Jesus is Better than our Idols
Transcript
If you have your Bibles, turn with me to 2 Corinthians chapter 5. It's going to take us a minute to get there tonight. We're actually going to be in two separate chunks of Scripture because we're going to be unpacking two separate ideas. But we'll be in 2 Corinthians chapter 5. If you don't have a Bible, just throw your hand up, Mitchell, and be able to grab and hand these out. So we've got some back there for you.
My name is Chet. I'm one of the pastors here, and it's just good to see everybody. Decided to get all our groups together. So we are in the fifth week of our Idol series. Thank you, Isaac. We're in our fifth week of our Idol series.
We've been unpacking for the past four weeks that sin for us does not primarily look like us breaking rules. So for most of us, we grew up with an understanding or our understanding of religion or Christianity is that God has rules, and you don't want to break His rules. And it's bad when we break His rules. But for the most part, sin is actually, we don't break God's rules until we have first placed something else as primary, as more supreme, as more important to us than God. So even when God sets up the Ten Commandments, He sets it up as, you will have no other gods before me, and you will make no idols, no graven images for yourself.
And then He gives the rest of them. So we actually don't break the other Ten Commandments until we've first broken the first one. We've first said that something else is functionally more important to us than God. And so that's what we've been talking about. We've been unpacking this idea of idolatry. St.
Augustine Okat from the 4th century, he was a pastor in Africa, wrote the book Confessions, wrote a lot. He's considered a church father. He said that sin is a disorder of love. And that's kind of how we've been looking at this, that when we love anything more than we love God, it leads us into sin. And we see this in other areas. So if you love success more than your family, then you'll work too much and not spend time with your children.
If you love the way people view you more than you love the truth, then you'll lie about yourself so that you can look good. And so the truth is for us that it's actually when we love something too much, when we place too much value on something, that we begin to turn away from God and we begin to chase after other things. And what we unpacked was basically we actually want God to be God. That was what we spent the first week talking about and how idolatry is us worshiping something other than God. The second week we looked at how we can turn anything into a God. So we take good things, turn them into God things, and that actually becomes a very bad thing.
The third week we spent some time talking about what that actually does to our object of worship and to us when we do that, how we ultimately begin to destroy. So if it's a relationship, we'll slowly destroy that relationship because we have to take from it to validate ourselves, to give ourselves worth, and ultimately idolatry destroys us. Last week we spent some time unpacking that really we have heart-level idolatry. That it's not always just the object of what we're chasing after like money, but most of the time it is actually something deeper. That we're actually seeking power or control or approval or comfort and we're just money is the best way to get it.
And so we actually have heart-level issue and so God actually has to change our hearts for that to work out, for us to grow in that. So what we're actually going to look at tonight is we're finishing up the series and we're just going to spend some time talking about Jesus. And we're going to do it by looking at some lies that our idols tell us. Jeremiah 17.9, we read this the other day, but I think it bears repeating. It says this, this is prophet Jeremiah talking, he says, the heart is deceitful above all things and desperately sick. Who can understand it?
So the heart is deceitful above all things and desperately sick. This makes like most animated movies really scary. Because there's always like a cricket or a bird or something that shows up and it's like, follow your heart wherever it will lead you. Like whenever you see that, stand up and yell, don't do it kid! It's a trick! Your heart is going to destroy you.
It's a bad idea. Don't listen to the cricket. Do that next time. It will be very helpful. But that's the truth, that our hearts are desperately sick.
No one has lied to you more than you have. No one has more often worked to deceive you more than you have. No one has stolen more joy from you than you have. It's just no one has. I remember the first time I heard that, someone was like, unpacking that idea. And they were like, no one has lied to you more than you have.
And I was like, that's not true. Wait a second. That's exactly what I would say to me if I did lie to me. This is getting really fishy. But it's true.
And so what we're going to spend some time is looking at the fact that our hearts and our idols lie to us. And we actually have to, we're going to just spend some time unpacking that and replacing those lies with what Jesus actually accomplishes for us. And so we said early on that most of the time our idolatry is not just something bad. That most of the time it's actually a good thing. It's a gift that God gave us to enjoy and to appreciate and to take part in that we've turned into something ultimate. So it's marriage, it's relationships, it's success, it's approval, it's comfort.
All these things given to us by a good God who wants us to enjoy life. And then we make it as ultimate. We begin to define our life around it. And then it becomes a very big problem. I remember when I was, I don't know, I was a little kid. But this story is not about me.
It's about my younger brother. So he's a couple years younger than me. He was like four or five. So that makes me seven or eight or something. We went to the Universal Studios and they had the Jaws ride. I don't know if they still do, but that ride was great.
And my younger brother, really, four or five, I don't think he was even, like, hadn't even made it to kindergarten yet. And one of his favorite movies was Jaws. That cat watched Jaws, Aliens, and Terminator on repeat. Like when I was growing up watching like Mary Poppins and Bedknobs and Broomsticks and Aladdin, this cat was watching Jaws. You can question my parents' parenting ability later. If you would like.
But he was like five. And so we're at Universal and they're like, we're going to do this Jaws ride. And he was amped because he loved the movie Jaws. So he gets on the ride and you're in water and you're going along and he's just eating it up. And then over the radio, the person's like talking to somebody, you know, in an earlier vessel. And they're like, we've got problems here.
There's a giant shark. And you hear like water gurgling into the mic. And my little brother was like, he's seen the movies. He knows what's going to happen. He looks at my mom and he's like, this is not okay. And my mom's like, no, it's fine, it's fine.
He goes, it is not fine. He said, I heard him go glo-go-go-go-go-go. Which meant, you know, they drowned. So we're going along. She's telling me, it's okay, it's okay. And then he just sat in the absolute perfect spot.
And I think it's because we have a good God who wants to give us good gifts. And he was being gracious to the rest of my family and everyone else on the boat. Not so much to Vince. So Vince is sitting and the animatronic Jaws pops out of the water and bites the side of the boat right where he is. He stands up in his seat and goes, we're all going to die. He is just streaming down his face.
He has lost it. He hasn't fully grasped the idea of what a ride was at this point. I guess he was questioning my parents' idea of, we're actually going to go see this Shark Jaws and this will be fun. Like, what on earth is wrong with these people? My mom was able to calm him down. And then after the ride, I mean, still, they had to explain to him, this is just a ride, this is how this works.
Once it clicked, once he got what it was intended for, it was his favorite ride. He ended up riding it like three or four times. And he loved it. But he was believing something that was wrong about it, which just ultimately ruined the ride for him. Once he realized how it was intended to be used, how it was intended to be operated, then it was actually something he could enjoy. Anyway, that's what we're doing tonight.
We've been believing incorrect things about our idols. They've been lying to us and we've been believing it. And we're going to replace that with the truth that is ours in Christ. And once Jesus is in the right place, everything else just gets to be what it is. So money can just be money if Jesus is God.
Your marriage can just be your marriage if Jesus is God. Then we actually can take all the good things that we've been treating as ultimate things and it's been destroying us. We can put them in their rightful place and actually enjoy them as Jesus trains us in how to do that. And so all we're doing is taking some lies, replacing them with truth so that we can operate and follow Jesus the way we were designed to. So here are the two lies we're going to walk through and then we'll jump into the first one.
So idolatry is a heart issue. It's us taking and chasing after something that we think is going to do these two things. This is the primary lies that our idols tell us. I can give you worth. I can give you life. So whatever it is that we're chasing after that we've put in the place of God, those are the two things that our idols and our hearts lie to us and tell us.
I can give you worth. I can give you life. First lie, I can give you worth. So we use our idols to justify our existence. They tell us that they can give us worth and value in the world. Basically, our idols come to us and say, I can make it okay for you to live on an overpopulated planet and suck up air.
I can make it okay. I can make it to where each day you have a reason to wake up, you have a reason to walk in life, and when you die, you weren't a waste of space. That's what our idols tell us. So whatever it is we're pursuing, and this is why you'll see men a lot of times will work and work and work and work and work and retire and die. Because what they had been using to define that the reason they had value in the world no longer existed for them. Because they had believed that work gave them worth, and when they weren't working anymore, they didn't really have a reason to wake up in the morning.
Because our idols tell us that they can give us worth. They tell us they can justify our existence. The movie Rocky, which is a great movie, and it's old. It's like, I don't know, it's old. But it's a very good movie.
It's one of the two good movies that Sylvester Stallone ever did. So there's the first Rocky, and then there's, Rocky II is okay. And then there's Rambo First Blood. And the greatest arm wrestling movie of all time, Over the Top. But that's a really narrow category.
So it wins that category, but I'm pretty sure it's the only one. Because everyone else is like, no, we're not making a movie about arm wrestling. Anyway, I get distracted. In Rocky, he's going to fight Apollo Creed, and he tells Adrian, who's his girlfriend, he says, I don't even want to win. I just want to go the distance. I don't even have to win.
I just want to go the distance, because then I'll know I'm not just some street bum. All of us have something that we're looking at and saying, if I can just do that, then I'll know I'm not a bum. If I can just have that, if I can just accomplish this, if this would just work out, then I'll know I'm not a bum. Then I'll know I haven't failed. Then I'll know I haven't fallen short.
Then I'll know I've had worth. I'll know I'm not a bum. That's what our idols are telling us, that they can give us worth, that they can justify our existence. But they can't. They ultimately let us down. They ultimately fail us.
That's what we spent the past four weeks talking about. That when we achieve them, we feel the need to achieve something else, to chase after something else. I remember in high school I played football. The best thing you can do in high school football is win state. I remember telling my mom when I was a freshman in high school, I think our team will be good enough by the time we're seniors to win state. She was like, okay.
I remember when they were doing class rings my sophomore year. I was like, nah, that's okay. I'll just get a state ring and wear that. My mom was like, you may not win state. Do you want a class ring? And I was like, no, I don't.
We won state my senior year. And that was cool. I did not wear that ring to college or my Letterman jacket because I appreciate not being made fun of. I didn't cease to exist after winning state in high school. It was nice. It was fun.
It was cool. Everything that we look at and say, this will prove my existence. This will give me value. This will show that we get it. And then it's like, ah, I probably should pick something bigger next time so it takes a little longer to get there. I probably should have something else that I find value and worth in so that I can pretend longer that this will fulfill me.
2 Corinthians chapter 5. I have some good news for us. Verse 21, one of my favorite verses in all of Scripture. 5.21. For our sake, he made him. So he, the first he is God, made him.
The second, the him is Jesus. So for our sake, God made Jesus to be sin. We're going to come back to that. Who knew no sin. So sinless Jesus became sin on our behalf.
So that in him, in Jesus, we might become the righteousness of God. For our sake, he made him to be sin who knew no sin. So that in him, we might become the righteousness of God. Our idols promise us that they can justify our existence and they cannot. The word justify when the Bible uses it is talking about a legal transaction. So it's as if you were acquitted in court.
So that you were tried and you were declared not guilty. They can never try you on that again. So when the Bible speaks of justification, what it's saying is that we've been acquitted in God's court. But not only that, the great exchange has happened. Where Jesus actually became our sin. So that in him, we could become God's righteousness.
Did y'all bring your idol with you? I got mine with me. I carry it around with me all the time. I just happen to have a representation of it this week. Y'all catch that? Okay.
Jesus became everything I wrote on this. So last week, we took the time to sit down and write out what it is that we think will give us value. That we think will give us life. That we think will bring ultimate joy and fulfillment. And Jesus became it. He became everything you wrote down on that disc.
Everything that he's begun to reveal to you over these past few weeks. He became it. He became our posturing for power. He became our lying for approval. He became our incessant need to have others validate us. He became the darkest, most broken parts of our souls.
He became sin. And he was crushed for it. So that in him, we can become the righteousness of God. We stand in God's court and he declares over us the same thing that he would declare over Jesus. That we're approved. That we're valued.
That we're loved. God is not indifferent towards Jesus. He prefers him. He loves him. He lavishes on him. And we are in Christ.
We are the righteousness of God for those of us who have placed faith in Christ. And God prefers us. And he loves us. And he lavishes on us because of Jesus. Once you go to the Supreme Court in the U.S., you don't go anywhere else. Once the Supreme Court's made a decision on something.
