|
1 John 5:21 –
"Dear children, keep yourselves from idols."
1 Corinthians
10:14 – "My dear friends, flee from idolatry."
Introduction
In an age of
education, empirical research and intelligent investigation, why would
we need to consider the subject of contemporary idolatry? Some might be
tempted to ask, "Haven’t we evolved beyond that?" In this "age
of enlightenment" it wouldn’t be an overstatement to assert that:
Idolatry is the greatest sin that plagues the heart of man. Calvin
expressed it well when he said that "the human heart is an idol
factory."
The sin of
idolatry is near to us, dear to us, and in the very midst of us, so much
so that we may hardly even be aware of its existence. One of the reasons
that so many of us are not aware of this serious and pervasive problem
is that we lack a clear understanding of 1) the nature of and 2) the
need for idolatry.
I would like
for us to consider the following six questions related to idolatry:
1. What is the
true nature of idolatry?
2. What is the
root cause of idolatry?
3. What forms
does it take in the visible church and in contemporary culture?
4. What are
some of the negative consequences of idolatry?
5. What is the
positive alternative to this seminal sin? And,
6. What is the
practical application of this important truth?
I. What Is The
True Nature of Idolatry?
What is
idolatry? "Idolatry is wanting something else
more than we desire God."
It is valuing
something/someone in a way that hinders the love and trust that we owe
to God. It is anything that conflicts with putting God first. When the
Apostle Paul was exhorting the Corinthian Church in the first century,
he was equally speaking to all of us in the 21st
century when he said, "My dear friends, flee from idolatry" (1 Cor.
10:14). Idolatry is so serious and so deadly that it needs to be
avoided like the plague! Many of us are in serious spiritual danger and
we don’t even realize it. How sad is that?
In an age of
tolerance, the Christian church has had relatively little to say about
this serious sin. Perhaps more than any other sin, the truth about
idolatry is one that needs to be told in our time. What is the truth
about idolatry?
Idolatry is a
worship in which the honor and glory due to God alone is given to
someone or something other than the One true God.
If we fail to give God His rightful place in our lives, we will have no
alternative except to give that place to someone or something else, and
that is idolatry. Idolatry may assume different forms in different
centuries and different cultures but the true nature of idolatry remains
the same. Whether we worship a wooden caving or whether we deify
ourselves, the principle of idolatry is in reality the same. The honor
that is due God is turned aside and given to someone/something which is
not God. Whenever and wherever this is done, whether in heathen temples
or Christian churches, there is an act of idolatry!
It’s not
necessary to formally deny the one true God is order to be an idolater.
All that is necessary is that we desire something else more than we
desire God. All that is necessary is that we relinquish the throne of
our hearts to someone or thing other than God. We may not even be aware
of it and in many cases we’re not aware of it. Nonetheless, idolatry is
a deadly sin that God has strongly denounced in His Word.
What did Jesus
say? If we love anything/anyone more than Him, we are not worthy of Him.
If we love anyone more than we love Christ we can’t be His disciple.
Idolatry isn’t something confined to other times or other cultures,
rather it is the most pervasive and deadly sin imaginable and it is here
in our midst!
What does the
"man of sin" do in 2 Thessalonians 2:4? He "sets himself up in
God’s temple and proclaims himself to be God." If the truth be told,
he isn’t the only one who has committed the sin of self-deification.
It’s a sin that we all need to watch and continually pray against. This
sin is so serious that two of the Ten Commandments are devoted to the
prohibition of it (Ex. 20:3, 4). The besetting sin for all of us is, in
one word, "idolatry".
It is not for
nothing that Paul sternly commands the Corinthians to flee from
idolatry. In Isaiah 42:8, the Lord says, "I
will not give my glory to another or my praise to idols."
II. What Is
The Cause of Idolatry?
To a secular,
superficial thinker, the perils of idolatry may seem very small to
non-existent. Since man is incurably religious, the seeds of idolatry
are within each of us. The secret roots of this sin reside in every
human heart. The cause of idolatry is the natural corruption of the
human heart. It’s not surprising that Calvin said "The human heart is
an idol factory," because there’s no end to the number of idols we
are capable of producing. Almost anything or anyone can become a
potential idol!
Our Adamic
nature shows itself in a thousand different ways. Idolatry is an act of
the sinful nature (a work of the flesh) – an act of the unregenerate
human heart. It is the great disease of which all the children of Adam
are infected since birth.
Jesus said, "For
from within, out of men’s hearts, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality,
theft, murder, adultery, greed, malice, deceit, lewdness, envy, slander,
arrogance and folly. All these evils come from inside and make a man
‘unclean’" (Mark 7:21-3).
According to
Paul in Galatians 5:19-21, "The acts of the sinful nature are
obvious: sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery; IDOLATRY and
witchcraft; hatred, discord, jealousy, fits of rage, selfish ambition,
dissensions, factions and envy; drunkenness, orgies and the like. I warn
you, as I did before, that those who live like this will not inherit the
kingdom of God." Paul is saying that idolatry is the natural product
of man’s heart. It’s a spiritual weed which is always ready to bring
forth!
