But believers should know that the Lord cannot be reduced to a two-dimensional image and that prayer or adoration is not to be offered to a picture. Such an image could well be a reminder to pray, to refocus on the Lord, or to follow in Christ’s footsteps. But there is nothing in the New Testament that would specifically forbid a Christian from having a picture of Jesus. It is possible that a portrait of Jesus or a crucifix can become an object of worship, in which case the worshiper is at fault. Of course, simply having a picture of Jesus hanging in a home or church does not mean people are practicing idolatry. Again and again, they made idols to represent gods and worshiped them beginning with the creation of the golden calf during the very time God was writing out the Ten Commandments for Moses (Exodus 32)! Idol worship not only drew the Israelites away from the true and living God, it led to all manner of other sins including temple prostitution, orgies, and even the sacrifice of children. The fascinating thing about the history of the Jewish people is that they disobeyed this commandment more than any other. He immediately followed that by forbidding the making of any image of anything “in heaven above or on earth beneath or in the waters below” (Exodus 20:4) for the purpose of worshiping or bowing down to it. When God first gave His Law to mankind, He began with a statement of who He is: “I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of Egypt” (Exodus 20:2) with a warning that Israel was to have no other God but Him.
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