godless dave
Great Dalmuti
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2007
- Messages
- 8,266
I think there is a common confusion between worship and veneration. I've heard people in one christian sect slam Catholicism because they say it supports worship of saints and images, when actually it is the veneration (as in the definition someone posted earlier) that is taught: not worship per se.
I'm not defending the practice, but here's how I understood it: for saints, they aren't god, but by being recognized as saints, they have achieved what all other Catholics are trying for. And besides that, though no longer alive, they aren't really completely separated from the 'church': the are part of the 'body', as all Christians (or Catholics, etc) so communicating with them, or venerating them, is sort of like doing that to a venerable person - only more intensely.
I've seen it a bit like those traditions who venerate their elders, and that kind of veneration continues even after their ancestors die. But they don't worship them, as they do their deities.
ETA: And for relics, I suppose it is because they are somehow still connected, or ascended, with the saint? Or at least somehow a strong symbol and reminder of the saint, and so a way to increase a person's faith? I'm not as sure as relics go.
That's really not that much different than worship of polytheistic gods.
Don't get me wrong. Venerating an idol isn't any sillier than worshipping a crucified and ressurected god. It's hypocritical in the context of the ten commandments and that's all.
