Idolatry
From BibleEncyclopedia.Net
Image-worship or divine honour paid to any created object. Paul describes the origin of idolatry in Rom_1:21-25 : men forsook God, and sank into ignorance and moral corruption (Rom_1:28). The forms of idolatry are,
(1.) Fetishism, or the worship of trees, rivers, hills, stones, etc.
(2.) Nature worship, the worship of the sun, moon, and stars, as the supposed powers of nature.
(3.) Hero worship, the worship of deceased ancestors, or of heroes.
In Scripture, idolatry is regarded as of heathen origin, and as being imported among the Hebrews through contact with heathen nations. The first allusion to idolatry is in the account of Rachel stealing her father's teraphim (Gen_31:19), which were the relics of the worship of other gods by Laban's progenitors “on the other side of the river in old time” (Jos_24:2). During their long residence in Egypt the Hebrews fell into idolatry, and it was long before they were delivered from it (Jos_24:14; Eze_20:7). Many a token of God's displeasure fell upon them because of this sin. The idolatry learned in Egypt was probably rooted out from among the people during the forty years' wanderings; but when the Jews entered Palestine, they came into contact with the monuments and associations of the idolatry of the old Canaanitish races, and showed a constant tendency to depart from the living God and follow the idolatrous practices of those heathen nations. It was their great national sin, which was only effectually rebuked by the Babylonian exile. That exile finally purified the Jews of all idolatrous tendencies.
The first and second commandments are directed against idolatry of every form. Individuals and communities were equally amenable to the rigorous code. The individual offender was devoted to destruction (Exo_22:20). His nearest relatives were not only bound to denounce him and deliver him up to punishment (Deu_13:2-10), but their hands were to strike the first blow when, on the evidence of two witnesses at least, he was stoned (Deu_17:2-7). To attempt to seduce others to false worship was a crime of equal enormity (Deu_13:6-10). An idolatrous nation shared the same fate. No facts are more strongly declared in the Old Testament than that the extermination of the Canaanites was the punishment of their idolatry (Exo_34:15, Exo_34:16; Deut. 7; Deu_12:29-31; Deu_20:17), and that the calamities of the Israelites were due to the same cause (Jer_2:17). “A city guilty of idolatry was looked upon as a cancer in the state; it was considered to be in rebellion, and treated according to the laws of war. Its inhabitants and all their cattle were put to death.” YHWH was the theocratic King of Israel, the civil Head of the commonwealth, and therefore to an Israelite idolatry was a state offense (1Sa_15:23), high treason. On taking possession of the land, the Jews were commanded to destroy all traces of every kind of the existing idolatry of the Canaanites (Exo_23:24, Exo_23:32; Exo_34:13; Deu_7:5, Deu_7:25; Deu_12:1-3).
In the New Testament the term idolatry is used to designate covetousness (Mat_6:24; Luk_16:13; Col_3:5; Eph_5:5).
ī-dol´a-tri (תּרפים, terāphīm, “household idols,” “idolatry”; εἰδωλολατρεία, eidōlolatreía):
There is ever in the human mind a craving for visible forms to express religious conceptions, and this tendency does not disappear with the acceptance, or even with the constant recognition, of pure spiritual truths (see IMAGES). Idolatry originally meant the worship of idols, or the worship of false gods by means of idols, but came to mean among the Old Testament Hebrews any worship of false gods, whether by images or otherwise, and finally the worship of Yahweh through visible symbols (Hos_8:5, Hos_8:6; Hos_10:5); and ultimately in the New Testament idolatry came to mean, not only the giving to any creature or human creation the honor or devotion which belonged to God alone, but the giving to any human desire a precedence over God's will (1Co_10:14; Gal_5:20; Col_3:5; 1Pe_4:3). The neighboring gods of Phoenicia, Canaan, Moab - Baal, Melkart, Astarte, Chemosh, Moloch, etc. - were particularly attractive to Jerusalem, while the old Semitic calf-worship seriously affected the state religion of the Northern Kingdom (see GOLDEN CALF). As early as the Assyrian and Babylonian periods (8th and 7th centuries bc), various deities from the Tigris and Euphrates had intruded themselves - the worship of Tammuz becoming a little later the most popular and seductive of all (Eze_8:14) - while the worship of the sun, moon, stars and signs of the Zodiac became so intensely fascinating that these were introduced even into the temple itself (2Ki_17:16; 2Ki_21:3-7; 2Ki_23:4, 2Ki_23:12; Jer_19:13; Eze_8:16; Amo_5:26).
The special enticements to idolatry as offered by these various cults were found in their deification of natural forces and their appeal to primitive human desires, especially the sexual; also through associations produced by intermarriage and through the appeal to patriotism, when the help of some cruel deity was sought in time of war. Baal and Astarte worship, which was especially attractive, was closely associated with fornication and drunkenness (Amo_2:7, Amo_2:8; compare 1Ki_14:23 f), and also appealed greatly to magic and soothsaying (e.g. Isa_2:6; Isa_3:2; Isa_8:19).
Sacrifices to the idols were offered by fire (Hos_4:13); libations were poured out (Isa_57:6; Jer_7:18); the first-fruits of the earth and tithes were presented (Hos_2:8); tables of food were set before them (Isa_65:11); the worshippers kissed the idols or threw them kisses (1Ki_19:18; Hos_13:2; Job_31:27); stretched out their hands in adoration (Isa_44:20); knelt or prostrated themselves before them and sometimes danced about the altar, gashing themselves with knives (1Ki_18:26, 1Ki_18:28; for a fuller summary see EB).
Even earlier than the Babylonian exile the Hebrew prophets taught that Yahweh was not only superior to all other gods, but reigned alone as God, other deities being nonentities (Lev_19:4; Isa_2:8, Isa_2:18, Isa_2:20; Isa_19:1, Isa_19:3; Isa_31:7; Isa_44:9-20). The severe satire of this period proves that the former fear of living demons supposed to inhabit the idols had disappeared. These prophets also taught that the temple, ark and sacrifices were not essential to true spiritual worship (e.g. Jer_3:16; Amo_5:21-25). These prophecies produced a strong reaction against the previously popular idol-worship, though later indications of this worship are not infrequent (Eze_14:1-8; Isa_42:17). The Maccabean epoch placed national heroism plainly on the side of the one God, Yahweh; and although Greek and Egyptian idols were worshipped in Gaza and Ascalon and other half-heathen communities clear down to the 5th or 6th century of the Christian era, yet in orthodox centers like Jerusalem these were despised and repudiated utterly from the 2nd century bc onward.
See also Golden Calf; Gods; Images; Teraphim.
Literature
Wm. Wake, A Discourse concerning the Nature of Idolatry, 1688; W.R. Smith, Lectures on the Religion of the Semites; E.B. Tylor, Primitive Culture; J.G. Frazer, Golden Bough (3 vols); L.R. Farnell, Evolution of Religion, 1905; Baudissin, Studien zur semitischen Religionsgeschichte; Beathgen, Der Gott Israels u. die Götter der Heiden, 1888.