They don't appeal down to a lesser court. When the God of the universe speaks that we're the righteousness of God because of Christ, we don't appeal down to a lesser court. We don't say, yeah, but popular opinion at work. Like, that's an appeals process, God. And I've got to run this by my wife. That's not how that works.
We are the righteousness of God because of Christ. I don't even fully know what that means, but I know it's great. That means that we don't need the approval of people because the God of the universe approves of us because we're in Christ. The most powerful being in the universe lavishes on us, cares for us, loves us, so we don't need to seek to have power on earth. The God of all comfort declares that we are in him forever, that we have always been made right, so we don't have to spend our days chasing after some piddly form of comfort that is soon fleeting. The God who orders the universe has already secured the end for us.
Our need to pretend like we have control fades away. Jesus gives us worth. Our idols do not. Jesus gives us never-ending, everlasting worth, and our idols cannot. The second law. I can give you life.
So the first one is that they can justify our existence. They can give us a reason to live. They can prove that we're worth being around. And the second one is that they can give us fulfillment and validation and satisfaction and joy. They can give us life. And it's really kind of squishy.
But we think this. Life was the best term I could come up with to describe what it is our idols are telling us. Because it's not like I can give you the ability to suck oxygen into your lungs and to keep your heart beating. That's not what your idol tells you. But it's this.
Okay, so you were in elementary school. And you were like, ah, elementary school is okay. But middle school is where it's at. And then you got to middle school and you were like, I was really dumb in elementary school. Because middle school is the worst. This is horrible.
Like that's the closest to purgatory I think I've ever been. Middle school. So you're in middle school and you're like, this is the worst. High school. High school is where it's at. When I get to high school, I'll have life.
That's where joy will be found. High school people, that's it. High school is the promised land. You get to high school and you're like, I'm going to need a driver's license for this to work out right. Like, high school is good, but driver's license. What if I have a driver's license?
I get that taste of freedom. Then I'll be okay. And then you get your driver's license. And after a while, you're like, ah, I just want to get out of high school. I just want to be done with this place. I want to have some freedom.
I want to be away from my parents or whatever. And then you start saying, if I could just go to this school or if I could just get this job. And then it's, if I could just get this promotion or if I could just graduate with this degree or if I could just get married. And if we could, oh, if we could just get married. If we could just have children, you have children. Maybe we should have gotten a dog.
Like, it's always around the corner that we keep telling ourselves that's where life will be. Because you're doing that now. We're all looking and saying, ah, if we could just, hmm, get into that type of house. If we could just get to where we didn't have to worry about our bills. If we could just get to this next stage. Always around the corner we're saying, life will be here.
Life will be here. Life will be here. And the reason that we do that is because we haven't found it yet. None of us have reached the point where we are like, that's it. Even when we get a taste of it, it's soon fading and we realize we need something else. Colossians 3.
Just a few flips to the right. Verse 1. If then you have been raised with Christ. So this is those who are in Christ. Those who are believers that place their faith in Christ. If then you have been raised with Christ, seek the things that are above where Christ is.
Some versions say set your heart on. So if then you have been raised with Christ, set your heart on the things that are above. See, our idols are where we set our hearts. And the reason we know that is because when they're up, we're up. And when they're down, we're down. So if it's relationships, I'm in a relationship.
I'm good. All of life is good. This relationship isn't good. Or I'm out of a relationship. I'm bad. All of life is bad.
My worth comes from having finances, having money. That's why when the stock market crashed. When all of that happened with the housing market and with Madoff. There were so many CEOs that hanged themselves or jumped out of windows. Because where their heart was set had just dropped off. And where they had their life centered was gone.
And so whatever it is that we're riding the wave of and then crashing back down with, it's where our hearts are set. But it says to set our hearts on the things that are above where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your mind on the things that are above, not on things that are on earth. So this is basically what we were talking about where God says, you cannot make an idol out of anything that has been created. Which leaves us one option. God can be our God.
Because he's the only thing that's not created. So that's what that's saying. Don't set your mind on anything that's on earth. Don't chase after anything that's been created. Set it on Christ. For you have died, and your life is hidden with Christ in God.
When Christ, who is your life, appears, then you also will appear with him in glory. For you have died. We have died to our old selves with Christ, and our life is hidden with Christ in God. And when Christ, who is our life, appears, then we will appear with him in glory. Our lives are not going to be found for those of us who are in Christ anywhere other than him. They're not just around the corner.
They're not going to be found in the next promotion. They're not going to be found in the next relationship. They're not going to be found if we can just make this work, this scenario play out. They aren't anywhere but in Christ. That's amazing. That our lives are in him.
We don't have to search for them. We don't have to chase for them. We don't have to try to find them. He has it. Our life is hidden with Christ. I heard a pastor talking one time, and he was working with a lady who had some serious relationship idolatry.
That she consistently was seeking approval from men. And the only way she kind of knew that her life was okay was when she had a man. That they validated her. So she was talking with a counselor, and the counselor told her, it was a lady. The counselor told her, you need to get off of this man habit you're on. And you need to get a job.
You need to get your own career. You need to pursue that. And then you'll be self-sufficient, and you won't need a man all the time. You'll have your own thing going. And this pastor said he was talking to her, and he's like, well, what did you think of that advice? And the lady said, I agreed that I didn't need to have a man for approval.
But I did not want to just swap out a typical female idol, relationships, for a typical male idol, career. She was like, I didn't think that was a good trait, to just swap idols. And he said, okay, well, what has helped you in this? What has grown you in this? And she said Colossians 3. She said, I memorized Colossians 3, and every time I enter into a conversation, start getting to know a man, I say to myself, my life is hidden with Christ in God.
My life is not hidden in you. So she'd say, I'd start a relationship. I'd be like, you might be a great man. You might even one day be my husband, and you may be a great husband and a great father. But my life is not hidden in you.
I don't need you to complete my life. And that is true for us in Christ, and that is great news. That our next job promotion, our next career, our next good grade, our ability to graduate, our ability to get this situation to work out, our ability to enter into a relationship, our ability to have our children grow up and be happy and healthy and fine, our life is not hidden there. It's in Christ. So practically, do you know how free this makes us as Christians?
Do you know how good that news is? That nothing outside of Jesus is going to bring us worth. And because our worth is centered in Jesus, nothing outside of Jesus can take it from us. And nothing outside of Jesus is going to give us life, and because our life is centered in Jesus, nothing can take it from us. I was recently reading Justin Martyr, where we get the term martyred from. He was writing a letter to the Roman government to tell them basically they shouldn't kill Christians because Christians were great.
That was basically his argument. He was like, look, Jesus told us to pay taxes and to not cause problems. You want all your citizens to be Christians. Killing us is dumb. His letter didn't go so well because we got the term martyr from his name, just for the record. He said, spoiler alert, I don't think it was well received.
But in that letter, he said this. He said, I want to make something clear to you. You can kill us, but you cannot hurt us. That's the freedom that we have in Christ. I can lose my job. That doesn't harm me because my worth and my life don't come from it.
I probably should get another Job because paying bills is nice and eating is fun. But my life and my worth don't come from it. This relationship that I'm in with Anna, my marriage, is great. And it can be going really well, and it can be going really poorly, and it doesn't destroy me. She's my wife. She's a sinner I'm married to.
I'm a sinner she's married to. I got the better end of that deal, for the record. And we just get to walk through life together. Because worth and value in life don't come from it. So we actually just get to be teammates who walk through life together.
You can graduate or not graduate. You can be in a relationship or not in a relationship. Your kids can turn out wonderfully or be the worst children the world has ever seen. And your worth and your life are always forever sealed in Christ. Now that's freedom.
People can like you or not like you. Life and worth are in Christ. So what this means for us is that as we wrote down our idols, and as the Holy Spirit in His grace began to reveal to us where we had inordinate love, where we had begun to worship something more than God, what we get to do is approach Jesus in faith. That He is capable. That He has accomplished what He says He'll accomplish. That He has taken our sin and given us His righteousness by His grace and His grace alone.
And that we have died with Him when He was brutally murdered on a cross. That our sin was nailed to it with Him. And that we died. And our life is hidden in Him. When He rose again, we rose again. And one day when He cracks the sky open, we'll appear with Him in glory.
When He does that, when we see the Creator of the universe snatch heaven open to reclaim His children, it says our life will appear with Him. We'll finally say, there's my life. There's that quiet nagging I've had my entire life. That's where it's hidden. It's hidden with Christ in God. And we'll be forever with Him.
Forever free. Forever loved and approved and comforted and given grace. Because He is good. And only He is good. And we are not. So we get to approach Jesus in faith and faith alone.
We don't have to be good at getting rid of the things we wrote down on these discs. We don't have to be good at crushing all the things that God began to reveal to us that we pursue. Because Jesus is great at it. Now that's good news. My value and my worth and my life are found in Jesus forever. And I get to approach Him in faith that He is big enough and He is capable of destroying all the would-be gods that would take His place.
So the band's going to come back up. And we're going to do things a little bit differently tonight. We're going to sing one song. I'm going to come back up and talk to us just for a few more minutes to kind of give us some instruction about how we're going to end this. Now we are a church family.
We exist as God's church. This isn't a show. So we respond. And so we sing one song on the front end and we're going to celebrate and sing a lot on the back end. We're going to take some time to respond to who Jesus is and what He's done. So we're going to sing one song.
I'm going to come back up and talk to us a little bit. But we get to approach God in faith. We get to come to Jesus knowing that these things have a hold of our hearts, but that He is the one who can grab our hearts and make it His through His grace and not anything that we do, no work that we bring to the table, no awesomeness that we have. We come empty handed to a God of grace who rescues and lavishes and loves and redeems. I'm going to pray and we're going to sing. Jesus, we thank You that in You, because You were willing to become our sin, because You were willing to take our wrath, we have become the righteousness of God.
That our worth and our value is forever sealed in You. And Jesus, we praise You and thank You that our life is in You and You alone, and that we will forever, never be able to find it on earth. That in all the things we seek, it will come up wanting because it is in You. So God, I pray right now that You would stir our hearts to love You more, that Your Holy Spirit would draw us to Yourself. And for those of us who are walking through life, seeking our worth and our life somewhere other than You, that You would capture us and make us Yours in Jesus' name. Grace is open freely for everyone.
Life is only in Jesus. The worth and the validation and the life that we're seeking, that we're constantly chasing after, all the things that our idols represent are given to us fully, and freely and forever in Jesus. And we get to approach Him in faith. Not our own ability, not our own ability to run from our idols, not our own ability to fix our heart, but faith that He is gracious and that He is capable. And that He is good. That on the cross, when He died in our place, when He took our sin, He proved once and for all that He is good, and that He is for our good.
And we get to approach Him in grace. So what we're going to do, because He is gracious, because we get to approach Him in faith and faith alone, we're going to sing a few more songs, and we're going to spend some time just talking to Jesus, praising Jesus for who He is, and you get to, if you would like, if you want to approach Jesus in faith, we've got a trash can set up over here and a trash can set up over here, and you can go throw your idol away. Not because you are able to get rid of it, but because Jesus is. All you have to do is want to get rid of it. All you have to do is surrender to the fact that He is capable of destroying all would-be gods.
You don't have to be good at it. You don't have to even get to the point where your heart isn't still going to chase after it some, but you're going to go say to Jesus, I don't want to chase after this. I don't want to seek my worth and validation from this. I don't want to try to find life in this. Life and worth and value are in you and you alone forever. And I want you as God, who are capable to step in on my behalf, just as you did in the cross, where you stepped in on my behalf to rescue and redeem.
I want you to step in and rescue and redeem. I heard this the other day, you're never too weak for a redeemer. You're never too small to come to someone who can rescue and redeem. And so we just approach Jesus in faith. Faith that He's capable. So we're going to sing a few more songs.
We're going to celebrate that Jesus is God, that He is good, that He is capable, that He does destroy idols. And we're going to approach Jesus in faith that He can. It may be a daily process of you continuing to approach Jesus in faith to get rid of your idols. But He's capable and He's faithful.
