to spread the faith by gaining converts. This has brought Christianity into contact with a wide variety of other religions throughout its history. The polemical Christian views against idolatry often caused hostile relationships with polytheistic religions and even other monotheistic religions (including other Christian denominations) who used images in some manner as part of religious practice. It would appear that most Christian groups, Protestant or otherwise, generally condemn idolatry as it is practiced in non-Christian religions. The Catholic missionary Saint Francis Xavier, for example, referred to Hinduism as idolatry, and Protestant Christian apologetics make similar claims about various non-Christian religions.

Idolatry in Islam

Qur'an

As could be expected with its succession in the Abrahamic line, Islam inherited the Judeo-Christian intolerance toward idolatry and polytheism. All throughout the Qu'ran, the book of holy scripture revealed to the prophet Mohammed, states even more vehemently the anti-idolatry sentiments in the Hebrew Bible. Islamic monotheism arose as a marked contrast to the polytheism which had dominated Arab tribes before the rise of the prophet Mohammed. These tribe usually venerated their gods through the use of stones, which were either raised or smeared with sacrificial blood. In the Qu'ran, these stones are referred to under the heading of sanam, a word of Semitic origin meaning "object venerated next to god". Before the arrival of Mohammed and his prophecy, sanam also referred to statues dedicated to the evocation of various divinites, such as those placed around the Ka'bah. However, in the Qu'ran, the word is used solely to designate idols, which were to be rejected. According to Mohammed, idols are the enemy of god's true followers, and should be destroyed in much the same way as Abraham smashed the idols of his neighbours (21:52-70).

It is also in the Qu'ran that the term shirk (or mushrikun, loosely translating to "sharing as an equal partner") is introduced, referring to the mortal sin of polytheism. The sin is so immense, in fact, that shirk is placed in diametric opposition to a muslim ("believer"). In Surah 9:114 Mohammed implores Muslims to avoid such people at all costs, even if they are kinfolk. For Mohammed, idolatry refers to the association of one god or several gods with the one true God; hence, honour is placed upon false gods (51:51). Also, shirk involves the claiming the existence of progeny of God. Islamic commentators on the Qur'an have emphasized that pre-Islamic Arabic idolatry made a number of godlings (most memorably the three goddesses Manat, Lat and Uzza) equal associates of Allah (53:19-21). When the Qur'an describes shirk it frequently seems to be referring to and disparaging the Christian belief in the divinity of Jesus (4:171). Other forms of shirk, which are debatable, include the worship of wealth and other material objects. This is pointed in the Qur'an in one of the story of the Children of Israel, when they take calf made of gold for worship (7:148-150). Yet another form of shirk is to revere a leader (religious or not) beyond limits, as mentioned in (9:31).

Shirk

The concept of Shirk (Arabic شرك) has become a theological focal point throughout the history of Islam up to the present day. While the term specifically refers the sin of polytheism, it refers more generally in Islamic doctrines to serving anything other than the One God (for example wealth, lust, the ego, and so forth). It is the vice which is opposed to the virtue of tawhid, literally "declaring [that which is] one", often translated into the English theological term "monotheism" for lack of a better word. In the Qur'an shirk and the related word (plural Stem IV active participle) mushrikun (مشركون) "those who commit shirk" often clearly refers to the enemies of Islam (as in verse 9.5) but sometimes it also refers to erring Muslims (verse 6.122). The seriousness of shirk cannot be underestimated, as can be seen in Abu Malik commentary on Allah's teaching: [وَالْفِتْنَةُ أَشَدُّ مِنَ الْقَتْلِ] which explains that "what you (disbelievers) are committing is much worse than killing."

