Idols and icons are not allowed in Gods religion.
I sometimes wonder if people who carry crosses around are significantly aware that theyre carrying a replica of a wooden torture weapon that people have used and still use today in some parts of the world, to shame, torture and kill people.
The cross was never used for something good.
Did Jesus's death turn a considerably evil icon to a good one?
No. Infact. His death is only tripled it.
Am no Christian, but if I was, that would be like venerating the very thing the bigots of Jesus's time used to torture and hurt the Son of God, or even...God himself.
I fail to see the goodness here.
2007-01-29 02:33:33
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answer #1
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answered by Antares 6
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I wasn't aware I worshiped crosses. When did this happen? I don't wear crosses, I don't sell crosses, I don't pray to them, or anything else like that.
The cross as mentioned in the New Testament is literal when describing Jesus death. After that there are some sermons by the Apostle Paul making symbolic references in regard to Jesus very real crucifixion and the message of the Cross - and again the message of the cross is not a speaking cross, but the reason Jesus died on the cross.
I found nowhere in the Bible where Christians wore crosses as casual jewelry (which to me would be cheapening the death of Christ to human designer markets).., nor is there any references to people who worshiped the cross.
Hence I don't use crosses except perhaps in an illustration - but not for worship, not for house decoration, not for a designer clothing or jewelry line. But did you know - people still send me junk like that? Wooden crosses, pictures of some figure thats supposed to be Jesus on a cross and things like that.
I Love Jesus - and I respect the message of the Cross (as I explained earlier) but in no way am I about to turn the cross into an idol.
2007-01-29 04:15:51
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answer #2
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answered by Victor ious 6
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So early in the day, and there is another bashing.
Here we go, Again. The Christians do NOT worship the cross, it is only a symbol for what it stand. The sacrifice, I know you don't believe, and it does NOT matter. To the Christians it matters. Why for goodness sake don't you live and let live! If anyone asked to wear, just say no, same as you should with anything else. Get a life, well you.
DO you get it now. I hope. It is only a symbol.
2007-01-29 02:35:29
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answer #3
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answered by Genevieve 4
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You are seemingly quoting the views of the J.Ws are you not?
Images were worshipped among the pagans since time began,the believer in God and all that concerns God knows better than this,the cross is adored and not worshipped,and this applies to all religious articles,it is the puritan mentality that seeks to pour scorn on the things that are used to keep God in the mind at all times.
2007-01-29 02:36:07
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answer #4
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answered by Sentinel 7
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The cross is among the oldest and most universal symbols. In preliterate societies it often represented a conjunction of dualities. The horizontal arm was associated with the terrestrial, worldly, feminine, temporal, destructive, and negative, passive, and death, while the vertical arm connoted the celestial, spiritual, masculine, eternal, creative, positive, active, and life. Often symbolic of the four astrological elements of earth, water, fire, and air, a cross was also perceived as the cosmic axis from which radiated the spatial dimensions of height, length, width, and breadth, as well as the directions of north, east, south, and west.
The ankh (crux ansata) was an ancient Egyptian T - shaped cross surmounted with a loop. It symbolized the creative energies of the male and female and the essence of life. The simple T - shaped cross is named for the Greek letter tau. It is often referred to as the Old Testament cross because Moses supposedly placed a brazen serpent on a T cross (Num. 21:6 - 9), and according to legend, the Israelites on Passover eve marked their doors with blood - drawn tau crosses to identify themselves as Yahweh's followers. Another name for the T cross is the crux commissa.
In ancient Asian, European, and pre - Columbian American civilizations the left - directed swastika, or cruz gammata, appears to have been symbolic of solar power and movement. Hindus see the swastika as a sign of the resigned spirit, whereas Buddhists consider it an emblem of the Buddha's mind. The German Nazis adopted a right - directed swastika for their party logo because they believed it to be an ancient Nordic symbol.
