Originally posted by Flipside
Well, number one certainly has to be. The Cross, The Virgin Mary etc etc are all infractions of it.
No, they're not. Neither one is worshipped. Images of Christ on the cross, i.e. crucifixes, are what are known as sacramentals, objects or actions that serve to symbolize a certain principle or idea of one's faith. When I kneel in front of a cross to pray, I'm not praying to that piece of wood as if it was an idol; I'm praying to Christ. The cross serves as something like a visual aid, if you will.
As for Mary, contrary to a popular misconception among many fundamentalists, Catholics do not worship her. Rather, we ask her to pray for us and to intercede for us with her son. In the same way, we ask certain saints to pray for us. Mary has never been considered a divine being on the level of God; she was a simple woman, but incredibly special in that she was chosen to bear God's son.
Regarding the Old Testament regulations, i.e. the "wool-linen" line that so many people fling around for some reason, these sorts of statements were really nothing more than societal regulations for the Jewish people. They're your ancient equivalent of traffic codes. As Gooberman, I believe, said earlier, these regulations are completely different from the moral guidelines outlined in the Ten Commandments. The Ten Commandments outline God's moral law, while the other statements are societal rules. Christ himself spoke of the Pharisees who criticized him for breaking such "commandments" as not working on the Sabbath (one one occasion when he healed a man's hand in the synagogue) as hypocrites, following the law's minutiae such as ritual washing while completely ignoring God's morality.
Regarding Christ and his connection to the Old Testament, he did not abolish it or its commandments; rather, he fulfilled it. Through his death and resurrection, Christ made a new covenant with humanity. While God's original covenant with Abraham applied to the nation of Israel and was sealed with the blood of a ram, Christ's covenant was with all of humanity and sealed with his own blood; Christ died and conquered death so that all of humanity could experience everlasting life. Christ did not abolish the Ten Commandments; he reaffirmed them. Indeed, Christ summed up all ten of the commandments in one of his most important teachings, "You shall love the Lord, your God, with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength, and love your neighbor as you love yourself."