In a theological context one commits shirk by associating some lesser being with Allah. This sin is committed if one imagines that there is some other spirit than Allah whom it is suitable to worship. Many Islamic theologians extend the sense of worship to include praying to some other being to intercede with Allah on one's behalf, rather than taking one's case to Allah Himself. The limits of the concept of worship are quite elastic and theologians often describe excessive veneration of some artifact here on earth as shirk. Images of God are banned outright in most sects of Islam, reinforcing absolute monotheism in Islam and attempting to eliminate any and all forms of idolatry. The act of shirk is extended to include such things as the notion that Allah possesses humanlike anthropomorphic qualities as well as acts of worship or piety whose inward goal is pride, caprice, or a desire for public admiration. Furthermore, most sects of Islam forbid any artistic depictions of human figures, particularly those of Muhammad. This is considered akin to idolatry, if not idolatry outright. Atheism is also described as shirk because it denies the position of Allah as the unique creator and sustainer of the universe (tawhid ar-rububiyya, the unity of creation). Muslims employ a variety of terms to refer to idolators, such as Kafir (plural Kuffar) which describes a person who disbelieves in Allah or refuses to submit Him, or Kufr, a verb which referring to the act of showing ungratefulness to Allah by neglecting to believe in Him. Islamists have used these terms to define all non-Muslims.

Categories of Shirk

Based on the Qur'an, the Prophetic tradition of Islam (Sunnah) has delineated 4 main categories of Shirk, which are still upheld by Muslims today.

1. Shirk in Ruboobeeyah (Lordship)

This category of Shirk refers to either the belief that others share Allah's Lordship over creation as His equal or near equal, or to the belief that there exists no Lord over creation at all.

(A) Shirk by Association

This is the shirk concerned with associating 'others' with Allah.Among some Muslim people, Shirk in Ruboobeeyah is manifested in their belief that the souls of saints and other righteous humans can affect the affairs of this world, even after their deaths. Their souls, it is believed, can fulfill one's needs, remove calamities and aid whoever calls on them. Therefore, grave worshippers assign to human souls the divine ability to cause events in this life which in fact only Allah can cause.

(B) Shirk by Negation

This sub-category represents the various philosophies and ideologies which deny the existence of God either explicitly or implicitly. That is, in some cases God's non-existence is stated (Atheism), while in other cases His existence is claimed, but the way in which He is conceived actually denies His existence (Pantheism).

2. Shirk in al-Asma was-Sifat (the Names and Attributes of Allah)

Shirk in this category includes both the common pagan practice of giving Allah the attributes of His creation as well as the act of giving created beings Allah's names and attributes.

(A) Shirk by Humanization

In this aspect of Shirk in al-Asma was-Sifat, Allah is given the form and qualities of human beings and animals. Due to man's superiority over animals, the human form is more commonly used by idolaters to represent God in creation. Consequently, the image of the Creator is often painted, moulded or carved in the shape of human beings possessing the physical features of those who worship them.

(B) Shirk by Deification

This form of Shirk in al-Asma was-Sifat relates to cases where created beings or things are given or claim Allah's names or His attributes. For example, it was the practice of the ancient Arabs to worship idols whose names were derived from the names of Allah. Their main three idols were: al-Lat taken from Allaah's name al-Elah, al-'Uzza taken from al-'Aziz and al-Manat taken from al-Mannan. During the Prophet Muhammad's era there was also a false prophet in a region of Arabia called Yamamah, who took the name Rahman which only belongs to Allah.

3. Shirk In al-'Ebadah (Worship)

In this category of Shirk, acts of worship are directed to other than God and the reward for worship is sought from the creation instead of the Creator. As in the case of the previous categories, Shirk in al-'Ebadah has two main aspects.

(A) Ash-Shirk al-Akbar (Major Shirk):

This form of Shirk occurs when any act of worship is directed to other than Allah. It represents the most obvious form of idolatry which the prophets were specifically sent by Allah to call the masses of mankind away from. This concept is supported by Allah's statement in the Qur'an:

(B) Ash-Shirk al-Asghar (Minor Shirk):

Minor Shirk

Mahmood ibn Lubayd reported, "Allah's messenger (saws) said: "The thing I fear for you the most is ash-Shirk al-Asghar (minor shirk)." The companions asked "Oh! messenger of Allah, what is minor Shirk?" He replied "Ar-Riya (showing off), for verily Allah will say on the Day of Resurrection when people are receiving their rewards, 'Go to those for whom you were showing off in the material world and see if you can find any reward from them."

