Natural Idolatry – Rewind

You shall not make for yourself an image  Deuteronomy 5:8 NASB

Image – What is an idol?  We certainly recognize the idols of ancient religions.  The Hebrew word here (pesel from pasal, meaning “to cut or hew”) makes it clear that the initial emphasis of the commandment deals with all those sacred objects men make in the pursuit of gods.  But a little investigation shows us that there is more at stake here than wood and stone.  Deuteronomy tells us that idols are an abomination to God, lumped into the category with devious and evil acts, stealing, evil thoughts, lying and pride.  All are abominations to God (and, of course, we have never done any of these, have we?).  The issue of idolatry is so important that Hebrew has fourteen different words for “idol.”  Some apply to external objects of worship.  Some apply to internal objects of worship.  All fit that same prohibition.  Anything that demands absolute devotion in attitude or action other than the Lord is the subject of this commandment.

Of course, we have all heard the exhortations against placing our devotion in money, power, other people or causes.  I am quite sure we have all endured the declarations of those who challenge our commitment by pointing to the inherent idolatry in materialism, nationalism or some other “ism.”  What we might not acknowledge is how perfectly natural it is for men to turn to idols.  After all, God is invisible.  His actions are mysterious;  His methods inscrutable;  His plans unimaginable.  The Bible readily admits that His ways are not our ways.  We, on the other hand, are all about “show me” devotion.  We want proof before we commit.  We want something we can touch or see or taste before we are ready to turn our lives over.

God knows this.  How could He not know it?  He made us!  So, God provides the proof.  He acts on our behalf.  Our problem is not that God is absent from life.  Our problem is that we want a God Who acts right now!  We have stopped looking in the appropriate direction to see the trustworthiness of God because we have stopped looking into the past to find the meaning of our lives.  We have been seduced by the culture of significance into looking toward the future, and since we can’t see the future, we’re afraid.  So, we make something solid that we can hang on to.  As a result of not looking back at God’s acts, we see nothing that we can be sure of in the future.  Therefore, we make up some substitute for devotion.  We put our trust in what we have now;  those things that make us feel secure.  We devote ourselves to what we think will serve us best right now.  In the process, we slander God.

God leaves plenty of markers to establish His reliability.  There’s a pile of stones where the children crossed the Jordan.  There are altars scattered across the land.  There is a rainbow in the sky.  And there’s an empty tomb.  But unless we gather our courage from God’s past acts, we will find the future so threatening that worshipping what we have right in front of us will be the natural thing to do.  Turn around!  Ignore the culture that tells you your safety lies in planning for tomorrow.  Look where God has already been.  That’s what sets the course of your life.  Tomorrow never comes.  What you have is what God has already done and what you are going to do with it today.

Is it any wonder that the Hebrew word for the future is a word that gives us an image of a man in a rowboat, looking back at where he came from while he rows toward a place he cannot see?  Once aligned with the markers he can see (where he has already been), his future is secure.  He can’t row while straining his neck to look where he is going.  So, God leaves markers, lots of them, in order that we can get aligned with where He has been, and be confident that the alignment will take us where He wants us to go.

Natural idolatry is the attempt to row forward without looking back at God’s handiwork.

And, by the way, once we divest ourselves of the history of God with Israel, or the history of God with our own family trees, we are set adrift without markers.  No wonder we flounder in the sea of idolatry.

Want to read more about the Hebrew view of the future?  Click here.

Topical Index:  idolatry, future, Deuteronomy 5:8, pesel

LOGISTICS NOTE:  Today I will board the Celebrity cruise ship for the Greek Islands.  I will be lecturing on the influence of Greek thought on the West and the debt the Greeks have to the cultures of the Middle East.  I will have virtually NO internet for the next two weeks so don’t expect much in the way of comments.  See you on June 24.

Michael will be gone for a few days so if you order something please be patient.  We will send it out as soon as we can.

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Desiree

Yes I want to read more but the link isn’t working.

