I suppose "idolatry" may be an exaggeration, given that Catholics do not literally worship icons, but, then, did most pagans? Did the Anglo-Saxons literally worship their sacred trees? Do followers of Shinto literally worship a statue of Ameratsu? In all cases, their is a reverence shown to icons depicting or representing sacred entities, and at which worship is directed.
It's not worship unless it's
latria.
I see no
fundamental difference between
this sort of thing and
that sort of thing.
That's probably why you're not a sociologist, then. The person which the statues/icons represent in Catholicism are venerated (
dulia); and the entities behind the statues/icons in polytheism are worshiped (
latria). Simple difference. The angels and saints in Christianity praise and worship God themselves, and are considered to be good role models because of the fact that they praised and worshiped God in a pleasing manner to Him; not because they are beings that in their own regard have any sort of power to themselves.
They are not gods themselves, but the religious and cultural niche they fill is akin to that of the secondary gods of pre-Christian paganism, albeit lessened somewhat. When one offers a prayer to say, Saint Medard to cure you of toothache, the theology dictates that you are praying to God via Medard, and that the cure comes from God himself, but that does not dismiss the fact that worshippers still feel the need to drag Medard into things.
I believe we've just isolated the problem: you misunderstand the nature of saint veneration. When people prayed to the Greco-Roman gods, it was for material/pleasurable blessings, such as a plentiful harvest or personal virtue. It was to make their own lives better. When people pray to God, it's in order to become better worshipers of God. The final cause is completely different. If a Christian is asking to be spared of a certain suffering, it should only be insofar if it is God's antecedent will that the person in question not suffer at that particular moment. Hence the prayer to St. Medard: as he is the patron saint of toothaches, his story is a particular inspiration to those with toothaches attempting to be proper Christians.
Because that is a hallmark of polytheistic religion. Monotheism traditionally holds that a single deity rules over all things, as is the case in Judaism, Islam and Protestant Christianity. The Catholic assertion that God chooses to delegate authority is hardly in line with other forms of monotheistic worship, at least not of the Abrahamic variety.
God doesn't delegate authority, except in a priestly manner; which is also true of Judaism. To suggest that He is not a "single deity [that] rules over all things" is completely false. He shares mediation, which is something different. It demonstrates His love of His creation in that He chooses to work through human means in order to accomplish His will. This, again, can be found in the Hebrew Bible, and is not exclusive to Catholic tradition:
"When the messenger came to announce to Job that the Sabeans had plundered his goods and slain his children, he said: 'The Lord gave and the Lord taketh away.' He did not say: 'The Lord hath given me my children and my possessions, and the Sabeans have taken them away.' He realized that adversity had come upon him by the will of God. Therefore he added: 'As it hath pleased the Lord, so is it done. Blessed be the name of the Lord.' We must not therefore consider the afflictions that come upon us as happening by chance or solely from the malice of men; we should be convinced that what happens, happens by the will of God." - St. Alphonsus de Liguori,
Uniformity with God's Will
Then, what, Judaism is also trumped up pagan sect?
No. Neither are. Perhaps if you let go of the silly assumption that God having agents is polytheisticesque, you would see that.
Makes sense, I suppose, given the explicit and implicit acknowledgement of gods other than Yahweh in the Bible. "You shall have no other gods before me" can only be understood in so many ways, after all...
"A god" can be defined in many ways. St. Paul considered financial greed to be a type of idolatry; even though money is not an intelligent being, it is something considered to be a good that is often placed above God.
Still, Jews don't reverse saints, or make icons as Catholics do. You must have picked that up from somewhere.
Modern Jews don't as much, but see my "Abraham's blessing" example above. Perhaps you should also check the Book of Exodus to see what was placed on the Ark of the Covenant.
Then why does the practice exist? An omnipresent and omnipotent god does not need to delegate, nor does he need certain entities to advise on the affairs of his worshippers, yet this is exactly what Catholicism suggests.
Strawman. This isn't what the Catholic Church teaches.
Again, I did not mean that she is an explicit or literal goddess, but that the role she fulfils in the Catholic faith is derived from an analogous to that of various goddess in pre-Christian paganism. She is, in essence, the divine feminine, manifested as the Catholic image of the "perfect" female.
So after you've stripped away the majority of the quiddity of paganism, you're left with thus: the Virgin Mary is a perfect female. I can agree with that, that there are
extremely loose not-significant-enough-to-be-even-called-coincidental connections that can be made between every religion; even though when you refer to "pre-Christian paganism," you're likely not referring to any religions that the Christians actually had contact with, since the Greco-Roman, Celtic, Egyptian and other local pantheons had no "perfect females."
Handy you've got that kicking about, then. Heaven forbid you make up your
own mind about that sort of thing.
How am I not making up my own mind? Am I a cyborg? Do I live in an Orwellian society without any intellectual freedom?