Deep Idols
Transcript
We'll be in Ezekiel chapter 14. We are in the fourth week of our series looking at and studying idolatry and kind of what the Bible has to say about that and how that plays out in our lives. Ezekiel is kind of in the middle. Maybe to the right, page 454 if you've got one of our Bibles. If you don't have a Bible with you, we actually just hold your hand up. We'll grab one for you.
Aubrey will hand you one real quick. So if anybody need one, we've got some right back there. Okay, so we're in the fourth week. We've been doing this for three weeks now. How are we doing? We've been talking for the past four weeks about idolatry, kind of looking at what Scripture says about idolatry.
Are we beginning to see that in our own lives? Are we changing? Are we walking that out with community? Are we just hearing things, learning things, and not allowing it to affect us? So we got together on our first week of this series, and we talked through that God is the only God, and that we actually would want Him to be God, that it's actually best for us if He is God.
The next week we talked about how we'll take good things and turn them into God things, and then that becomes a very bad thing when we actually put that weight on something that is not God and how we'll take things that He gave us to enjoy, meant to be enjoyed, and we'll treat them as if they are God. We spent last week talking about broken cisterns. Basically what happens when we do that, how we have to work really hard to prop up our made-up God, and then ultimately we either crush it or it destroys us, and that God is the fountain of living water that brings us life. So my question is, are we seeing areas in our lives that we've placed too much weight on, that we've begun to take something good and care too much about it?
Are we looking at, are we walking that out in community? Are we doing that, or are we just hearing things, learning things, talking about things? So hopefully we are in relationships kind of walking this out and growing in the gospel. That would be the hope. That's why we do this. That's why we walk things out in church families.
So what we've been addressing, though, is that idolatry is the worship of anything other than God. So we've talked about how we often think of sin as breaking God's rules, but that we don't first break rules until we have first decided to worship something, to give more importance, more value to something other than God. So when we talk about Adam and Eve in the garden, God created them in a perfect relationship with himself. They kept it together for really like half a chapter because part of that they weren't even made yet. So it kind of tells the story twice.
So maybe if you add up both half chapters, they got a whole chapter of the Bible where humans had it together. So just so you know, if your life looks like that, lots and lots of chapters. If you're messing it up and half a chapter of it is good, that's how humans look in the Bible. So you're on pace with the rest of us. But they ate from the tree they were not supposed to eat from.
And so they certainly broke a rule. But first, their value system changed. Prior to breaking the rule that God had given them, they first decided that they wanted to elevate themselves, that they were more important. And so they swapped God out for themselves, and then they broke a rule. And so that's what we've been talking about. The sin is not primarily us breaking rules.
That when you look at the Ten Commandments, we don't break any of the other ones until we've broken the first one, which says, you will have no other gods before me. So that's what we've been talking about. What we're going to talk about tonight is heart-level idolatry. And that's what we're going to be looking at in Ezekiel. So I'm going to pray, and then we're going to hop in.
God, we thank you for your grace. We ask you to show up in a very real way tonight. We love you, and you are good. Speak to us through your word. In Jesus' name, amen. Some of what we're going to be talking about tonight, I think, has previously been said better, or as my English 4 teacher would say in high school, more better.
She told us one time, y'all got to start doing more better on these tests. And I was like, I don't think we've got much of a chance. But there's a guy named Tim Keller that we've stolen some of these ideas from. He unpacks idolatry very well as it applies to us in American culture. And so I would recommend the book Counterfeit Gods by Tim Keller. If you're interested, if you've been kind of growing and understanding this, idolatry as we walk through it, Tim Keller says things really well.
Some of what we'll talk about tonight is stuff that, like I said, I think Tim Keller has said previously, more articulately and smarter-y. That's one thing Presbyterians have going for them. They're usually pretty smart. They have a lot they have to go through to be a Presbyterian minister. Other denominations and that sort of thing, they're like, can you read? Kind of.
All right, go at it, boy. You want to yell at people about Jesus? Yes. All right, you're in. So Ezekiel chapter 14, verse 1.
Then certain of the elders of Israel came to me and sat before me. Okay, so Ezekiel is a prophet. He's writing this down. This is stuff that happened. So when he says they came before me, that's Ezekiel.
He's a prophet. They are in Babylon at this time. So they are in the Babylonian captivity, which means that they had been in Israel and the Babylonians had come down and snatched up a bunch of them, the king and other high-ranking people, and took them back to Babylon. And the reason that happened was because in the Old Testament, God set up the nation of Israel as his people, and as long as they were worshiping him as God, he defended them. He protected them. And so people would show up and be like, we're going to conquer you.
And they'd be like, no, because you don't know who God is, and that's going to go really poorly for you, so you might want to go home. And they would be like, yeah, right, and then God would just crush people. And then whenever they would begin to make alliances with other countries, begin to trust more in Egypt than in God, begin to trust more in other gods than in God, God would basically just say, okay, sure, if you want to pray to gods that don't exist, pray to them when people show up to capture you. And so God would lead the Israelites into captivity basically to train them, basically to show them that the gods they were trusting in, the alliances they were making, the things they were letting their heart chase after were really bad for them.
And ultimately weren't going to bring them joy and satisfaction, so he would allow them to go into captivity so that he could bring them back to himself. He actually may be doing that with some of us right now. In his grace, he may be identifying in our hearts areas of idolatry and sin that we've begun to place too much importance on something that is not him and that ultimately will not satisfy, and it's actually very loving and good for him to do that. It's the worst. Don't get me wrong. It's horrible and not enjoyable at all, but it's very, very good for us.
He's been doing that with me. It's not fun going behind the woodshed of grace, but it's very, very good for us. And so as he identifies idolatry and areas in our heart that we kind of get off, that we begin to drift, it's actually him being good to us. And that's kind of the situation they're in right now. So it says, Then certain of the elders of Israel came to me and sat before me.
Elders of Israel would have been the chief leaders of the Israelite people in Babylon at this point. So chief leaders come and sit before Ezekiel, came and sat before me, and the word of the Lord came to me. Son of man, these men have taken their idols into their hearts and set the stumbling block of their iniquity before their faces. Should I indeed let myself be consulted by them? Stop right there. All right.
Leaders of Israel come and sit before God, come and sit before Ezekiel to have Ezekiel ask God something for him. Basically like, what are we supposed to do? How are we supposed to lead? What do we need to do? And what God says is, their idols are not visible. They've set them up in their hearts.
So these were Israelite leaders. They were not bowing down to other gods. They were not worshiping and chasing after other gods. If they were, it would have been obvious. When they showed up, Ezekiel would have just been like, hey, why don't y'all get rid of the idols you have in your house? Why don't you get rid of the totem poles and the asherahs?
And why don't you get rid of your Baal idol worshiping things? But they don't. They show up, seem like they've got it all together, and God says, their idols have been set up in their hearts. That's very scary for us. What that means is, that we can be walking through life, functionally looking like Jesus is our God, functionally being a part of church family, functionally looking like God is our God, but actually, at a heart level, be in love with and chasing after and worshiping something else. And so he says, the idols that they have have been set up in their hearts.
Therefore, speak to them, verse 4, Therefore, speak to them and say to them, Thus says the Lord God, Anyone of the house of Israel, who takes his idols into his heart, and sets the stumbling block of his iniquity before his face, and yet comes to the prophet, I, the Lord, will answer him, as he comes with the multitude of his idols, that I may lay hold of the hearts of the house of Israel, who are all estranged from me through their idols. Therefore, say to the house of Israel, Thus says the Lord God, Repent, and turn away from your idols. Repent means confess and change. It means actually turn away from.
So don't just say, Oh, this is an idol I have in my life, but actually turn away from it. Repent, and turn away from your idols, and turn away your faces from all your abominations, for any one of the house of Israel, or the strangers who sojourn in Israel, who separates himself from me, taking his idols into his heart, and putting the stumbling block of his iniquity before his face, and yet comes to a prophet to consult me through him, I, the Lord, will answer him myself. What he says is, they come to talk to you, I'm going to talk to them. I'm not going to speak to you and let you talk to them.
I'm going to speak to each one of them individually, as it comes to the idols that they've set up in their heart. What we're going to do, is we're going to pray, and ask this same God, to do the same thing for us tonight. He promised to do it for the people of Israel, we're going to ask him to do it for us tonight. So, all of us in here who are believers, I would like for you, because it is his grace and his goodness towards us, to show this to us, I would like for you to ask God to show you areas in your heart, that you've begun to place too much weight, too much value, that you've begun to put some hope in, put some worth in, get validation from, that is inordinate and not appropriate, areas that you've taken idols into your heart.
So, I want you to ask him, and ask the Holy Spirit to reveal that to us. If you're in here tonight, and you're not a believer, and you're just hanging out, and checking out this whole Jesus thing, I would ask you to do the same thing, to ask God to reveal to you, where there may be areas in your life, that you're pursuing something, that's not going to satisfy you, because he says that he's going to do this, so that he may lay hold of the hearts of the house of Israel. That's what we want. And if you're in here tonight, and you don't know Jesus, ask him to do that. Here's the thing, this is the trade off, if you don't know Jesus.
If he's real, it's on him to show that to you. Like, if Shakespeare is going to meet Romeo, Shakespeare's got to do that. Okay? Think about it a little while, that makes sense. Okay? So, that's on God to reveal himself.
So, if he's real, then cool, you're talking to the creator of the universe, and it's actually very good for you to meet him, because if he's real, this is true, and you need to know it. If he's not real, you just fired off some chemicals in your brain, for no reason whatsoever, and that's not a huge waste. So, think some thoughts. If he's not real, no harm, no foul, if he is real, you might actually get to encounter the living God, and that would be really cool. So, everybody though, we're going to pray this together, that God would reveal this to us, that he would speak to us. So, I'm going to pray, but let's, we'll be quiet for a second, y'all can pray, and then I'll pray.
God, you promised your people many years ago, that you would reveal their idols to them, and we as your church, ask you to do the same for us. That you show us in areas in our hearts, where we've begun to seek validation, where we've begun to console ourselves, where we've begun to seek worth, and God, we ask that through your Holy Spirit, you would lay hold of our hearts, that they might be solely yours, because in that, there's freedom, and there's life, and there's joy. So, speak directly to us tonight. God, I pray that there's some people in here, who don't hear a word of anything else I say, because you are dealing with them.
That's far better. And we love you in Jesus' name, and ask this in Jesus' name. Amen. Okay, so, what God is saying here, is that we can functionally, at a heart level, have something that we pursue, and it alters, how we walk through life. So that these men, looked like they had everything together, but they had, at a heart level, at a deep level, idolatry, set up.
What that means for us, is that, idolatry is always, the sin beneath the sin. So that it's always, idolatry, prior to us, sinning in any other way. So when we think about, our sin, a lot of times, it's not, that we have a problem with lying, or that we have an issue with money, or that we have an issue with, with relationships. It's actually something deeper, something at a heart level, that's driving that. So that a lot of times, money and relationships, and all of the manipulation, and stuff that we do, is actually the object, not the operator.
The operator is what's driving, that. So that's what we're trying, to unpack tonight, and I'm going to try, to give us some different ways, to think about that, so that we can begin, to see that in ourselves. The other thing, that that means, is that if it's at a heart level, that means that, behavioral change, will not solve the issue. It means that, adjusting how you look, how you act, how you behave, is not going to fix the problem, if it's a heart level issue. I'll give you an example, of how this plays out, and how this can be the operator, not the object. Matt and I, have been friends for a long time, we roomed together in college, which some of that was cool, and some of that was not.
I like my roommate better now, her name is Anna, she's way better, of a roommate. I think Matt, likes his roommate better now, as well. But we roomed together in college, we got to know each other, and then there was a while, where we weren't around each other, and then we moved back down, and moved to this area about, I don't know, a year and a half, two years ago, something like that, and started working on, on being a part of this church plant together, and what's cool is, we've gotten to kind of, be friends again, in a different way, and you get, you get around each other, you work for a while together, and you start realizing, man, you're kind of messed up. Like that's kind of what you realize, the more you're around people.
