Sunday, May 10, 2026

Venerating, HUH?

The Bible forbids using icons in worship: Religious art vs. religious icon.

Worshippers who use icons claim that they are not really worshipping them, only venerating them. Some even renumber the commandments so that the second is hidden behind the first. But they are, in fact, doing exactly what the second commandment describes and forbids. Changing the name of what they are doing and claiming that excuses them is no more convincing than calling adultery “love making” and thinking that makes it okay. The core prohibition of the second commandment is not about an attitude toward the image or what the image is of (e.g., Christ or a saint), but about what is done with it. “You shall not bow down to them or serve them.” To “serve them” suggests performing acts of worship.

This is why the intricate theological debate over the distinction between worship (latria) and mere veneration (dulia) is moot. The commandment forbids a particular use of the image: making it a focal point of prayer or adoration, bowing before it, or using it as a tool in religious devotion. When an image is used this way, it becomes an icon, and the second commandment explicitly forbids it.

Art is not iconography

It’s crucial to differentiate between religious art (decorations, stained glass) and a religious icon.

Orthodox theologians themselves define an icon by its liturgical function: “The icon’s purpose is liturgical.” It is not merely a decoration in a worship space but is actively used in worship. The Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America defines an icon: “The primary purpose of the icon is to aid in worship.” By definition, an icon is an image used in religious devotion.

This distinction is key when iconodules (supporters of icons) point to images allowed in the Old Testament, such as the cherubim over the Ark of the Covenant or the bronze serpent Moses made (Numbers 21). These were symbolic images or decorations, but they were never used in worship. The cherubim were not bowed to, and the bronze serpent was destroyed by King Hezekiah the moment it was turned into an icon (2 Kings 18:4). The discovery of early Christian art in catacombs or churches, therefore, does not automatically imply the discovery of early Christian iconography. Art for viewing is not the same as an image used for veneration.

The unanimous early church testimony

The historical record from the first four centuries reveals a consistent and unanimous opposition to icons among Christian writers, a position known as aniconism. While Christians fell on a spectrum — from rigorist aniconism (against all images anywhere) to lax aniconism (against only using images in worship) — no one in the early church crossed the line to allow images in devotion.

  • Clement of Alexandria insisted that “works of art cannot then be sacred and divine.” 
  • Tertullian required artists to cease image-making to be accepted into the church, declaring all “similitude” interdicted.
  • Lactantius famously wrote, “wherefore it is undoubted that there is no religion wherever there is an image.” 
  • Arnobius of Sicca noted that pagans criticized Christians for their “very serious charge of impiety because ... [we] do not set up statues and images of any god.”
  • Origen famously declared that Christians, “being taught in the school of Jesus Christ, have rejected all images and statues.”
  • The Synod of Elvira (c. 300–314) stated: “Pictures are not to be placed in churches, so that they do not become objects of worship and adoration.” This council documented the common practice of the time: keeping images out of places of worship to prevent their use as icons.
  • Eusebius of Caesarea rebuked the emperor’s sister, Constantia, for requesting a picture of Christ, citing the second commandment: “Did the reading escape you where God commanded not to make any likeness of anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath?” He admitted to confiscating purported images of Christ and Paul “lest we might seem to carry around our God in an image, as idolaters do.”
  • Epiphanius of Salamis wrote a letter detailing how he entered a church in Palestine, saw a curtain bearing an image of Christ or a saint, and immediately tore it asunder and ordered it be used to bury a pauper, stating such images are “contrary to our religion.”

When did icons arrive?

For the first five centuries of Christianity, there is no evidence of any Christian — not even a minority faction — approving the use of images in worship. The veneration of icons was an absolute novelty that emerged later, triggering a violent and divisive controversy in the 8th century when superficially converted pagans brought their idolatry into the church.

The famous Second Council of Nicaea (787), which mandated the use of icons, did so centuries after the early church period. Empress Irene, who had been alienated from her late husband for her icons, rigged the council to deliver the result she wanted. In doing so, it effectively anathematized the universal practice of the Church Fathers who had come before it. The style and use of the icons it championed were, as noted by historian Henry Chadwick, heavily influenced by pagan traditions, borrowing from images of Zeus and venerated mother goddesses.

The conclusion is stark: the early church strictly prohibited icons. They are not a part of apostolic tradition; they are a later innovation.

Birdie.


 

Pastor Freed.

Nkor Deacon Jang 3


 

Sorry. I only just spotted this:

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Podcast.

 Providence And Persecution With Background

2 Peter 1.

Confirming One’s Calling and Election.

3) His divine power has given us everything we need for a godly life through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness. 4) Through these he has given us his very great and precious promises, so that through them you may participate in the divine nature, having escaped the corruption in the world caused by evil desires.

Päivi Räsänen and Lutheran Bishop Juhana Pohjola.

Dear All,

Can a decades-old church booklet, written by a Christian for her church, be treated as a crime? That is the question before Europe’s top human rights court.  

With the legal support of ADF International, Päivi Räsänen and Lutheran Bishop Juhana Pohjola are appealing their criminal convictions before the European Court of Human Rights, alongside allied Finnish lawyer Matti Sankamo.  

On 26 March 2026, after nearly seven years of legal proceedings, the Supreme Court of Finland found Päivi guilty of “hate speech” for a church booklet she wrote 22 years ago. Bishop Pohjola and the Luther Foundation Finland were convicted alongside Päivi for publishing the booklet for their church. They were convicted under Finland’s 2011 “hate speech” law that falls under the War Crimes and Crimes against Humanity section of the country’s criminal code.  

The Court ordered Päivi, the Bishop, and the Foundation to pay thousands of euros in fines, in addition to ordering that the statements deemed “hate speech” within the booklet be “removed from public access and destroyed.”  