Man will
worship something. If not God, then an idol! There is no third option. A
distorted view of God and reality always characterizes the religion of
the natural man (1 Cor. 2:12-14). God is a Spirit and natural man often
craves after something he can see and touch. In the beginning God
created man in His image and since then man has not ceased to return to
compliment. Man brings his god down to his own level. Natural man allows
his morality to determine his theology rather than the reverse. The song
writer expressed his concern this way, "Prone to wander, Lord I feel
it, prone to leave the One I love, here’s my heart, Come take and seal
it, seal it for Thy courts above." Because the seeds of idolatry are
always present in the human heart, we need to heed Paul’s warning to
"Flee from idolatry" (1 Cor. 10:14).
III. What Form
Does Idolatry Take in The Visible Church?
The visible
church (those who profess to be Christians) is opposed to the invisible
church (those who are true believers) the elect of God. When Jesus said
that the gates of hell would not prevail against His church, He was
talking about the invisible, not the visible church. Particular
congregations and/or denominations of the visible church are not exempt
from serious errors in faith and practice.
Paul says,
"You must not associate with anyone who is an idolater (1 Cor. 5:11);
"Do not be idolaters, as some of them were" (1 Cor. 10:7); "Flee from
idolatry" (1 Cor. 10:14); John says, "Dear children, keep yourselves
from idols" (1 John 5:21). The sin of idolatry is a predictable and
prevalent sin in the visible church. It was a problem in the first
century, and it remains a problem in the 21st
century.
What forms of
idolatry present themselves to the visible church in our time?
1) Idolatry is
to have images and pictures of saints that we venerate and revere.
2) Idolatry is
to glorify and pray to the virgin Mary and the departed saints.
3) Idolatry is
to bow down before mere material icons in the worship service.
4) Idolatry is
to worship anything that man’s hands have made or invented.
5) Idolatry is
to make mere men mediators of God’s covenant rather than Christ.
6) Idolatry is
to look to the church rather than Christ for eternal salvation.
7) Idolatry is
bowing down in homage before an image, picture or statue.
8) Idolatry is
exalting and desiring the gift more than the giver of the gifts.
9) Idolatry is
focusing on the self rather than on the Savior in worship.
10) Idolatry
is valuing your money and materialism more than the Master.
11) Idolatry
is putting your spouse or your children in the place of God.
IV. What Are
Some of The Negative Consequences of Idolatry?
Be careful who
or what you worship because you will become what you worship; you will
become like the object or the one you worship. Everyone has an ultimate
object of love and loyalty. What’s most important to us determines
what’s very important to us. Our core values flow out of the ultimate
object of our love and allegiance. The person you truly worship will
control you. Even secular people realize this.
Have you ever
heard someone say, "She worships her husband"? Such people are
saying that they live for the one they worship. You don’t have to be
motivated or forced into it, it just naturally happens. Worshipping the
wrong god guarantees we have wrong values, resulting in wrong decisions
and actions.
Don’t create
and worship your own false god; spend your time getting to know the One
and only true God (Ex. 20:3, 4). God won’t compete with other gods. He
won’t share His glory with other gods or other things.
Do you
remember the scene in Raiders of the Lost Ark when Indiana Jones’
nemesis took the Idol away from Indiana Jones and the hostile natives
were all around them and he held the Golden Idol over his head? Do you
remember what happened next? All the natives fell down and knelt before
the Golden Idol.
In America
today, most people aren’t likely to kneel down before the Golden Idol,
but these are a few of the things we will kneel before: houses, cars,
boats, sports, TV’s, money, job, self, spouse and children.
It does matter
what you believe in and what is the ultimate authority for our lives. It
does matter who we worship and who is the ultimate object of our love
and loyalty. Idolatry is a LIE that is destructive, dangerous, and
ultimately, it’s deadly. What’s the LIE? The LIE is:
there is some ONE or some THING more important than the one true God.
That LIE comes
from the pit of hell and it smells like smoke!
If you want to
see some of the negative consequences of idolatry, see Romans 1:21-32,
where Paul lists 24 sins resulting from not giving God His proper place
in our lives:
For although they knew God,
they neither glorified him as God nor gave thanks to him, but their
thinking became futile and their foolish hearts were darkened.
Although they claimed to be wise, they became fools and exchanged the
glory of the immortal God for images made to look like mortal man and
birds and animals and reptiles. Therefore God gave them over in the
sinful desires of their hearts to sexual impurity for the degrading of
their bodies with one another. They exchanged the truth of God for a
lie, and worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator –
who is forever praised. Amen.
Because of this, God gave
them over to shameful lusts. Even their women exchanged natural
relations for unnatural ones. In the same way the men also abandoned
natural relations with women and were inflamed with lust for one
another. Men committed indecent acts with other men, and received in
themselves the due penalty for their perversion.
Furthermore, since they did
not think it worthwhile to retain the knowledge of God, he gave them
over to a depraved mind, to do what ought not to be done. They have
become filled with every kind of wickedness, evil, greed and
depravity. They are full of envy, murder, strife, deceit and malice.