Roderick Logan

Upon meeting Skip for the first time several years ago, this was among the first Hebraic concepts I heard him present. To this day it remains one of the most impacting in my life, and in fact, has become my life’s motto. I am a man rowing backwards into the future.

Teresa

The “click here” link is not working…

Patrick (Skip's Tech Geek)

I’m not for certain, but I think this is the page Skip meant to link to at the end of this Today’s Word. https://skipmoen.com/2009/04/21/row-your-boat/

Judi Baldwin

Hi Skip,
Hope your time on the ship is a blessing to many. The folks on board have no idea what’s in store for them with “Skip Moen” as the Guest Lecturer. I must admit, I’m a little envious. Would love to be on board.
I enjoyed your pics of the Tower in Barcelona. We were just there last Sept. 2012 and found it to be an amazing structure. Barcelona is a wonderful place with so many sights to see. I hope you and Rosanne got a chance to see some of the works of Antoni Gaudi. Two of our favorites were his Casa Batllo and Sagrada Familia. And of course Park Guell is amazing as well. He was a gifted architect.
Meanwhile, have a fantastic time cruising the Greek Isles and doing the Lord’s work. It’s a tough job, but somebody’s got to do it. 🙂
Hugs to both of you.

Michael

Depeche Mode-Personal Jesus (With Lyrics)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26DD0JwAbAc

Hmmm

For me, the song above has always had a profound spiritual attraction

And, in a dialectic mode, it catches all of the audience up

In a satire on the Self – A work of genius IMO

Bon Voyage Skip!

carl roberts

~ We, on the other hand, are all about “show me” devotion. We want proof before we commit. We want something we can touch or see or taste before we are ready to turn our lives over ~

Proof? Visible proof? “Show me? What about the tslav?- the execution stake? Did Jesus (who is the) Christ, Davids’ son, yet David’s LORD, die a physical death as the son of man, yet also Son of God on a hill called Mt. Calvary? Did He bleed real red human blood and feel physical pain for our sakes? Did He wear the crown of thorns and did He feel the spit and the slap of the soldiers? O the love that drew salvation’s plan- O the grace that brought it down to man- O the mighty gulf that God did span- At Calvary.

~ But God demonstrates His own love for us in that the Messiah died on our behalf while we were still sinners ~ (Romans 5.8)

What more can He say, than to you He has said, – to you who for refuge to Jesus have fled?

sharon

ditto Teresa

Gabe

This has been an interest for me for a while. I believe that the prophets still speak to us, and that their warnings against idolatry are still valid. However, I have heard people say here and elsewhere that the Jews ‘learned their lesson’ after Babylonian captivity — and haven’t made the same mistake again. Has ‘spiritual idolatry’ taken the place of ‘physical idolatry’ in most developed countries?

In reading the story of Elijah on Mt. Carmel – it seems as if there were a bit of grey area about the true God and the false god(s). The people needed a line drawn in the sand, which God provided through Elijah’s ministry. If someone were to dig up our billboards, video commercials, statues, movies, ect — would they cross-culturally name our gods? Would they be able to identify our Asherah poles? Would it be difficult to identify our idols? Or is this too puritanical of a view?

I could use some more help in articulating modern day idolatry.

Luzette

Hi Gabe

Your referral to Elijah made me think of Bob Gorelic’ s teaching when we were on Mt Carmel (its on Skip’s the 2012 dvd set) He said: ” do not worship Me the WAY pagans worship their false gods” and then gave the example of the Baal prophet praying louder and louder to their gods.

And since “avad ” is the word for worship, work and serve, may be we can identify a bit of modern day idolatry in who, what and how we are serving and working for, as well?
Personally I have a big issue with “competition and competitiveness”: especially sports – where do you draw the line? I don’t read anything about healthy competition in Scripture.

Gabe

Thank-you. This is very helpful. I am about half-way through the Matthew audio lessons – perhaps I should try the Israel material next.

I agree that our most prolific versions of competition are fallen indeed. “Survival of the Fittest” has become synonymous with competition, but it doesn’t necessarily have to be so. I wrestled throughout high school and college, and whereas most coaches taught a kill-or-be-killed mentality – I saw glimpses of another kind of ‘striving to improve’ – which I think fit in very well with biblical principles.