Secret Shirk

Mahmood ibn Lubayd also said, "The Prophet (saws) came out and announced, 'O people, beware of secret Shirk!' The people asked, 'O messenger of Allah, what is secret Shirk?' He replied, 'When a man gets up to pray and strives to beautify his prayer because people are looking at him; that is secret Shirk."

4. Ar-Riya

Riya is the practise of performing any of the various forms of worship in order to be seen and praised by people. This sin destroys all the benefits that lie in righteous deeds and brings on the one who commits it a serious punishment.

Idolatry in Eastern Religions

Although there are many different interpretations of the term 'idolatry', it is essentially a term that belongs to the ethical structure Abrahamic faiths. As a rule, any interpretation of the term by the non-Abrahamic religious who feel that they have been subjected to the label of 'idolatry' will not effectively represent the reasons why they have been labelled as such. Moreover, defending their activities based upon the existence of graven images, pictures or other aspects of their worship will not affect their status as idolators by those who accuse them of idolatry. Many modern Abrahamics reject any views of idolatry addressed against the other world religions and feel a great sense of kinship with them even though a very different attitude has dominated throughout history.

Hinduism

While the Early Rig Vedic of India may have seemed overtly polytheistic or henotheistic, closer inspection reveals that the initial threads of monism were present. Phrases such as "Truth is One, but sages call it by many names." (Rid Veda 1:164:46) suggest that Vedic writers found some kind of ephemerality in their various gods. This monism was fully realized in the Upanishads which developed the conceived of Brahman, an omniscent and omnipresent substrate pervading the entire universe which could not be perceived by human beings. This concept would affect how all Hindu sects, whether polytheistic or monotheistic, perceived god. Sects of Hinduism which identify a multiplicity of gods, such as the Smarta school, see the multiple forms (which they call Sarguna Brahman) as representative of different aspects of one inconceivable Brahman (also known as Nirguna Brahman). This concept of Nirguna Brahman parallels the Judaic or Islamic notion that the truest manifestation of god has no form. However, human beings are sensory beings and have a need to visualize God with form. The personal forms of God are expressed through gods such as Vishnu or Shiva.

For this reason, murti, or icon worship, is very much a practice for most Hindus, who choose to connect through bhakti, loving devotion, with God. Followers of Vishnu use the saligrama (a black stone pebble, found only in the Gandaki River at Mukti Kshetra and Damodar Kunda, one of the most sacred pilgrimage places in north-west Nepal) or sometimes some turmeric paste aggregated into a conical form ,in place of the idol, signifying that a form is not essential to be attributed to God. Similarly, followers of Shiva mediate on the Siva linga, a phallic-shaped symbol of the God's creative power. While murti worship is sometimes equated with idolatry, critics of this point of view argue that the Hindu concept of murti worship consists of veneration of the image or statue as representative of a higher ideal or principle, while idolatry objectifies divinity as the material object itself. When Hindus use idols in worship, they are worshipping God (Brahman) and not the idols themselves. The idol is just a piece of stone until God is invoked in it, and then it serves as a means to focus and meditate on God and is not believed to be the God in physical sense. As Hindus believe that God is Omnipresent; that God is within everyone and everything; that the soul and the supreme are not different; therefore, worshipping different Gods, deities, Goddesses, or Idols, is worshipping the Supreme because everyone and everything is God. That aside, some Hindu sects like Arya Samaj and Brahmo Samaj do not believe in using murtis as a way to focus on God since they singularly worshipNirguna Brahman. Other sects argue that the human mind needs an Ishta Deva (chosen deity) to help him to concentrate on the Divine principle during sadhana (spiritual exercise). In particular, some Hindu sects like ISKCON will only consent to worship of icons that they consider the supreme God (i.e., Vishnu or Krishna) or His avatars. Just as some followers of Islam, Christianity and Judaism have called Hindus idolators or kafirs for not worshipping Yahweh or Allah, Hindus have a similar term for calling followers of non-Vedic religion, (i.e., foreigners) yavanas and mlecchas.