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The erect pole and crossbar used to crucify Jesus Christ became the principal symbol of Christianity. A cross stood for both the actual Crucifixion and the concept of the Christian church. More than 50 variants were to develop, but the most important are the Greek cross, with its equilateral arms, and the Latin cross, with a vertical arm traversed near the top by a shorter horizontal arm. The Greek cross derives its name from its frequent use in the Greek and other Eastern Orthodox churches; the Latin cross was favored by the Western, or Roman Catholic, church.
Other major shapes include the diagonal, or x - shaped, cross on which Saint Andrew is said to have been crucified, and the cross paty (or patee), in which the arms widen at the extremities. A variant of the cross paty is the Maltese cross, has eight points. The Chi - Rho is a cross formed by joining the first two letters of the Greek word for "Christ." The Celtic or Iona cross, developed in early medieval Ireland and Scotland, is distinguished by a circle surrounding the point of crossing. Two graduated crossbars indicate the Lorraine cross associated with archbishops and patriarchs, whereas the Papal cross has three graduated crossbars. A commonly used Eastern Orthodox variant of the cross of Lorraine has an additional crossbar diagonally placed near the base.
The placement of the cross is often symbolic. Crosses surmounting orbs or spheres refer to the global triumph of Christianity. A cross erected on the site of a pagan temple indicated the victory of Christianity, and territory conquered by Christians would be claimed initially by planting a cross in the ground.
The cross was not widely depicted before the 4th century AD, when Christianity became the official religion of the Roman Empire. Earlier, when Christians were often persecuted, the cross was frequently disguised as an anchor, or some other mundane object. Second century Christians, however, had already begun to make the sign of the cross as a gesture of identification, blessing, and warding off of evil. In the Roman church the sign of the cross was made from left to right and in Eastern Orthodox churches from right to left.
A crucifix is a cross bearing a painted or sculptured image of Christ. Crucifixes first appeared in the 5th century, and from the 9th century on medieval artists increasingly aimed at a realistic portrayal of Christ's suffering. The Renaissance created a fashion for a more ideally conceived imagery that dramatically returned to pathos under the emotional taste of the baroque period. During the Reformation, Protestants generally repudiated the use of representational religious imagery; the crucifix therefore became associated with Roman Catholicism.
I know this does not entirely answer your question but i will say this. It's just a symbol. If you are a true christian you would know this. No one that I know in that faith use it as an object of worship. It's just a symbol for the lord jesus christ. So they can remember him and the way he died for them all.
2007-01-29 02:35:09
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answer #5
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answered by alittlebitvicious 2
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the actual incontrovertible actuality that the bypass is between the most worry-free of all pagan non secular symbols ought to make us doubt that it ought to also be the emblem of the organic Christian worship of Jehovah God. And so also ought to the extremes to which some have lengthy gone in cases previous in venerating the bypass. for that reason the Catholic author Didron tells that “the bypass has received a worship similar, if no longer equivalent, to that of Christ; this sacred timber is loved practically both with God himself.” once the honoring of the bypass began it went to such extremes that the pagans accused professed Christians of being idolaters. “it is undeniable that the great mass of Christians,” says a non secular authority, “connected a mystical fee to this signal. in any respect events they used it as a kind of exorcism and a fashion of fending off unclean spirits.” “quickly the bypass got here to artwork miracles of itself. people went to the size of marking farm animals to guard them from ailment." So There...
2016-10-16 06:19:02
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answer #6
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answered by ? 4
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The ultimate reality is unknown. So no matter what the image, it's pretty much worthless.
2007-01-29 02:35:23
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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well, if i can't say it has to do with Jesus' death, then I'll say it represents why I will have eternal life. If you choose to believe this, then I'll see you in Heaven. God Bless.
2007-01-29 02:36:00
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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ppl are idiots and ive been trying to explain this for like, forever. its stupid.
2007-01-29 02:31:59
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answer #9
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answered by Me 3
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