I suppose the Olympic games where a way of ‘honoring the gods’ – which should give us pause. Hmmm. Or is the issue bigger and more about making a spectacle of worship – mixing worship and entertainment?

Dorothy

We have the accurate, trustworthy history of the Bible. I have no trouble believing every precious word. God was there, He knows what happened.

All human historians are pretty much guessing.
“Imagination plays too important a role in the writing of history, and what is imagination but the projection of the author’s personality.”–quote from somebody.
“The voice of history is often little more than the organ of hatred or flattery.”– Edward Gibbon
“No opinion can be trusted; even the facts may be nothing but a printer’s error.”– W. C. Williams

Many Christian hymns echo lives that have learned to trust God’s faithfulness. Those who have walked this life, came out with song!

Great is His Faithfulness….
What He’s done for others He’ll do for you…(He never changes and His mercy endures forever)
Because He lives, I can face tomorrow….(He has been faithful in the past, thus the foggy unknown horizon is not un-faceable)
‘Tis so sweet to trust in Jesus…(why? because trusting Him has worked out for me and others, first hand knowledge)
Blessed Assurance…(We read of His unfailing arms in His unfailing Word)

Even nature testifies of His faithfulness:
Summer and winter, and springtime and harvest,
Sun, moon and stars in their courses above,
Join with all nature in manifold witness
To Thy great faithfulness, mercy and love.

“I remember my affliction and my wandering, the bitterness and the gall. I well remember them, and my soul is downcast within me. Yet this I call to mind and therefore I have hope: Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed, for His compassions never fail. They are new every morning; great is Your faithfulness. I say to myself, ‘The Lord is my portion; therefore I will wait for Him'” (Lamentations 3:19-24).

Gayle Johnson

Thanks, Dorothy!

My all time favorite hymn. Great Is Thy Faithfulness!

Morning by morning new mercies I see.

Dorothy

🙂
http://www.my-hebrew-name.com/gayle-avigayil-8567.html
Closest meaning: “your Father’s joy” :)You are:)

Ester

“Anything that demands absolute devotion in attitude or action other than (YHWH) .. is the subject of this commandment.”
External idolatry is easily identifiable, but internal idolatry has to be expressed through the mouth, ..out of the abundance of the heart, we speak; for whatever value or priority we place on certain things, or persons above YHWH.
Reason for having to give account for every word spoken/written.

Hebraic mindset is very different- the future is behind us, and the past is before us, as we can see our past to learn from it.
So, doing what is right today, before it gets past us, and we need not learn again from it. 🙂

carl roberts

“Anything” (underlined and in bold font) we love more-serve more-think about more than God is an idol.
“American Idle”- anyone? Whether possessions – pleasures – position- profession..- “the list” is quite extensive. We are meant for labor (or to work), but some worship their work! Some worship (even) the family! – (He quickly added)- my wife is #2. My children #3. God is number 1. “Self” is crucified with Christ. At all times and in all places and in all thoughts. “Bringing into captivity every thought (Yes, even the “Greek” ones- lol!) into the obedience (did someone say obedience?) to the obedience of Christ.”
Was there ever (he inquired of every man) a more obedient man than our own thrice-holy LORD and Savior? And your answer is? (I’ll wait while you think about it…)
No. There is not, nor will ever be. He was (listening?)- THE “only” obedient Man, the “Only” Righteous ONE, the “Only” sinless man ever to have lived. ~ Which of you convinces (or convicts) the LORD Jesus (who is the) Christ of sin? Friend, ~ I (too) find no fault in Him! ~ Not one jot, not one tittle of “the Law or Torah of YHWH” did He ever transgress- never (as in not once) did He ever have an evil thought, much less an evil deed. There is One among us who IS thoroughly able to cast the first stone- and that Man is the Second Adam, the (only) sinless Adam, our sinless, spotless, sacrificial virgin-born Lamb of God- our LORD Jesus (who is the) Christ.