Idolatrous

Idolatrous

Idolatrous


eye-DAH-luh-trus

Definition

(adjective) Relating to or practicing idolatry; showing excessive admiration or devotion to someone or something.

Example

The fans’ idolatrous devotion to the celebrity bordered on unhealthy obsession.

Word Origin


Late Middle English: from Old French “idolatrer,” from ecclesiastical Latin “idololatria,” from Greek “eidololatria,” from “eidolon” (idol) + “latreia” (worship).

Fun Fact

Idolatry originally meant worshipping physical objects as gods, violating monotheistic commandments against graven images. Modern usage extends beyond religion—we speak of idolatrous celebrity worship, idolatrous devotion to money or power, or idolatrous nationalism. The biblical prohibition against idolatry shaped Western art history; iconoclastic movements periodically destroyed religious images considered idolatrous. Psychologists discuss how modern consumer culture creates idolatrous relationships with brands and products. The word implies problematic excess—you can admire someone without being idolatrous, but cross a line into worship and admiration becomes unhealthy. Contemporary critique of “toxic fandom” often describes behavior that’s effectively idolatrous, where devotion to entertainers or fictional universes eclipses rational perspective, demonstrating how ancient concepts remain relevant in secular contexts.

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