Dictionary Definition
venerate v : regard with feelings of respect and
reverence; consider hallowed or exalted or be in awe of; "Fear God
as your father"; "We venerate genius" [syn: reverence, fear, revere]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- /ˈvɛnəreɪt/
Translations
To treat with great respect and deference
- Finnish: kunnioittaa, arvostaa
To revere or hold in awe
- Finnish: kunnioittaa, arvostaa
Related terms
Italian
Verb
venerate- Form of Second-person plural present tense, venerare
- Form of Second-person plural imperative, venerare#Italian|venerare
Extensive Definition
In Christianity,
veneration (Latin veneratio,
Greek
δουλια
dulia), or veneration of saints, is a special act of honoring a
saint: a dead person who
has been identified as singular in the traditions of the religion,
and through them honoring God who made them and
in whose image they are made. It is practiced by the Eastern
Orthodox Church, the Roman
Catholic Church, and some members of the Anglican
Communion, Veneration is often shown outwardly by respectfully
bowing or making the sign of
the cross before a saint's icon, relics, or statue. These items may
also be kissed.
In Roman Catholic, Orthodox, and Anglo
Catholic theology, veneration is a type of honor distinct from
the worship due to God
alone. Church theologians have long adopted the terms latria for the sacrificial
worship due to God alone, and dulia for the veneration given to
saints and icons. Catholic theology also includes the term
hyperdulia for the type of veneration specifically paid to Mary,
mother of Jesus, in Catholic tradition. This distinction is
spelled out in the dogmatic conclusions of the
Seventh
Ecumenical Council (787), which also
decreed that iconoclasm (forbidding icons
and their veneration) is a heresy that amounts to a denial
of the incarnation
of Jesus.
Now, the Roman
Catholic tradition has a well established philosophy for the
veneration of the Virgin Mary via the field of Mariology with
Pontifical schools such as the Marianum
specifically devoted to this task.
In Hebrew the word for honoring a person such as
a king or prophet is שׁחה, which is the same word for worship of
God. Examples of such worship of or honoring men are demonstrated
in 1 Kings 1:23 where the Prophet Nathan bowed
(שָׁחָה) to King
David:
And they told the king saying, "Behold, Nathan
the prophet." And he came in before the king and he prostrated
himself unto the king upon his face, to the ground.
This word is also used in Genesis 23:7, 27:29,
33:3, 2 Kings 2:15, 1 Samuel 25:41 to refer to honoring men by
bowing to them or falling prostrate.
Possible veneration of an angel, which is
identified as the Archangel Michael in rabbinical commentary, can
be found in Joshua 5:14:
And he said, "Nay, but as captain of the host of
the LORD have I now come." And Joshua fell on his face to the earth
and worshiped, and said unto him, "What saith my lord unto his
servant?" (21st Century KJV)
Other religious traditions
In Protestantism,
as well as monotheistic religions such as Islam and Judaism, veneration
is sometimes considered to amount to the heresy of idolatry, and the related
practice of canonization amounts to the
heresy of apotheosis.
Protestant
theology usually denies that any real distinction between
veneration and worship
can be made, and claims that the practice of veneration distracts
the Christian soul from its true object, the worship of God. In his
Institutes of the Christian Religion, John Calvin
writes that "(t)he distinction of what is called dulia and latria
was invented for the very purpose of permitting divine honours to
be paid to angels and dead men with apparent impunity." Likewise,
Islam also condemns any veneration of icons. The Hindu honoring of
icons and murtis, often
seen as idolatry, may also be looked upon as a kind of
veneration.
In the tradition of Green
theology (or Creation-centered theology) animals, plants, and
other parts of nature may be said to be venerated simply by taking
good care of them, thereby showing honor and respect for God who
made them. Creation,
being regarded as an icon of the Creator, is a valid object of
veneration.
Philologically,
to venerate derives from the Latin verb, venerare, meaning to regard
with reverence and respect. This word derives from the same root as
the name Venus,
the goddess of love of the ancient Roman pantheon.
Notes
See also
External links
- ON THE INVOCATION, VENERATION, AND RELICS, OF SAlNTS, AND ON SACRED IMAGES. Roman Catholic teaching from the Council of Trent (1545–63)
- "Dulia" from the Catholic Encyclopedia (1911)
venerate in German: Heiligenverehrung
venerate in Spanish: Veneración de santos
venerate in Interlingua (International Auxiliary
Language Association): Veneration de sanctos
venerate in Italian: Venerazione
venerate in Portuguese: Veneração de
imagens
venerate in Swedish: Vördnad
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
accord respect to, admire, adore, apotheosize, appreciate, defer to,
deify, do homage to, do
service, entertain respect for, esteem, exalt, favor, hallow, hero-worship, hold in
esteem, hold in reverence, honor, idolize, look up to, pay homage
to, prize, regard, respect, revere, reverence, think highly of,
think much of, think well of, value, worship