The booklet was written at the request of her church and was intended to equip the congregation to form a biblical worldview on a pressing national issue (the debate over the redefinition of marriage in Finland at the time). As expected of a church communication, it contains scripture and Christian teachings to help guide the congregation through issues of sexuality and marriage.  

This case underscores why it is more important than ever to stand firm against so-called “hate speech” laws. These dangerous laws suppress public debate and pose a grave threat to free and democratic societies.  

"The failure of the Finnish Supreme Court to uphold freedom of speech has set a dangerous precedent in my country and across Europe. I feel it is my duty to appeal this decision, to reinstate respect for the basic human right that all are free to peacefully express their views in the public square. 

"I know I am not alone in facing unjust persecution under ‘hate speech’ laws that make sharing Christian beliefs a criminal offence. I make my appeal in the hope that the European Court of Human Rights will recognise that peacefully expressing one's beliefs is never a crime and ensure that this basic freedom is protected for all,” said Päivi.  

 "The Supreme Court's decision to convict me and the Lutheran Foundation for publishing a booklet for our church was extremely disappointing. As a Bishop, I have a responsibility to guide those under my pastoral care, and I am deeply concerned by the state's extensive efforts to censor our beliefs and decide what can and cannot be taught by religious leaders to members of their own group. It is our intention to join Päivi Räsänen in appealing to the European Court of Human Rights in defence of our free speech and religious freedom rights, and those of everyone in Finland.” — Bishop Pohjola  

We are immensely proud of Päivi and Bishop Pohjola for their courage, integrity, and perseverance. They have stood strong not just for themselves, but for the freedom of all to speak openly without fear.  

We receive no public funding and never charge our clients for legal support. Everything we receive comes from the generosity of people like you. Will you stand with us as we continue to lead the global battle for freedom of speech?

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Saturday, May 09, 2026

Hmm.

CofE priest erupts during election service of first female archbishop of Canterbury: 'I object!'

Quick Summary

  • A priest was removed from the election service of Dame Sarah Mullally as the frst archbishop of Canterbury after shouting, 'I object!                                                                                                    The Rev. Paul Williamson has opposed the ordination of women and claimed his objection was related to Mullally's alleged false allegations against a clergyman who killed himself.Mullally's formal installation is scheduled for March 25, amid ongoing divisions within the Anglican Communion over its leftward drift on homosexuality and female ordination.  
Bishop Sarah Mullally poses for a photograph in The Corona Chapel at Canterbury Cathedral, southeast England, on Oct. 3, 2025. | BEN STANSALL/AFP via Getty Images

An Anglican priest was removed from the formal election service of Dame Sarah Mullally as the first female archbishop of Canterbury at St. Paul's Cathedral on Wednesday after he shouted his objection to her confirmation.

The Rev. Paul Williamson, who was ordained in 1973 and has since been outspoken against the ordination of women, shouted, "I object!" during the service before he was removed, according to Church Times.

Stand Up For Truth.

Bishop urges people of Britain to stand up for Christian truth.

UK, Britain, tourism, United Kingdom (Photo: Getty/iStock)

Ceirion H Dewar, a missionary bishop in the Confessing Anglican Church (CAC), has called upon the people of Britain to repent and return to the Christian faith.

The CAC was founded in 2019 and, although not a part of the Anglican Communion, sees its spiritual roots as going back to the earliest days of Christianity in the British Isles.

Bishop Dewar last month wrote an open letter to His Majesty King Charles III, calling upon him to end the “erosion of Britain’s Christian inheritance”.


In recent days some have criticised the King, who is also Supreme Governor of the Church of England and "Defender of the Faith", for issuing a special message for Ramadan this year, but declining to do so for Easter.

In his latest open letter, Bishop Dewar noted that the King had “not responded to the plea that was set before him”.

Addressing himself to the British people, the bishop said that Christianity had previously been central to British life, describing it as an anchor of truth around which all of the country’s institutions, morals and customs had been built.

That morality, he argued, is now being replaced by something else.

“The moral language that once shaped them [our institutions] is being systematically redefined. We see it within parts of the Church itself, where the call to holiness is softened, and the demands of the age are too often given greater weight than the Word of God. And we are told that this is progress. It is not progress. It is decline!” he said. 

This decline, he argues, stems from the willingness to bend and compromise to the spirit of the age, all done at the expense of eternal truth. The final result is a country which is unrecognisable.

“If you have looked at this nation and felt that something is wrong, you are not mistaken. If you have sensed that we are losing something deeper than politics, you are not imagining it," Dewar continued. 

To reverse the decline the people themselves have to be willing repent and to stand for truth, he argued.

“Stand in your homes, and teach your children what is true, even when the world says otherwise. Stand in your churches, and demand the Gospel in its fullness, not a diluted echo of the age. Stand in your communities, and live with a conviction that cannot be reshaped by passing opinion. Stand in the public square, and speak without fear," he said. 

The bishop concluded his open letter with a prayer that God would grant the people of Britain a heart of repentance and courage, and that God would renew the country. CT.

I Made A New Friend In Spain.


 

Birdie.


 

Galatians 2.

 19) “For through the law I died to the law so that I might live for God. 20) I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me. 21) I do not set aside the grace of God, for if righteousness could be gained through the law, Christ died for nothing!

John Lennox Proves That Faith Is Real. Do Listen!

John Lennox SILENCES Audience Over the TRUTH of Christianity

Prayer Please.

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Venerating, HUH?

The Bible forbids using icons in worship: Religious art vs. religious icon. By  John B. Carpenter , Op-ed contributor Wednesday, January 28,...