Buddhism

Although the Buddha is said to have asked that no statues be made in his honour, numerous images and icons have been dedicated to him through history nonetheless. At first, Buddhist art employed certain measures to represent the Buddha without actually depicting him, such as inserting empty gaps in murals. In another case, he was represented by a footprint. Statues actually appeared half a century later within the Mahayana school and were often used to represent Gautama Buddha exactly as he was posed when he acheieved Enlightenment under the bodhi tree. Attempting to portraying this unconditioned, unmade, formless state of Nirvana would be futile, hence the act of portrayal could be considered idolatrous. However, since a Buddha comes only by the form of a human, this practice was not considered idolatry by the remaining schools as they suggested that it was the exemplar human being in the person of Buddha who was represented rather than the Nirvanic state that the Enlightened One was entering. As far as ritual and worship goes, Buddhists do not venerate the objects themselves, but rather the meaning and symbolism represented by the object, which is the beneficial practice of meditation. Often Buddhists will bow before statues, not as an act of literal worship for the carved image, but to evoke faith and respect in the individual towards that which the given statue symbolizes. Buddhism, as can be expected with its focus on detachment from material objects, demarcates idolatry as identification with the physicality of an object rather than the principle that it represents. It is considered a grave error, for instance, in Buddhist thought to risk one's life (or the life of another) for the purpose of preserving a statue's material form, let alone worship one.

Chinese Religion

Of the various religions and practical philosophies in China, Daoism is the most concerned with idolatry. While Daoism can be described as non-theistic or monistic, reducing all of the universe to a pervasive universal principle called the Tao, some variations influenced by Chinese folk traditions appear to be polytheistic in that they identify various historical figures and god-like personalities as having metaphysic supremacy. The deity Xiwangmu, the goddess of immortality who rules over of the western paradise is one example of such a figure. Early Daoism was in fact partially aniconic, picturing most deities, while disallowing the anthropomorphic representation of the central deity Taishang Laojun. As the manifestation of the ineffable Dao, He was represented either by an empty throne and canopy or vicariously through the image of Shakyamuni Buddha.

However, since at least the Tang dynasty, Daoism has incorporated the use of divine images (called shen2xiang4) even for its highest trinity, the San Qing. In both Daoism and Chinese Folk Religion, statues, paintings, or name plaques of deities are given central place as focus of worship in temples and homes. While all representations of deities are afforded reverence and respect, images which have been ritually "opened to light" (kai1 guang1 dian4 yan3/開光點眼) or have been venerated through pious worship are exceptionally invested the divine numen of the god, and become a condut for its transmission, known as ling2qi4 (靈氣). Through ritual offerings and scriptural chants, such icons are believed to maintain the living presence of the deity, who gives guidance and bestows blessings upon the devout. However, while the high gods of the Dao might be iconicized, they are still regarded as ultimately transcending both form and numen in a way unavailable to the deities of the popular religion. As beings directly emergent from and suffused with the primordial Dao, they may take on form through incarnations, icons, and visualization mainly for the purpose of aiding humanity's spiritual advancement.

The question of whether Confucianism, and Chinese folk religion, consists of worshipping a God or veneration of a saint was of particular importantance to the Catholic Church during the Chinese Rites controversy of the early 18th century. This dispute was between the Dominicans and the Jesuits; the Dominicans claimed that Confucianism and Chinese folk religion was indeed the worship of another god, and therefore incompatible with Catholicism, while the Jesuits thought otherwise. Confucianism, of course, acknowledges the existence of a Supreme Heavenly Being (Tian or Tien) though it does not place as much emphasis worship and prayer as in the typical Catholic conception of religion. The pope eventually ruled in favor of the Dominicans; a decision which greatly reduced the role of Catholic missionaries in China.