That's actually why we, walk out, church family, in community groups, because the truth is, you can't help somebody, walk closer to Jesus, unless you're around them. You just can't do it. Like how am I going to know, whether you're pursuing Jesus, if I'm never around you, and your spouse? How am I going to know, if you're pursuing Jesus, if I never see you, with your roommates? If I never see how you handle stress? I mean how am I going to know?
I'm going to tell you something. I can fake being really, really good for an hour on Sunday. That's easy. But you hang out with me, for a long period of time, you're going to realize, man this guy is sinful, and he needs Jesus. And that's why we walk out, community, in life, in normal everyday life, doing normal everyday things together, as Jesus' people. But as Matt and I have gotten to do that, what we realize is that we both lie, periodically, and we shouldn't, but we do.
And it happens in quick, kind of circumstances. And so what will happen is, let me tell you how, this is how Matt lies. I was talking to him about it the other day. I'm going to confess his sin first, and then we'll focus more on me. Matt will do this. Matt loves being early to places.
It's his favorite. It's the worst, but he loves it. So he loves being really early to places. It makes him way more comfortable, in just life in general. He wants to be early, kind of allows him to, take a deep breath, know everything's going to be okay. I do not operate that way, but we go to the same places a lot, to meet with people, and do different things.
And so it doesn't make any sense, for both of us to drive our trucks, which get like, 12 miles to the gallon, or something. And so we end up riding together a lot, and so what Matt will do, is he tricks me, and I just recently discovered, this took like a year and a half, so you can see how quick I am on things. What he does is this, he wants to be there like an hour and a half early, but he knows there's no way, I'm going to sit in a parking lot with him, for an hour and a half, before we have to meet with somebody. That may be a bit of an exaggeration, but it's early guys, so he really wants to leave way early, to like change two tires on the way, I don't know what he's wanting to do.
So what he'll do, is he will tell me about 15 minutes earlier, than he knows I am willing, like would want to be. So like if we wanted to leave at 3, he'll tell me 2.45, if I wanted to leave at 3, because he actually wants to leave at like 2.30. And then what he does, is he shows up early to leave. He knows the entire time, that he's going to show up 10 minutes early, to my house to pick me up. And he's like, I'm just early, oops. So he'll tell me he's going to be somewhere, sometime, and it's intentionally 15 minutes later, then he knows he's coming.
And I recently was like, man, you're kind of lying to me, aren't you? And he's like, yeah, that's not right. He didn't realize he was doing it. And then I, he's called me out on this, I didn't realize I would do this, but I forget things, all the time. I'm the worst at it. So what I do, is somebody asks me, hey man, did you do that?
Or Matt will ask me, hey, did you do this? Because Matt remembers everything. Hey man, have you gotten this done yet? And I'll go, oh, I'm going to do that tomorrow. All that means is, I have completely forgotten about this. And if I remember, I'll do that tomorrow.
So I just act like I scheduled it for the next day. Oh yeah, I was going to get up early and do that tomorrow. Now I'm going to have to get up earlier than I had planned, because I've got to do that tomorrow. That's how that works. So what I should say is, I completely forgot, and I will now get that done.
But I don't want to say that, because the truth is, I want people to think I'm awesome. That's really one of my major goals in life. See, Matt and I are both lying, but we're lying for completely different reasons. Matt is just pursuing some comfort, some level of ease in life. And so, since I would never do that, I feel really superior to him when he does that. I'm like, how on earth could you lie like that?
What a jerk. And then when I lie, Matt remembers everything, so he feels superior to me in two ways. One, he would remember, and second of all, he wouldn't lie about it. And so he gets to feel really superior too, but the truth is, we're just lying for different reasons, and we're defending different things. I just want people to think I have my stuff together. I just want people to think I'm awesome.
I could care less whether they like me. So somebody's like, man, that guy's a total jerk. Well, whatever. That guy's really stupid. What? No, I'm not.
I'm smart. Like, I will defend you thinking I'm great. I don't care whether or not you actually like me. We are lying, and we can go after lying. We can go after the behavior, and we can say, we need to stop lying. We shouldn't lie.
But the truth is, until we change what's underneath that, we won't actually fix the problem. We won't actually root out what is there, because we have heart level issues, things that our actions are pursuing, that are a bigger deal. So what we're about to do, is we're going to walk through four, kind of broad, major categories, to just help us get a lens for this. To help us get a lens for, sin beneath the sin, what actually might be driving us, to get a look at the operator, not the object. Then I'll try to unpack it some, with some, we'll talk about money, and I'll give us some other examples, to kind of show how this plays out in life.
Here's what I want though. Don't argue with the categories, when we go through these four things. Don't get derailed, in trying to blend them together, or be like, I feel like these are the same, like just don't do that. The reason is, they're made up. So it's really not worth it.
Like I'm as willing to argue with you, about these categories, as I am about breeds of unicorns. I'm just not going to do it. Like you want to talk about, Irish stompers and palominos, because it's like, they don't exist. So you can argue all you want to about them. So this is just to give us a helpful lens.
Okay? So just track with me, walk with me through this. It's just to help us see this. So the first one we're going to talk about, is power. So if you had power, as you're operating idolatry, as something to sin beneath the sin, what that would mean, is you would say something, along the lines of, life has meaning and purpose, if I have success, if I have influence, if I win.
If I'm on top, that's how life has meaning and purpose. Your worst nightmare would be humiliation. Because your ultimate goal, is to have people think you're great. To be powerful in life, however you define that. And so, your worst nightmare would be, to have people look at you and think, man, this person doesn't have their life together. They are the worst at this.
They are terrible. They have blown this. They've failed. People around you feel used, because they're just objects, in your ability to have power. And your problem of motion is anger. I will also let you know, as we walk through this, just to be helpful to you, if it's not one you deal with, you will think, man, that's the worst.
Just so you know, you'll be like, oh my goodness, how could anybody be like that, until we get to the one that you deal with, and then you're like, well, that one seems reasonable. Just so you are aware, when I interact with some of the other ones, I'm like, that's really stupid for you to care about that. And then we get into my area, and I'm like, no, this is smart. This is what you should pursue. This is why everyone wants to win. So, okay, power, approval is the next one, just kind of a broad category, to help us have, life has meaning and purpose.
If I have affirmation, if I have relationships, if I feel loved. That's how I know that life is okay. Okay, worst nightmare is rejection. To have people not want you around, not care about you, to think very little of you. People around you feel smothered, because you need them to love you. And your problem with emotion is cowardice.
You would rather lie to someone's face, than hurt their feelings, and say some true things they probably need to hear. So, you will, people ask you questions, and you'll bend the truth, and you'll do some different things, because you really just don't ever want to get into a conflict. You'll let people walk all over you, when they shouldn't be, when it's actually appropriate for you to, to engage them in that. But, that's because you want their approval. Comfort. Life has meaning and purpose, if I have freedom, and privacy, and no stress.
Like, I just don't have to worry about things. So, your worst nightmare is stress and demands. Some of the other areas of idolatry, actually feed off of stress and demands, and appreciate it, and enjoy it. It destroys you. Stress stresses you out. It's like you get multiply, overly stressful, because something's stressing you.
People around you feel neglected, because you really just kind of want to be to yourself. So, you're not checking up on people, you don't care too much about how things are going on with them. The majority of the time, you're kind of withdrawn. And, your problem of emotion is apathy. It's just really hard to get you to care about things. The last one is control.
Life has meaning and purpose, if I have discipline, self-discipline, if I have certainty, and if I have standards, if I know how things are going to operate. Your worst nightmare is uncertainty. So, having a situation that's not going to work out, that's all you can think about. You don't know how this is going to end up, at the end of the month. You don't know how this is going to work out, at the end of the week. You don't know how this conversation is going to go.
You have no control over how you're going to pay this bill, and it drives you crazy. People around you can feel unloved, because you don't care so much about them, as much as you care about how they're fitting into your system. And your problem of emotion is worry. You just, you worry about a lot of things, because anything that brings uncertainty, brings worry. Okay, that's just to give us a lens. Let me, let me explain how that operates.
We would look at certain people in life, and we would say, man, they're idle. What they chase after, what they love, is money. They love money. Maybe. Most likely, they love what money gives them. And the reason I say that is, because if money was just green and folded, people wouldn't care about it.
It's actually what money does, that we appreciate. Nobody, gets amped up about monopoly money. None of you have a bank account, that just has monopoly money in it. None of you keep that at your house, hidden somewhere. Because monopoly money, doesn't do anything for you. The only time you care about monopoly money, is the seven hours you're playing that game.
I don't even know how you win monopoly. I always, it just ends when someone flips over the board, and yells at their grandmother. I'm pretty sure that's how monopoly ends. And then you're not allowed to play it again, for like three years or something. And it's a good three years spent. Like it was enjoyable, to not have to play that game again, for three years.
But nobody cares about monopoly money. If money was just green paper that folded, we wouldn't care about it. So what we would say is, man, this person's idol is money. But the truth is, it's probably more likely, one of those four things, or something else, that money gives them. Let me explain how this works. Since your operator may be power, or comfort, the object becomes money.
Because money is a really good way, to get your idol. So if, if power, we're going to go through all of them. So power is the one we started off with. If your idol is power, money, does that really well. It gives you influence. Political candidates listen to you.
You get to be in the important rooms, because you have wealth. It goes before you, as little soldiers, that conquer the world for you. There's actually a guy on Shark Tank, that says that, every one of his dollars, is a soldier, that goes out, and recruits more soldiers for him. But see, it is, it's just a great way, to get power. So it's not that you love money, it's that you love power, but money is a really good way, to get it.
To have influence, and to win. It's also a tangible reminder, of your winning. If you're in business, and you're making more money, you're winning. And that money, is the scoreboard for you. If it is approval, money is a great way, to get approval. You buy me a pizza, I approve of you.
That's how that works. You give me things, I like this guy. This guy, with the wallet, this is great. But it really is, it's a great way, to have friends, to be able to, to feel loved, by pouring that out, on other people. So, it's even, you know, the grandmother, who always gives the best gifts. That may be, because she's very generous, and she loves her grandkids.
It also may be, because it's a great way, to get approval from. To have them over, to have them be a part of things. Comfort, money, is a pad, to life. Comfort, you don't want stress, you don't want people bothering you. Buy a lot of land, and put a fence around it. It's great.
You want privacy? Privacy fence. It's wonderful. You can pay people, to stand there, and keep other people out, if you have enough money. But, for us, it's more like, buying a really nice couch, and getting to go on vacation. It just buys us comfort.
We don't have to worry, about stress and demands, if we have enough money. But ultimately, money is just serving, our need for comfort. And, the last one, control. There's not a whole lot, of uncertainty, if you have enough Numbers, in your bank account. What's going to happen next year? I don't know.
I got cash. What's going to happen, if you lose your job? Cash. How are you going to handle this, if your car breaks down? Cash monies. There's not a lot of uncertainty, and so, some people, they look like, they're really good with money.
Serving their God of control. You can actually have, a marriage relationship, where they argue, all the time about money, and the wife, let's say, is always, so you sit down with these people, and he's like, look, all she wants to do, is spend money. She wants to buy things for herself, she wants to go on vacation, she wants to eat out all the time, we never cook at home, she just, all the time. And it's wasteful, and it's ridiculous, and I need, we need to save money, and we need to have enough money, in our bank account. Truth is, that may be a wise decision, but he may be, being just as selfish, with every dollar, he puts in a bank account, because it's serving his idol, of control, as she is, every time she spends it, on her idol, of comfort or approval.
Now, biblically, does it make more sense, to save money, than to spend it on everything? Yes. But it may be, just as idolatrous. So, a lot of times, the object, the surface level thing, we can see, is just that. It's an object, but it's not the operator. It's not the heart level issue, we have.
So we can step in, and change the behavior, and never root out, the heart issue. Never have, our holy God, step in, and lay hold, of our heart. Which is what he says, he's going to do, in Ezekiel. So you can have someone, that has a power idolatry, and in high school, the best way to do that, is to play sports, and be really good at them. So in high school, pour themselves into sports.
Very good athlete. And you would look and say, oh, that is idol of sports. Then he gets to college, and he's not as good, an athlete in college. But he's really good, at chasing women. And that's a good way, to exert power. And so he quits, playing sports.