They are gossips, slanderers, God-haters, insolent, arrogant and
boastful; they invent ways of doing evil; they disobey their parents;
they are senseless, faithless, heartless, ruthless. Although they know
God’s righteous decree that those who do such things deserve death,
they not only continue to do these very things but also approve of
those who practice them.
The negative
consequences that result from idolatry are too numerous to mention. But
when we carry poison in our blood stream it affects every part of the
body. When our god is the wrong god, our ultimate object of love and
loyalty is wrong, our perspective or worldview is unrealistic, our core
values are wrong, our feelings are often inappropriate, our thinking is
confused, our heart is hard, our conscience is callous, our morals are
corrupt, our relationships are unhealthy, our decisions are unwise and
our actions are sinful. Whether we realize it or not, the sin of
idolatry adversely affects every aspect of our being. Proverbs 14:12
says, "There is a way that seems right to a man, but in the end it
leads to death." Finally…
V. What Is The
Positive Alternative to The Deadly Sin of Idolatry?
God is so
unique, so special, so powerful and so awesome that to think of Him like
anything or anyone else is wrong. Any idea we attach to any image of Him
we have made in our minds isn’t big enough to describe Him. To think of
God in any form is to shortchange Him and is to rob Him of His divine
attributes.
Do you have an
image of God that you cling to when you think about Him? Is it accurate?
There’s a book written by J. B. Phillips called, Your God Is Too
Small. It’s a classic. I recommend it because it will help you
evaluate your concept of God.
There are many
misconceptions of God going around, but there are also many ways to
describe His true nature, to be accurate when we talk about Him. God is
a jealous God – He desires and deserves your affection and admiration.
God is a jealous God and will not share His glory with another – not
even you. God desires and deserves to be the sole object of our worship;
He won’t tolerate pretenders to His throne in our lives. This is so
important that He warns of lasting consequences of infidelity to Him.
Idolatry can
ruin generations and fidelity can bring great blessing to future
generations (Ex. 20:5-6). "I, am a jealous God, punishing the children
for the sin of the fathers to the third and fourth generation of those
who hate me, but showing love to a thousand generations of those who
love me and keep my commandments." By far, the best picture of what God
is like is found in the person of Jesus Christ. The writer of Hebrews
says that "The Son perfectly mirrors God and is stamped with God’s
nature" (Heb. 1:2-3, The Message). That means that when we
read the Gospel, we learn what God is like by seeing what Jesus is like.
When we study the life of Christ we’re seeing no less than the
character, the essence, the image of God.
What is the
positive alternative to the deadly sin of idolatry? It’s nothing less
than: 1) giving our ultimate love and loyalty to the one true God, 2)
honoring Him as God, 3) giving Him His rightful place in our lives, 4)
worshipping Him is spirit and in truth, loving Him with all our heart,
soul, mind and strength. The positive alternative is trusting, loving
and serving the Lord. Doing His will, His way for His glory.
The positive
alternative is giving God first place in our lives over anything and
everything else! The antidote for idolatry is a personal, loving and
intimate relationship with the person of Jesus Christ. Only when we
learn to love God properly, can we learn to enjoy all His gifts
appropriately.
VI. What Is
The Practical Application of This Truth?
A final
question that we all need to ask is: "What do we bow down to?"
Every once in
a while, get off the merry-go-round and ask yourself these questions:
1. What am I
doing?
2. What should
I be doing?
3. What should
I be doing next?
4. What should
I not be doing?
5. What
persons or things do you have that you devote yourselves to more than to
God?
Now it’s time
to stop preaching and to start meddling:
Are you
superstitious? Do you look to someone/something other than God for
guidance on how to live your life? Do you even read, let alone consider,
what your Horoscope says in the newspaper? Do you believe that
something, like heavenly bodies, ultimately controls the universe?
Do you hold
certain people like sports stars or entertainers or musicians or actors
in high esteem – so high that they eclipse your desire for God? Or
eclipse your need to look to godly people for your role models?
What do you
think is the worse idol – the most prevalent idol – in our culture?
Perhaps our most dangerous temptation lies in the idolization of the
unholy trinity: me, myself and I. Our greatest danger is
self-deification and the selfish pursuit of happiness.
Our happiness
is not the ultimate goal in life. Do not make yourself an idol. We make
ourselves an idol when we put ourselves on the throne of our lives. We
need to understand that things will not ultimately make us happy. To
want to be happy is not wrong but to worship happiness is wrong.
How many
marriages and families have been ruined because one person selfishly
worshipped happiness, that is, because one person put his happiness
above doing what he knew God wanted him to do?
The pursuit of
happiness isn’t a god worthy of our worship or a goal to be directly
pursued. It’s like chasing after the wind; it can’t be caught. Rather,
happiness is a by-product of being rightly related to God and bringing
glory to God. Real happiness is found in living a life of holiness,
devotion, worship and loving service to Jesus Christ.
Is it any
wonder that the Apostle John’s closing words in his first epistle were:
"Dear children, keep yourselves from idols" (1 John 5:21)?
|