Idolatry in Polytheistic & Animistic Religions

Supposedly "idol-worshipping" religions are still found throughout the world, in the case of polytheistic Neopagan religions as well as animistic tribal beliefs. Polytheistic and Animistic beliefs that have given rise to the charge of idolatry for three reasons: 1) the use of certain objects or places which have supernatural powers independent of God, 2)Prayer or rituals which are likelier to have an effect when performed within the presence of certain objects or places then when performed elsewhere, and 3) instances where Prayer is paid to images, paintings or statues of pantheons, or to relics of polytheistic religious figures.

These adherents of polytheism and animism reject the charge that their religious beliefs and practices are idolotrous. Polytheists generally do not believe that their statues (or other physical objects) are gods; rather, they are symbols of immaterial gods. Rather, in the same sense as the aforementioned religions, they maintain that physical idols are simply the representational form of a divine deity — the act of "worship" is not for the object, but for the divinity that the object is believed to represent. Most polytheists hold that their idols or icons are only symbols of the gods they worship, and these idols or icons do not possess supernatural powers. Scholars of religion generally do not equate idolatry with polytheism, primarily because polytheists accused of idolatry usually do not actually follow the beliefs ascribed to them. Thus, it can be concluded that idolatry refers mainly to the worship of beings who are not God from the prospective of those who have defined such worship idolotrous. Idolotry, then, is the worship of a divine concept which displaces the genuine divine. Since polytheists and animists truly believe in the beings they worship, they cannot be self-defined as idolotrous.

Significance of Idolatry

The importance of idolatry cannot be underestimated, not only because it has caused a great deal of religious controversy and even violence throughout the history of humankind, but also because it has progressed the development of religion itself. That is, with the compiling of the Hebrew bible and the subsequent beginning of the Abrahamic tradition, idolatry served as a foundational stone for the development of monotheism, which came to be seen in many circles as the "ideal" of human religious experience. No longer were religions and their gods isolated to particular geographies, political principalities or mythological constellations. Now there was a concept of one god for all people who could not be limited by a particular form or representation(s). The effects are still evident today. While not all religions strive to be monotheistic, none espouse idolotrous behaviour, which has become a ubiqutious taboo across the board. In most cases, religions which use iconography and imagery which could be considered idolotrous usually defend their beliefs by claiming that they perform their worship with a sense of discernment. That is, they can discern between pious worship of the divinity represented in an icon, and the idolotrous worship of the physical idol itself. Thus, it can be concluded that idolatry refers mainly to the worship of beings who are not God from the prespective of those who have defined such worship idolotrous.

See also

References
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  • Brownson, Orestes Augustus Saint Worship and the Worship of Mary Manchester, NH: Sophia Institute Press 2004 ISBN 1928832881
  • Burggraeve, R., de Tavernier, J., Pollefeyt, D., & Hanssens, J. "True Faith in God and Forms of Religious Idolatry." In Desirable God?: Our Fascination with Images, Idols, and New Deities. eds. Roger Burggraeve, Johan de Tavernier, Didier Pollefeyt, and Jo Hanssens. Leuven-Dudley, MA: Peeters, 2003. 7-38. ISBN 9042913169
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  • Halbertal, Moshe & Avishai, Margalit. Idolatry. Cambridge, MS: Harvard University Press. 1992. ISBN 0674443128
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  • "Idolatry". The Encyclopedia Judaica. Jerusalem: Keter Publishing. 1994.
  • Kaufman, Yehezkel. The Religion of Israel: From its Beginnings to the Babylonian Exile. Moshe Greenberg, trans. 1960 Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press ISBN 0226427285
  • Kogan, Bary S. "Judaism and the Varieties of Idolatrous Experience" in Proceedings of the Academy for Jewish Philosophy Ed. David Novak and Norbert M. Samuelson, University Press of America, 1992.
  • Roth, Norman. Maimonides: essays and texts : 850th anniversary. Madison, WSC: Hispanic Seminary of Medieval Studies, 1985. ISBN 0942260597
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