And he starts chasing women. And you say, hmm, his idol is women. It's just the best way, to chase after power. Then maybe he, enters into politics. He gets into, to realm of thought, and he ends up, chasing power that way. So he quits chasing women, because that will get you, in trouble in politics, for the most part.
And he starts, going into politics. At some point, this guy, chasing after his power idol, could enter into the church, and become a, quote unquote, Christian. And it'd actually, just be a really, really good way, to serve his power idolatry. Because Christians, are the only ones, who have truth. And now he's one of the, owners of truth. And in Bible studies, when you get around, in your community group, he's the guy, who has all the answers.
He's the one, who knows all the best theology. He's the one, who can shout anybody down, when it comes to, Bible vocabulary, and where to find things, the best. And the truth is, it's just because, it's a great way, to exert power. And he's never let Jesus, take hold of his heart. You could have a female, she's growing up through school, best way to get approval, make good grades, and obey her parents. Very obedient, very good student.
Gets to college, grades are still important, but man, getting guys to like you, is a great way, to get approval. So she starts having, she has to have a boyfriend, at all times. Because she has to have, someone there. Her parents are further away. She has to have someone there, who shows that she has worth. So that other people, can see that she has worth, because her value, comes from approval.
Then she eventually, gets married, and the best way, to get approval, is to be the best wife, and mother, and best soccer mom, and have the most, well kept house, and kids. And throughout life, things actually look, fairly normal for her. But the whole time, she's bending her life, and walking out her days, pursuing her idol, of approval. It's very important, that we dig down deep, and find our heart level issues, and allow Jesus, to replace them, and to take them away. So, let me explain, how we do this. How do we fix that?
If that's true, if we have heart level idolatry, if we can take idols, into our heart, how do we fix that? Okay, let's go back to lying. Let's go back to, mostly Matt, but sometimes me. when it comes to lying, I'm just kidding. What we could say is, so when I lie, I could say, I shouldn't lie. Bad Christian. Bad, bad pastor.
Like, you should not lie. Pastors shouldn't lie. I'm pretty sure, that's in the handbook, somewhere. And I'm not supposed, to do that. And what I could do, is say, what if someone found out? That's really horrible, for me to do.
What if someone found out? And all I'd be doing, is pressing on my own fear, and my own pride, to adjust my behavior. So fear is, what if someone found out? And pride is, I should be better than this. And so all I'm really doing, is increasing, idolatry in my heart, to adjust my behavior. And that actually, in the long run, is going to be a very big problem.
So all I'm doing is saying, prolonging, so I'm just, adding into my idolatry, which has to do with, power and approval. And I'm just prolonging that, and saying, on the long run, it's actually better not to lie, for your ultimate goal, of power and approval. So I'm building into fear and pride, to change my heart. This is actually how we train children a lot. You don't want to be like, those bad people do you? Pride.
You don't want to go to jail, like they do. Fear. And all we're doing, is increasing idolatry, in their heart, which eventually, will be a very big problem. Because we're taking the operator, to adjust the object, we're increasing this. And that's an issue for us. That's how that plays out.
Y'all remember, a couple years ago, when, Siegfried and Roy, one of them, we'll just say Siegfried, because his name's more fun to say. Which, Roy, that's great, that that matches with Siegfried. That's just, that's a great coupling of names there. Siegfried, and Roy. One of them got attacked, by their tiger. Y'all remember this?
Their big, white tiger, or whatever. And they were all surprised. And it's like, bro, that's a tiger. That's what they do. That's like, he's never attacked me before. Well, he's a tiger.
Like, that doesn't, he's a trained tiger. Yeah, but he's still a tiger. And what happens for us, when we build into our idolatry, to adjust our behavior. Yeah, we're just a trained tiger. We're just training ourselves, training ourselves, to have a bigger issue later. Tigers are always going to be a problem, because they're tigers.
If you want to own a pet, own a pet you can take. That's pretty much how that works. Like, maybe you need a stick, but, have y'all heard the, I saw a thing, a dude called 911, a cat had pinned him into it. Have y'all heard this? Oh, it's the best. A cat had pinned him, and his whole family into it.
He called 911, and was like, we got a cat. He said, it's a big, Malaysian, or I don't know cat names. Himalayan. It's a big Himalayan cat. The lady on the phone was like, okay, and he said, it's a big cat. How big is it?
He's like, I don't know, like 22 pounds. She beeps over and goes, because she's a 911 operator, she gets a hold of the police officer, and she's like, guy, I want y'all to come help him with a cat. Is that a thing you do? Like, because I could just tell him to deal with it, if you want me to. And the cops are like, no, I will do that. They ended up sending an animal controller, whatever.
But, but, so if you, if whatever level you can take, you know, that's the level you need to own, just for the record. This is just a helpful tip. This has nothing to do with what we're talking about. If you can't take a 22 pound cat, don't own one. Get like a hamster. All right.
But what happens for us, when we build into ourselves, that's all we're doing, we're training a tiger. And that's why people will say, I can't believe I did that horrible, horrible thing. I wasn't raised like that. I know better than that. And it's like, yeah, but you've been just feeding the tiger, and then when something came along that seemed worth it, you went for it. Because all you've been doing is feeding into your heart, your heart level idolatry to adjust your behavior.
And let me tell you something, when it comes along, and suddenly your heart level idolatry sees something big enough, your behavior is going to change. Okay. So why do we lie? Why do we constantly seek approval? Why are we greedy? The truth is, our hearts are off.
As we've been walking through this series, and we begin to see areas in our lives that it's like, I've placed too much weight there, our hearts are off. We have heart level issues. We said early on that the biggest issue is not that we sin, or not that we break rules, but that we first chase after something other than God is God. When the Old Testament says, you will have no other gods before me, Martin Luther actually says that that's the same as when the New Testament says, you shall trust in Jesus through faith for salvation alone. Do the exact same thing, that your justification will come by faith in Jesus alone.
Justification just means how you have worth before God. Faith in Jesus alone, and you will have no other gods before me, are actually the same thing. When we sin, yes, it's idolatry, it's also a failure to trust in and believe in the gospel. For Christians, when we sin, we are actually functionally at that point failing to believe the gospel. So sin is, first and foremost, idolatry, and for Christians, it's a failure to believe the gospel.
What that means is, we have to replace our heart level issues with the truth of the gospel, and that actually changes us. We have to replace what is real for us because of Jesus, to change our heart level problems. So, what happens is, idols don't rarely just disappear on their own. They're always replaced by something. So someone who, as we walk through life, is really just lazy, may suddenly cease to be lazy if they start placing a lot of value on sports.
And they may quit placing a lot of value on sports if they place a lot of value on making money. But the idol is just being swapped out. It's never just gone. That's what we've talked about. You will have something that you worship as God. All it means is that something has taken ascendancy, has risen to a greater place in our hearts every time we change from one aisle to the other.
Thomas Chalmers, born in 1780, he's a Scottish calf. He says it this way, the heart's desire for an ultimate object, which just means something as supreme, something to be worshipped. The heart's desire for an ultimate object may be conquered, but its desire to have some object is unconquerable. The only way to dispossess the heart of an old affection is through the expulsive power of a new one. And as Christians, the expulsive power of the gospel is what rids us of all heart-level idolatry. When the gospel becomes so true to us, that we don't need any of these other things, when the fact that Jesus Christ, who was God, lived on earth a perfect life on our behalf, and died in our place, took the nails, the lashes, was hung from a cross, bled out the death that we deserved, so that we might be reconnected to God.
Jesus, when he's praying, calls God Father every single time, except for one time. When he's on the cross, he calls him God. Now the Bible doesn't say this, but it would seem that the relationship that Jesus had with God, as his Father, was broken, so that we might actually have one with the Father. That we might actually be adopted, because of the atoning sacrifice of Jesus. That when he rose again three days later, he rose on our behalf to give us life. New life, real life, not pursuing smaller things, not chasing after stuff that won't satisfy, but life in him, that ultimately fulfills and gives us everything.
Only when that becomes real to us, are we able to replace the idols that we've set up in our hearts. Only when Jesus regains and reclaims his throne, are we able to dethrone everything else. All the would-be gods that have shuffled in, and taken up a residency in our hearts. Only through Jesus. Always through Jesus. What cannot be dispossessed, what cannot be gotten rid of, may be dispossessed, if we are able to have a new affection, and so the truth is, we'll walk through life chasing after new affection, after new affection, after new affection, until the one thing, Jesus, the one true God, replaces it forever, and takes up home where he ought to be.
So here's what we're going to do. We've been talking for four weeks. Next week is our last week, that we'll be talking through this. We're going to play some music now. We're not going to, the band's not going to come back up. We're just going to play some music, because we as a church family are going to respond to this.
We've set up over here, we've got clay discs and Sharpies. And as God, through the Holy Spirit, has begun to reveal to us tonight, and through the past four weeks, areas that we have placed too much hope, too much life, too much joy, too much faith, too much worth, begin to get our validation from. The things that we've set up as idols in our heart, what we're going to do is, we're going to grab a clay disc, and we're going to write it down on it. Because the truth is, if we have idols set up in our heart, we carry them with us everywhere. I just want us as a church family to be honest about it.
So we're going to write down, I'm going to grab one, I'm going to write down the things that God's begun to reveal to me, that I have placed too much value in, too much worth in, that I've begun to seek validation from, and place my hope in. And I'm going to prayerfully write that down, asking God the Holy Spirit to reveal to me what that is, and then I'm taking my disc with me. And I want us as a church family to carry these with us, so that we can see the weight of our idolatry. Because most of us don't have something set up at home, that we go back home and worship. But we do have something set up in our hearts, that we carry with us all the time.
And so I just want us to be honest about it. I want you to put them in your purses, I want you to put them in your pockets, I want us to sit them on our dashboards, I want us to make ourselves very aware, that this little thing that we've written down, affects how we live. I want to bring them with you, when you meet with your community group. You've brought it with you every time you've come so far, you might as well just have a representation in your pocket. And I want us to be very honest and open with Jesus, and with church family, about what it is we've been pursuing, what we've been hoping would give us life and joy and satisfaction.
And then, when Jesus lets us, we're going to break home. So I don't know what that's going to look like for us. We're going to, next week, we're just going to spend some time talking about Jesus. We're going to spend some time talking about how He fulfills the promises that our idols make to us. So we'll have an opportunity next Sunday to break them.
If Jesus meets you on Tuesday and tells you to break it, break it. But don't just break it because it's convenient. Don't just break it because it's getting on your nerves. Because we actually, by God's grace, want these gone from our hearts, not just from our dashboard. We actually, by God's grace, want Jesus at the throne of our lives, because that's where joy is found, and that's where hope is found, and that's where life is found. And we don't want to walk through life chasing after things that will not satisfy anyone.
We don't want a little God. We want a big God. A holy God. A righteous God. That actually brings life. So we're going to play some music.
As you pray, and as God reveals you, and if He leads you, go grab one. We've got plenty of Sharpies. Move around the room, and in a minute I'll call us back. Pray over us. And we'll be done for that. I'm going to pray now.
God, I pray that through Your Spirit, You would reveal to us the idols in our hearts, so that You, God, as You say in Ezekiel 14, 5, that You may lay hold of the hearts of the house of Israel, who are all estranged from You through their idols. God, may You lay hold of our hearts. May our hearts belong to You and You alone. Because God, in You is life and hope and freedom. We don't have to work really hard to prove our value because Jesus proved our value when He died for us and He gave us value. He assigned it to us.
I don't have to be successful. I don't have to prove my worth. I don't have to walk through life trying really hard to show the world that I deserve to be here. Jesus Christ gives us value and hope. So God, through Your Holy Spirit, work in us now.
Call Your people to repentance as You called Your people here. And may we change and may we draw closer to You and may we draw closer to each other as we grow in replacing the lies that we believe with the gospel. We love You, Lord. Amen. outros, amen.
Amen. on our behalf.
God, we thank You that You change us by Your grace and may Jesus get all the glory. Amen.
