I don't think iconography is Christian, so I will say all of it is inappropriate.
Right, which naturally follows from your presuppositions, as I have said all along. Hopefully people will take note of this.
What is stopping you from outright iconoclasm? Should Evangelical Protestants seek to remove and destroy religious iconography from Catholic and Orthodox churches?
Tzaousios said:
The Orthodox have not said that their desire is not to have an appropriate image of Christ. Also, the iconographic tradition has never sought to have anything less than to represent Christ appropriately.
JesusFreak78 said:
I understand this and I find it scary they don't care about representing Christ accurately.
More manipulation of my statements. You know that I did not mean that they do not care about representing Christ accurately. This is entirely disingenuous, which seems to be a recurring tactic that you and simon use.
Tell me something, if you wish to portray yourself as a simple, no-nonsense, plain-talking, jus' me-n'-my-Bible Evangelical Protestant, why do you resort to wordsmithery and rhetoric to co-opt others words into the service of your purpose?
JesusFreak78 said:
I don't have an icon who appropriate represent Christ because no such thing exist.
Right, so why should the Orthodox care enough about your personal belief to adopt it as their own? Since we all know you are not "merely repeating what the Bible plainly says," please tell why.
JesusFreak78 said:
I don't expect them to accept what I'm saying, but it doesn't stop me from trying to tell them the truth.
No, it is what you personally have chosen to believe based upon a presuppositional reading of certain texts. You rhetorically label it as "the truth." No one is buying it because they do not care for your rhetoric or your wilful ignorance of the history of their beliefs.
JesusFreak78 said:
I'm using them to show that there is no way to represent Christ accurately by an image from those verses.
Ah, which is a different spin than what you were spinning before. Before, you were trumpeting with the utmost confidence that the OT verses talking about idolatry also applied to Orthodox iconography. When you were called out on such a smug eisegesis, you reconfigured the rhetoric to convey the above. The thin veneer is not hiding anything, my friend.