You shall not make for yourself an idol in the form of anything in heaven or above or on the earth beneath or in the waters below. Exodus 20:4 NIV
The second commandment, much like the first, is easily dismissed as a not meant for me type of verse. I want to caution you not to close your mind to the application. Most of us, if we our honest with ourselves, will violate this command at some time, maybe quite often in our life.
Have you ever seen a picture of Jesus? What does Jesus look like? Close your eyes for a minute a get a mental image. You have one, don’t you? Is that what He looks like? Has the mass production of a $45 portrait become your image of the living God, Creator of the universe? Wasn’t He the same Jesus who appeared from nowhere among the disciples in the upper room shortly after the resurrection? Can your image of a mere man do that?
Did you wear your cross around your neck today? Was that the cross upon which Jesus die? Does the symbol give your comfort? Do you draw strength from it? What if you lost it? Would Jesus still have access to your heart, or is it only through that piece of metal that He can reach you?
Now, please understand, I am not asking you to take down your Lord’s Supper scene or take off your cross necklace. I am asking you to consider the image you have of God. Is He more to you than a really good story? Is He more than the legend of the ages or the object on your grandmother’s Christmas card? Is He bigger than a fuzzy feeling in your heart? Is He God?
God is more than we give Him credit for being! The second commandment is to remind us and command us to give God the credit He deserves. He has no equal. There is no image to which you can compare Him adequately. There is nothing wrong with having something around your neck to remind you of your love and devotion to Jesus, but it is not a replacement for that personal relationship.
“To whom (or what) will you compare me? Or who is my equal?” says the Holy One. (Isaiah 40:25)
To whom? Tell God today that everything pales in comparison!
I have Christian art in every room of my house. For us, it is a visual reminder that He is in every room, the unseen visitor. The symbols don’t give me comfort or strength… the One they symbolize does.
I did some research on idols/charms when I did a blog about the Presidental candidates and the charms they carried around. An idol represents a deity or a servant of a deity who has the ear of the deity. And for the most part, an idol (and a charm) is vested of powers to grant wishes, protect and “do” other things for those who worship it. In some cases, it is thought those powers will transfer to the owner of the idol/charm.
So it kind of rolls back into yesterday’s post. Who (what) do you worship? Where’s your money going? Where’s your time going? What impression do you leave on people?
I think in anwering these questions is where you will find the “idols”.