Broken Cisterns
Transcript
Alright, if you've got your Bible tonight, turn with me to Jeremiah chapter 2. We'll be spending some time in Jeremiah chapter 2 tonight. My name is Chet Phillips. I get to be one of the pastors here. I'm very excited about being here tonight. We are in the third week of our Idol series, which is where we're taking some time to walk through and see what the Bible has to say about idolatry.
And specifically how idolatry is not just something that people used to deal with or that is something that only takes place in other countries, but that is actually a heart level issue for us. And so what we talked about the first week was that we were looking in Exodus chapter 20 and we talked about how God starts off by saying, You shall have no other gods before me. And so we just talked about what that looks like for us to have always have an object of worship and that we as humans will always have an object of worship. If you don't have a Bible, we actually have some. I forgot to say that.
So Jack and Mitch can help hand those out. If anybody doesn't have a Bible, if you want to raise your hand, we'll get one to you. So and if you don't own a Bible, just take that one home with you. That's our gift to you. So anyway, we've talked about how we always will have an object of worship.
We will always have something that is supreme in our lives. And so we just kind of discussed in week one why we would actually want that to be God. And we talked about how Jesus is the only God who was crushed in our place, who was crushed for us and that all other gods will eventually crush us. Last week, we talked about how we just kind of turned and looked at all of the things we can worship, how God basically says not to take anything and make it into a God and how we are as humans capable of turning anything into a God. And so one of the things we've said is that sin is not primarily us breaking rules.
So that God hasn't laid it out as I am God. Here are my rules. If you follow my rules, then we'll be good. If you break my rules, then you'll be in trouble. That's not how he lays it out. First of all, he rescues before he gives the law to his people.
So he chooses and rescues and redeems and brings them out of slavery before he ever says this is how we're going to relate to one another. And the way he sets up the law is I am God. There are no other gods. And so for most of us, we feel like sin is primarily me just breaking God's rules. But actually, the way he designs it, the way he lays it out is object of worship is first before rule breaking is.
And so Martin Luther actually said that we don't break any of the other commandments until we first broken the first one, until we've taken God and decided that something else is more important to us, something else is more supreme. That's when we'll lie. That's when we'll hate. That's when we'll do all the things that we're not supposed to do because we've actually decided that in this moment something is functionally greater to me than God. And it actually makes sense because our primary way to relate to God is not based off of works. It's not based off of rules.
It's not based off of following rules. I'll give you an example. Let's say that I ran an underground gambling casino out of my backyard in one of my sheds or something, which would be pretty amazing because I have pretty small sheds. It would be hard to get a lot of people in. Let's say I did that.
And let's say that I did not report this on my taxes and I did not tell Anna about it. Let's just say I had some form of income that wasn't illegal because I realize that in my story that's probably illegal and I can't do that. So it wasn't illegal, but I didn't tell the IRS and I didn't tell Anna about it. If I got caught, if the IRS audited me, the way that the auditor would relate to me would be completely different from the way that Anna would relate to me on the same issue. So the auditor would basically be like, all right, you owe us this much money, pay it plus interest or you're going to jail.
That's it. Anna, who I did the same thing, same situation, still money, still didn't tell her about it, she's going to approach me in a completely different way. She's going to be like, why didn't I know about this? Why on earth would you have hidden this from me? The auditor is never going to look at me and be like, an entire year? You kept this a secret for an entire year?
Like the auditor is not going to cry. He's not. He's going to be like, pay up or go to jail. That's something to you. Because the way I relate to the IRS is based off my ability to follow their regulations. And the problem between my relationship with the IRS and my relationship with Anna would actually be much different.
Because Anna and I have a whole lot of other issues that we need to talk about. Trust. We've got to talk about our communication. We've got to talk about all of the times that I told her things that weren't true. Why I wasn't willing to share this with her. And so it actually makes sense that when we feel like sin is just breaking God's rules, that he's going to say, no, it's deeper than that.
And the issue is bigger than that. Because God does not primarily relate to us on our ability to follow his rules. It's not that if we behave, then we're in. And if we don't behave, we're out. God's actually going to look at us and it's going to be that, no, if we're sinning, it's actually indicative of something deeper, something bigger, something greater. And so that's what we're talking about.
That's what we're trying to dig into a little bit. It's trying to understand how not only does our sin indicate where we are a little bit off, but actually how we might have set up idols in our own lives. And so we'll be in Jeremiah chapter 2. I'm going to pray and then we're going to hop in. God, we thank you that you're good. We ask you to speak to us tonight, that you would reveal your truth and yourself to us through your word.
God, I pray that we would grow closer to you and that your Holy Spirit would have free reign in here tonight. In Jesus' name, amen. Amen. So the prophet Jeremiah, he's going to speak. God's going to be speaking through him. And so basically what God's going to do in this passage, this section of text, is he's talking to the nation of Israel and he's going to lay out two symptoms that they have.
And then he's going to give them their diagnosis. So he's basically going to say, you're doing this and you're doing this, but here's the main problem. So we're going to talk about the two symptoms and then we're going to talk about the diagnosis. I'm going to go ahead, spoiler alert, the diagnosis is idolatry. For those of you who are type A people, you now want to kill me because you know point three before we get to talk about the first two. So you're welcome.
And we're going to go ahead and move forward. So he lays this out this way. He says, The word of the Lord came to me saying, go and proclaim in the hearing of Jerusalem. Thus says the Lord. So this is Jeremiah speaking on behalf of God.
God says, I remember the devotion of your youth, your love as a bride, how you followed me in the wilderness in a land not sown. Israel was holy to the Lord, the first fruits of his harvest. All who ate of it incurred guilt. Disaster came upon them, declares the Lord. So God starts off by saying, I remember how we used to relate to one another.
I remember your love for me as a bride. And so God over and over in the Old Testament is going to say that he relates to the nation of Israel as a husband to a bride. In the New Testament, we're going to be told that the church is the bride of Christ. And so the relationship stays the same. Jesus is our groom, which I'm a man that's a little weird for me, but OK. It's that there's a real, genuine, intimate relationship there.
And that's why in the Old Testament, it's such a big deal when Israel runs away from God. It's as if a bride had left her husband. And so there's when we talked about in the first week about God being jealous for us, not of us. So God doesn't look down from heaven and go, man, this hipster thing is pretty cool. I wish I could get in on that. And I mean, when, you know, moon shoes came out, he wasn't like, oh, I love a pair of those.
Like that wasn't a thing. He's not jealous of us. He's jealous for us the same way that a husband would be for a bride. And so he fights for that relationship. And it's actually fitting. And he ought to.
So it says that I remember your devotion of your youth, your love as a bride. So then we're going to move down to verse four. Hear the word of the Lord, O house of Jacob, and all the clans of the house of Israel. Thus says the Lord, what wrong did your fathers find in me that they went far from me and went after worthlessness and became worthless? Some other texts are going to translate worthlessness a little different. Some will say worthless idols.
The word there is the Hebrew word, Abel. I don't read Hebrew, but I have a computer program that does for me. It's H-E-B-E-L. I don't know how to pronounce it, Abel. So that's how it's spelled out in English.
If you spell it out in Hebrew, it's some squiggly lines that don't mean anything. But the word worthlessness there is used in the Old Testament for nothing, for vanity, for worthlessness. And it's also used for idolatry. So it will be idols. And so some will translate that as worthless idols. But here's what he's saying.
This is the first symptom he lays out for him. He says, you went after worthlessness and you became worthless. We become like what we worship. So whatever we set up as supreme, we will over time become like that. And we spent some time talking about it the past couple of weeks. So here's my question.
Are we becoming more like Jesus? If he is who we worship, over time, we'll become more like Jesus. That's just how that works. If you look out, if you've been a Christian for a while and you look out over the past three years. I'm not talking about last week. I'm talking about the past, or as long as you've been a Christian.
Some of you haven't been a Christian for three years. But if you've been a Christian, are you becoming more like Jesus? When you look out over the past three years, you've grown in some areas. So we might say, well, I'm in better shape than I was three years ago. Some of us will be like, well, my waistline grew over the past three years. And I now can breathe heavier at the top of a flight of stairs than I used to.
That's kind of where I am. It's like, man, I remember when this didn't make me tired. So I've got to get back in shape. But there's certain things. Maybe we've grown. You could say, ah, my portfolio.
It's better. My net worth is. I've grown in that. And so the question is, what are we growing in? Because we become more like what we worship. So are we becoming more like Jesus?
Do we hate sin more? Are we quicker to repent? More open in confession? Do we care about our neighbors more? Do you care about your neighbors more now than you did two years ago? Do you care about your coworkers more now than you did three years ago?
Because the Bible says that we're predestined to be conformed into the image of his son. And that's a slow, messy process. That's what we say when we talk about being in community groups. We say, hey, come be a sinful jerk with us. Like, come be messed up with us. That's what we're going to do.
You're going to spend your life annoying somebody. Come annoy us. Like, let's annoy each other together in community groups. That's what it is. But over time, we grow to be more like Jesus.
So he says, you went after worthlessness and you became worthless. So I would just have us ask and begin to look at what are we becoming more like. Verse 6. They did not say, where is the Lord who brought us up from the land of Egypt, who led us in the wilderness, in the land of deserts and pits, in a land of drought and deep darkness, in a land that none passes through where no man dwells. And I brought you into a plentiful land to enjoy its fruits and its good things. But when you came in, you defiled my land and made my heritage an abomination.
The priests did not say, where is the Lord? Those who handled the law did not know me. The shepherds transgressed against me. The prophets prophesied by Baal and went after things that do not profit. So here's what he says.
He says, I rescued you out of Egypt. And that's where we've been the past two weeks where we've been looking at the Exodus. He says, I rescued you out of Egypt. So I took you out of the house of slavery. I made you my people. And then I walked you through a desert of deep darkness, pits and destruction and despair where no one goes.
And I kept you safe. It's basically like, I walked you down dark alleys in New York and nobody messed with you. That's kind of what he's saying. He's like, I took you into the wilderness where nobody goes. Everyone who goes there just kind of dies. And I took care of you all for years.
And then I brought you into a good place. A place that's plentiful. I brought you things to enjoy. So we talked about last week, we said that God doesn't tell us not to enjoy things, not to love things. He doesn't say, I have created bacon. Now stay far away from it.
He did for a while, actually. But then there's grace and there's some stuff that happened in the book of Acts. And so you should read it. It's amazing. We get to eat bacon now because we're Christians. And so, but he doesn't say, he doesn't not want us to enjoy things.
He just doesn't want us to worship them. So he said, I actually brought you and gave you good things. And then you quit following me. The people who taught from the law didn't even know me. Your prophets prophesied by other gods and you went after things that don't profit. Not only did you chase after other gods, but you went after things that have no life in them, have no fulfillment in them, that will give you no abundance.
You went after things that don't even bring profit. And so what he says here in this section is basically, I rescued you, I made you my people, I brought you into a good land, and then you acted like all the other nations around you. You worshipped their gods and you looked like them. So the second symptom is, he says, you chased after worthless things and you became worthless. And then he says, you went into other nations and you went into, I brought you and made you a people and then you looked like all the nations around you. And so the second question I have for him, I think Jeremiah is pointing it out to the nation of Israel is, do we look like the rest of the Americans we know?
What I mean by that is, we would say, if we're Christian, I would say that I was in slavery to sin. That I could not get out of it, I could not save myself, I could not rescue myself, I was in trouble. And that Jesus rescued me, and that he brought me through my mess, and he's still doing that. And that he's actually blessed me with good things. With life and joy and peace in him. The Bible says that we are blessed with every spiritual blessing.
And so I would say, I know that Jesus is God and that I have an eternity to come that I'll spend with him. But if I view the world the same as everyone else, it doesn't seem like that's true. So what he's saying is, I made you into my people, I brought you through this, and then you started looking like everyone else. So what I'm not talking about is what beverages you partake in or abstain from. What we're not talking about is what rating of movie you're willing to watch. We're talking about some deeper stuff than words you may use or don't use.
What I'm asking is, we're not talking about like culottes. You all know what culottes are? You know what culottes are? Okay. Culottes are great. Because there's certain Christian groups that, I say culottes are great.
I've never really been around culottes. I just, I think the concept is funny. There's certain Christian groups that females aren't allowed to wear pants. So they believe in that. And that's okay. That's fine.
