29. Forasmuch then as we are the offspring of God, we ought not to
think--The courtesy of this language is worthy of notice.
that the Godhead is like unto gold, or silver, or stone, graven by art
and man's device--("graven by the art or device of man"). One can
hardly doubt that the apostle would here point to those matchless
monuments of the plastic art, in gold and silver and costliest stone,
which lay so profusely beneath and around him. The more intelligent
pagan Greeks no more pretended that these sculptured gods and goddesses
were real deities, or even their actual likenesses, than Romanist
Christians do their images; and Paul doubtless knew this; yet here we
find him condemning all such efforts visibly to represent the invisible
God. How shamefully inexcusable then are the Greek and Roman churches in
paganizing the worship of the ChristianChurch by the encouragement of
pictures and images in religious service! (In the eighth century, the
second council of Nicea decreed that the image of God was as proper an
object of worship as God Himself).
JFB.
Picture Study Bible