Why Icons?
Adrian Cross
Sold by Rarewaves.com USA, London, LONDO, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since 11 June 2025
New - Soft cover
Condition: New
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Add to basketSold by Rarewaves.com USA, London, LONDO, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since 11 June 2025
Condition: New
Quantity: Over 20 available
Add to basketThe Question That Stops Protestant Inquirers in Their Tracks
You've been drawn to Orthodox Christianity—the ancient liturgy, the theological depth, the continuity with the early church. Everything resonates except for one massive problem: the icons.
Orthodox Christians bow before them. They kiss them. They light candles in front of them. They pray before painted images of Christ and the saints. Everything you've been taught screams that this is idolatry, a clear violation of the Second Commandment. How can a tradition that claims apostolic continuity so obviously break God's explicit command?
Why Icons? directly addresses this stumbling block with clarity, historical evidence, and theological depth accessible to Protestant readers.
In this book, you'll discover:
The Second Commandment doesn't mean what you've been taught—and why God Himself commanded images for the Tabernacle and Temple, which changes how we interpret "graven images."
How the Incarnation fundamentally transformed what's possible regarding depictions of God. When the invisible God became visible flesh in Jesus Christ, He made Himself depictable. Icons witness to the reality that God took visible, physical form.
The crucial distinction between worship (latria) and veneration (dulia) that Scripture itself makes. Icons receive honor, not worship—the same honor you show photographs of loved ones, but directed toward the persons images represent.
What the early church actually did, demonstrated through archaeological evidence from the catacombs and testimony from the church fathers. Christians were venerating images from the second century onward—not medieval corruption but apostolic practice.
Why the Seventh Ecumenical Council in 787 AD definitively resolved the iconoclast controversy by showing that rejecting icons undermines the Incarnation itself. The same councils that gave us the Nicene Creed also defended icons as essential expressions of incarnational faith.
How icons function as theology in color, windows to heaven, and means of encountering Christ and the saints. They're not decorations or idols—they're sacramental realities that form believers in ways words alone cannot.
This isn't an academic treatise. It's a direct, accessible conversation about why Orthodox Christians venerate icons, what biblical and historical foundations support the practice, and whether Protestant fears of idolatry are warranted.
Written specifically for Protestant Christians exploring Orthodoxy but stuck on the icon question, or for those trying to understand why someone they love has embraced Orthodox Christianity. The book takes Protestant concerns seriously, engages Scripture carefully, and explains Orthodox theology clearly without condescension.
If icons are your stumbling block—if they're the one thing keeping you from seriously considering Orthodox Christianity—this book removes that obstacle. Not by minimizing the Second Commandment or treating Protestant concerns as stupid, but by showing that icons aren't what you've been taught, that the early church's interpretation differs from modern Protestant readings, and that serious theological, biblical, and historical reasons support Orthodox iconography.
Icons aren't idolatry. They're expressions of the central Christian claim that the Word became flesh, that God made Himself visible, that matter can mediate divine presence because God Himself sanctified matter by taking it as His own.
The question "Why icons?" deserves a serious answer. This book provides it.
Perfect for Protestant Christians exploring Orthodox Christianity, evangelicals curious about ancient Christian practices, anyone struggling to reconcile icon veneration with biblical commands, and those seeking to understand Orthodox theology from a Protestant perspective.
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