You believe females shouldn't wear pants. But then there's certain things that are hard to do, like run around and play games and do stuff in dresses. So they invented culottes, which are pants that look like a dress. Which is really confusing to me because it's like, what's the goal? To just look like we're doing stuff right as long as it's a secret that we're actually, like, it has more to do with appearances than, and a buddy of mine became a Christian. I met him up at Liberty.
He became a Christian and got a job at a Christian camp. And one of the first nights they were like, they were giving out the rules to all the counselors. And they were like, no, we don't believe in mixed bathing. And that's just a Christian terminology for guys and girls shouldn't swim together. But he'd only been a Christian for a couple of months.
And he was like, uh, yeah. No, I don't believe in that either. He said he was sitting in the meeting being like, I don't know if they know. I'm not sure a whole lot of people think that's okay. That's not like a big problem in society. Now, I know in other camps all the children just get to bathe together.
And so he's like, no, yeah. And he said he found out like a week later they meant swimming. And he was like, oh, I see why that was important to cover now. But he thought it. So that's not what I'm talking about.
What I want to know, and what I think he's pointing out here when it comes to our idolatry, when it comes to how we view the world, do we treat money the same as people who don't know Jesus? Are you thinking about your tax return the same way as your neighbors are? Do you treat relationships the same way? So that you think about marriage or you think about dating the same way that our culture does. Do you think about work? When you get in a conversation with a co-worker, do you talk about work and your boss the same way they do?
Is work just this thing you go to to get a paycheck and your boss is the worst because all bosses are the worst, but this one is specifically the worst because he's a moron. Is that how that works? Because we're supposed to fundamentally be different. Our hearts are supposed to be resting in a different place. Our hope is supposed to be grounded somewhere else. And if everything we do is just the same as our culture, I'm not talking about small stuff, I'm talking about fundamentally, like if we looked at your bank account next to your neighbors, do you all spend the money the same way?
Does your money just terminate on you? Or do we as Christians have places that we want our money to go because we know it's not ours? Places that we know that I've only got a short time here and then I've got an eternity of good things. My good things aren't here. Do we act like that? Do we treat relationships like the goal is for me to find some happiness in it, and once that stops, this doesn't need to exist anymore?
Or do we fundamentally view them differently? So those are the symptoms. He's saying, basically, your hearts are far from me. You're chasing after worthless things. You're becoming more worthless. And you look like all the other nations around you.
You're chasing after that which does not profit. Verse 9. Therefore I still contend with you, declares the Lord, and with your children's children I will contend. For cross to the coast of Cyprus and see, or send to Kadar and examine with care. See if there has ever been such a thing. Has a nation changed its gods, even though they are no gods?
But my people have changed their glory for that which does not profit. So God looks at him and says, He says, look, go to the countries around you. No, no, no, go. Go check them out. Nobody does this. No country does the stupid stuff you're doing.
They have gods that don't even exist, and they keep them. I'm real, and you swapped me out for stupid stuff. No, no, go. Go to Kadar. Same God they've had. And they carve that cat into rocks.
Go check him out. It's the same one. I'm real, and you swapped me out for stupid stuff. He says they exchanged their glory. They changed their glory for that which does not profit. I think we get this on small scale.
So let's take it away from thinking about God and other things. Movies where a dad only cares about work, and he has a family, so he neglects his kids all the time. So Hook was like that. The old Robin Williams movie where he was Peter Pan. Elf is like that. The dad doesn't care about his kids.
It's any other movie ever, pretty much. That's how that plays out. If a dad has a job, he loves it and hates his children. And we'll watch it and be like, don't you realize your family is important? And then he finally gets it at the end, and we're like, yeah, tell your boss he can shove his job and go hang out with your kids and figure out how to buy food later. We get that.
We get that on a small scale. I hung out with a guy named Jeffrey at Sears in Lynchburg. He was great. I was a fan of Jeffrey. He was a bigger guy. He had grown up in California and knew Spanish, so he kind of had a Spanish-y sounding voice.
I think his dad was African-American. His mom was Samoan. And apparently having an African-American dad and a Samoan mom makes you look all Hispanic because everybody just thought he was from Mexico or some Hispanic country, and he wasn't. So it was a lot of fun because people would say racist things to him, and I got to discuss it with him, and he was like, what the heck was that? But he was talking to me about it.
Basically, he did three things. He worked at Sears, sold drugs, and played video games. That was all Jeffrey did, pretty much. I assume he slept and ate, but that's pretty much what he did. And when he would play video games, he would come in sometimes and be like, dude, I was playing video games with this guy at 6 o'clock in the afternoon, in the evening, and I could hear this cat talking to his daughter and telling her to go away because Daddy's playing video games. He was like, I almost lost it.
He's like, I can't play with that guy anymore. And so here's a guy who understands that it's dumb to trade out things that have value for things that don't. And so what God's saying is, hey, you've swapped out your glory for something that doesn't profit, for something that at the end of life will have had zero meaning, and we have a real and genuine relationship, and I exist. So that's what he's laying out here. And so he says, I'll keep reading, he says this, Verse 11, Has a nation changed their gods, even though they are no gods? But my people have changed their glory for that which does not profit.
Be appalled, O heavens, at this. Be shocked. Be utterly desolate, declares the Lord. For my people have committed two evils. They have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters, and have honed out cisterns for themselves, broken cisterns that can hold no water. He looks at the heavens and he says, Be shocked.
Be appalled. Be utterly desolate. And I think he says it to the heavens because I think he may be speaking to the angels that actually know him, that are in his presence. And he's like, Do you see? The angels in his presence, first of all, are superior to us in look and power and that kind of thing. Every time they show up in the Old Testament, they have to say, Don't be afraid.
There's one lady who goes and tells her husband, I met this awesome man, and I bet that made him feel great. He's like, Really, honey? You've got to call him awesome to my face? And then he walked up and was like, No, that was a good assessment. This guy's pretty awesome. I'm paraphrasing.
I'm just kind of helping you all. That's how I read it. So they, in God's presence, praise him continuously because he's worth it. And so he looks at the heavens and says, Be crushed by this. My people have swapped me out. Be appalled.
Be shocked. Be utterly desolate. Be crushed by this. There's some weight behind what we take lightly. He says, My people have committed two evils. They have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters, and honed out cisterns for themselves, broken cisterns that can hold no water.
So, okay, what we know is that swapping out a fountain of living water for a cistern is immensely stupid. That's what we know from context. So he says, Be utterly desolate. Here's what they've done. But here's the thing.
When he's bringing the hammer down with this living water cistern analogy that he's explaining this, that everybody in their culture would have been like, They did. What? That hits home with none of us. None of us are like, Oh man, cisterns are the worst. Nobody says that. We don't even know what that is.
Like, What's a cistern? Because we're really spoiled when it comes to water. Like, immensely spoiled. Like, we, even in our society now, so not even just then, but in the world now, we are spoiled when it comes to water because we can get it anywhere. It's free. Like, we complain that water has no flavor.
We'll complain when it's like, What? They're going to charge me 50 cents for the cup? This is ridiculous. I'm getting water. This should just be free. You should be able to get it anywhere you want it.
The only time I've ever had to go without water, Anna and I both grew up in the middle of nowhere on wells. And so when your power goes out and you have a well, you have no water. That's how that works, which is actually kind of funny because now that we've moved here to the big city, when the power goes out, Anna will remind me that we no longer have water. And I've had to explain to her, I think twice now, that we still have water. Like, she'll be like, Power's out, so, you know, no water. Basically, which is like, be careful with how much we use and you can only flush a certain amount of times.
I'm just coaching you up. I just want to remind you. And it's like, no, no, no. We have water. And she's like, no, the power's out. And I'm like, yeah, but like water towers and we don't have a well that runs off of electricity.
But when you grow up nowhere, you only have limited amounts of water. I remember when the power would go out, we would have to, we had a swimming pool so we would take buckets to fill up the back of the toilets. And one time it was really cold but I took a bucket and dumped it on my head on my back porch to try to rinse off because if you go without water, that's the most I've ever gone without water. It was like two days in an ice storm with no water. That's it. And I was really whiny about it.
Like, I've learned that I like water. It's very useful for things. When he says this, what he's saying is, so here's how societies work then. You want to build a city? You need flowing water. Like, you need a river.
That's why all large cities built up around rivers. That's why Columbia is here. We built up around a river. Columbia, West Columbia was built on the fall line to power mills. West Columbia started as all the mill villages that ran. That's why Gervais Street Bridge was built to get all the people who worked in the mills across the river.
But, Rome was on the Tiber. You've got Egypt on the Nile. You've got Babylon and Assyria on the Tigris-Euphrates. You've got, Israel was built on the Jordan. You want a big city, you have to have a river. And that's what living water is.
Living is either flowing, it means living, or running. So it's like moving water. Then you had wells. So you weren't near a river, you dug a well, that's groundwater, that actually wasn't that bad, although those could run dry. And then third, also here, worst, was a cistern. And a cistern was, you dug a hole and it caught rainwater.
And that's, and they were difficult to keep up, like you had to keep plastering them. They didn't have good plaster then, they would cave in, you'd dig them again, and then the water would get really gross. If you had water in it, depending on when it rained. And so what he says is, they traded out a river and built their life on a cistern. And this cistern doesn't even work. And everybody went, whoa, that's dumb.
That's ridiculous. So nobody would be like, I have dug this cistern. And upon this cistern, we will found our city. And we will become a great people. And we will water a plant. And, yes, just one.
And if, and we will have one person gets to drink water every day, if it's rained recently. And soon, as we multiply, we will all die of dehydration or dysentery. Who's with me? Like, you don't, you don't build a cistern, you don't build a city on a cistern. It just doesn't happen. It doesn't support life.
And what he's saying is, they've swapped me out who gives life for things that they have to work on and manage and that will ultimately kill them. That's idolatry. Taking God who gives life, who brings life, and swapping him out for something else that ultimately destroys. I got some pictures because we don't, it doesn't bring anything to mind. This is Caesarea Philippi. That is a, a freshwater spring in Caesarea Philippi.
That's what you can build a city on. That's flowing fresh water that naturally just pops out and turns into that. This is a cistern, a modern cistern, so it's about as nice as they look. This is also, that's in Mount Arad or Arad or however you want to say that or however they say it. And then, the next one is in southern Israel and that's a cistern as well. I work for, my dad owned a swimming pool company, so I worked for that one for a long time.
The best I can picture is a cistern, is a swimming pool that the pump doesn't work and it's just filled up with water. And let me tell you, you don't want to drink that. And that's what we're doing when we swap God out for something else. And here's what he says. He says, they've swapped me out for that which does not profit. He says, broken cisterns that can't even hold water.
What happens when we do that, two things. It crushes us or it crushes the cistern. And ultimately, it'll do both. But what I mean by that, how that plays out is this. If I make money a God, that's a problem. But if I make Anna a God, that's worse.
If you make your job a God, that's a problem. But if you make your children a God, that's worse. Because they cannot provide satisfaction and fulfillment, you will crush them. What will happen is, you ever had expectations for something and then it just didn't work out the way you had kind of painted it up in your brain? So like you just expected this date was going to be great and then it could have been a decent date, but because it wasn't what you had painted up in your brain, it wasn't any good.
I did this some when I have gifts like at Christmas and stuff. I did this past Christmas. Somebody handed me a gift and I was holding it and it just seemed like the right shape and weight to me for some reason. I wasn't really squeezing it or doing a whole lot with it because I didn't want to be like, you know, like a six-year-old. So I was just kind of behaving myself but I had kind of just decided that it was a bag of coffee.
And that means a lot to me because I really love coffee. And so I just decided, I was like, sweet, I think this is a bag of coffee. And then when I opened it up, it was socks. Well, here's the thing. I needed socks and actually have worn the socks. I was very appreciative of the socks.
But when I thought it was coffee and then it was socks, the best I could come out with was like, oh, yeah. Like that was all I could do because it was immediately like, no, this is great. Yes. Like, you know, you just kind of stick your eyebrows up and nod your head a lot. Like, you've given people gifts before and they've done that. They're like, and you're just like, well, I missed on that one.
Like, I don't know what I was shooting for, but I didn't hit it. If you walk through life expecting a relationship to provide fulfillment and satisfaction, if you walk through life expecting your spouse to be that for you, you will live your life going, ah, because they could be a great spouse, but they'll be a terrible God. And you'll slowly steal from them. You'll have to take from them to make yourself feel valued and loved and validated and over time, you'll slowly just be looking at them going, ah, and stealing from them and crushing them. Same thing with your children. Your children will have to be perfect.
They'll have to make great grades. They'll have to always work everything out because your validation depends on it. Your worth depends on it. And when they don't, it'll crush you or you'll crush them. We build our lives around broken cisterns that cannot support life. That cannot bring joy.
That cannot ultimately satisfy and fulfill. This happens prior to being married. This happens prior to entering into relationships. There's a lady at Sears who, I didn't work with her, but they told me about her. That's why she was infamous. She had a list of 50 things that her future spouse was going to have.
The only thing I know is one of them on there was a hairy chest, which, great. Like, not even like character qualifications. It was like random stuff, left-handed. Like, I don't know, like a mole on his forehead. I don't know what she had put on this list. She had 50 things.
They said that she had shown it to them. Spoiler alert, she was still single last I heard. She might as well have been looking for a golden unicorn. She'd have the same chance of finding it. To expect a person to validate and fulfill, she's never going to find that guy and if she ever marries somebody, she's going to destroy them. There's only a few options when that happens.
We can, we can blame the idol. So you can get married and just assume, well, it's this, this spouse. You can just assume my kids are terrible. If I had those kids, this would work out great. You can blame the category. So you can just be like, all spouses are the worst.
Or you can blame, marriage is the worst. Things were great until we got married and that destroyed this. You can blame the whole system. You can blame, you begin to, you can blame yourself. I'm the one that messed this up. But ultimately, as we enter into this expecting anything to validate us outside of God, anything to bring us ultimate fulfillment and joy, it'll be broken and we'll be slowly killing ourselves because it cannot, will not, sustain life.
Your entire life will be Indiana Jones 4. You'll just be slowly disappointed over and over again until it's over. And you'll be glad it's over. If you've seen Indiana Jones 4, you know what I'm talking about. If you haven't, well done. My favorite part about Indiana Jones 4 was right before it began when I could have not watched it.
So when we build up these expectations, everything will fail because we'll functionally be walking into a relationship and not just looking for a good spouse that we can walk through life together with, but looking for something to be God. Looking for something to give us what only God can give to bring us life and joy and hope and satisfaction. That's how it works with jobs. That's how it works with everything that we can say that, no, this would sustain my life. I can build my life around this. Body image, self-esteem, whatever.
It'll fail. Pleasing your parents, making good grades, being the smartest of your siblings, being the most successful. successful. All of it. What will happen is it will control you because you have to have it. Anything you have to have controls you. And if you get it, it won't satisfy.
And if you fail it, it will curse you forever. I love the quote that C.S. Lewis has on this because a right view of God changes this for us. And C.S. Lewis says this in his book The Weight of Glory. It would seem that our Lord finds our desires not too strong but too weak.
We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us. Like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at sea. We are far too easily pleased. See, so often we think that we just have our passions are too strong. What C.S. Lewis is saying is like, no, we are just too easily pleased with stupid stuff.
We just too quickly run to a cistern and say, this will do it. When we are passing up living, flowing, life-giving, water, when we are passing up a God who brings joy and life always, here is what happens. When God becomes God, everything else can just be itself. When God's God, my marriage can just be my marriage, which is really nice. If Anna expects me to be perfect, she's going to be very disappointed. Extremely disappointed.
But if she knows that I'm just a sinful guy that she happens to live with and we're married and we're going to go through life together, then we just get to be friends who are married. We're just a team attacking life together. We get to repent and move forward. And it's really nice. If our marriage isn't going well, that doesn't destroy us. We get to work on it.
Because our marriage is ultimately about Jesus, not about us. If it's not the happiest moments we've ever had, that's fine. If we don't have a whole lot of money, okay. Because it's not about us. Your kids get to just be your kids, which means they can mess up. Your parents get to just be your parents.
They don't have to be perfect all the time. Your grades can just be your grades. Your money is just money. And you can have a lot of it or a little of it and it can... It's just money. Your value, your worth, your life isn't wrapped up in it.
When God is God, everything else gets to be what it is and then it's actually there's a lot of joy there. There's a lot of life there. There's a lot of hope there. Jesus died to rescue us from slavery and to make us his people. He died in our behalf for our idolatry. For the fact that we have rebelled and run from him.
And he's made us into his own. And we get to worship him and have everything else just be what it is. To actually build our life on something that will sustain, will fulfill, will bring joy. Because when we fail him, he forgives. Always. Because our merit and our worth isn't based off of us.
We entered into the relationship with him based off of his merit, his worth. So he always forgives. And when we're doing really well, we don't have to get prideful. We just get to enjoy it. Be a part of it. Because it's always about him.
And then everything else just gets to be what it is. everything else will be destroyed by the weight of glory except for Jesus. He actually was designed to stand under it. He's worth it. The weight of glory does not crush him. It'll crush your spouse. It'll crush your kids.
It'll destroy your job. If you base it off of your success, you'll crush yourself. because you aren't designed to bear the weight of glory. But Jesus is. And he's able to handle it. And he doesn't disappoint. He doesn't fail our expectations.
He exceeds them. So, the band's going to come back up to play. Here's verse 12 and 13. Be appalled, O heavens, at this. Be shocked. Be utterly desolate, declares the Lord.
For my people have committed two evils. They have forsaken me, the fountain of living waters. And honed out cisterns for themselves. Broken cisterns that can hold no water. Some of us are worn out. We're stressed out.
We don't really know where to turn. Some of us have been building our life around a cistern. And we're dying. We've been basing our existence off of something that cannot satisfy us, that does not bring life and never will. The invitation is open and free to come to the fountain of living water where joy and fulfillment and refreshment refreshment and satisfaction and life are found always. There's peace and rest with Jesus.
So we're going to celebrate that that is open to us, that was open to us at God's expense. He paid for it on the cross. We deserve destruction for our rebellion, but He suffered in our place so that we might be able to come to Him freely based not off of our merit but off of His. Jesus died on a cross and three days later He rose again and we are invited to base our life off of a life-giving, running, fulfilling, satisfying, validating God. some of us are exhausted and it's because we've been trying to maintain a pit that was never designed to build our lives around. We've been trying to drink from dry dirt and it's killing us.
But we can come to Jesus and we can have freedom and we can have hope and we can have joy and we can have life forever. God, we thank You for Your grace and I pray that Your Holy Spirit would draw us ever deeper into the life that is in You, that You would fulfill us and You would satisfy us and You would help us see where we have begun to trust in something that will not fill us up, will not make us complete, will never be able to satisfy. God, I pray that You would show us where we've begun to build our lives around something that ultimately we will have to prop up and that ultimately will destroy. We love You and we praise You.
In Jesus' name.
No God but God
Transcript
For most of us, our understanding of idolatry is you go to maybe a foreign country and – or like it's a worship of like a totem pole or something carved out of gold or it's in the Old Testament when they worshiped a golden calf. Like our concept of idolatry is worship of some sort of inanimate object. Or you think about like if you went to India and you walked into someone's home and they had set up their entire house. They had designed their whole home in the way they sit facing this little box that had an image in it. And so we would think, well, we don't have any kind of idolatry here. Like we wouldn't design our house facing a box.
And it's ridiculous to think that in India they would face all the couches and the whole home would point to this little box and there would be an image in that box. And that image wouldn't even tell jokes or solve major life problems in 30 minutes. Like they can't even change that image quickly by pressing a button. And so it's ridiculous that they would do that. The Bible is going to be pretty clear though that idolatry is not just a problem they had in the Old Testament, not just an issue that has to do with certain groups of people or certain nationalities or anything, but that it's categorically a human problem.
That if we are humans, we struggle with and deal with idolatry. And so we thought we would take five weeks to talk about idolatry. And idolatry is simply this. It is worshiping anything other than God. So placing anything other than God in a place of supremacy in our lives.
And so we're going to be taking five weeks. Tonight we're going to basically be just talking about why we would actually want God to be God. So if we're going to talk about all the other things we worship, let's actually talk a little bit about why we would worship God. Why would we do that? If God's God, why would we want Him to be God? Next week we're going to talk more about the things we actually do worship other than God.
Third week we're going to talk about what happens to us and to those objects that we worship when we place the weight of glory on them. So we take what should be placed on God and we place it on those objects. And then week four we'll spend some time unpacking more internal ways that we idolize things. And week five we'll talk about how Jesus actually is better than all that we idolize. So they'll kind of blend together and we're going to talk about Jesus every week because that's pretty much all we do, which is good.
That's what we're supposed to do. And so we'll do that. But that's kind of how we've laid it out and how we plan on walking through it. And hopefully the Holy Spirit will lead us in that. And it'll be helpful for us to see where we are. So the Bible opens with God making everything.
So he just creates everything that exists. And so it basically lays it out this way. There's God and then he creates all of creation and he puts humans in dominion over the rest of creation. So humans are kind of in to manage and take care of all other things that exist. And so it's God, humans, rest of creation. And so that's why humans are allowed to eat cows and hunt and farm and do all the things that humans are able to build buildings and pave roads.
That's okay. But it's also why it's not okay for us to just destroy everything and mow down every tree because we want paper for things and we just cut down and kill all the animals. That's not okay either because we're supposed to have dominion and care for. So that's why it's okay to have a car, but it's not okay to throw your bottle out the window. That all fits in biblical. And so we start mixing this up some.
So like you'll have people that take created things like tadpoles and elephants and dogs and they'll kind of raise them up to human level. So they have like rights the same that humans do or maybe they pull humans down. And so it's like my dog should have the same rights as my children. And biblically the answer would be no and we should make fun of you. So like does that make sense?
Okay. But then we also do the thing where we'll take animals and we'll move them to the position of God, which is even weirder. So it's like cows are gods or this animal is a God. And so we've actually let them not even just like move them to our level or pulled us down. We've let them jump over us, which was a major fail. Sometimes we pull ourselves up to God or we pull God down to us, but we're designed to exist with God, us, creation.
And that's how God designed it and he made it. And we crushed it. We were great at, crushed in the good way, great at existing in that relationship for fully two chapters of the Bible. And so, I mean, we did great. And then in the third chapter we were like, you know what? Because we exist, we'd like to worship ourselves as God as opposed to you.
And so Adam and Eve begin, they swap, they work to swap places with God and they want to be like God. And so that's what happens in the Garden of Eden. And so we're going to be looking in Exodus chapter 20 tonight. And so I'm going to take a second to get us there. But we'll be in Exodus chapter 20.
It's going to be on page 40 if you have one of the Bibles that we have. I believe 40 is right. If you don't have a Bible, raise your hand. These guys are going to hand some out so that we can all kind of be in the same spot. So if you'd like a Bible and if you don't own a Bible, feel free to take that home with you.
That would be our gift to you. So we'll be at Exodus chapter 20. Here's what happens. So we swap ourselves out for God in Genesis 3. And then from that point on, basically the Bible says that humans used their good brains, because we have the best brains of all of creation. You've never met like a horse that does math better than you.
If you have, I'm sorry. You're really bad at math. But we used the best brains that God had created to come up with all of the evil things we could possibly come up with. So it said that the man's heart was intended on evil all the time. So it was like woke up and was like, I figure I'll do something evil, and then maybe I'll take a nap or eat lunch and then do something horrible.
That'd be great. And so that's basically what happened. And so humans categorically just rebel against God. And so in Exodus 20, where we pick up, God has taken a people and he said basically this. I created the world to exist in relationship with me, but humans didn't want to. So I'm picking you as a nation, you as a people, to exist in a relationship with me.
So we're going to model to the world what this is supposed to look like. And so they had been, as the Israelite people, they had been slaves in Egypt for 400 years. And God had shown up. He had taken Moses and said, go tell Pharaoh, who's the king of Egypt, that I want my people, let my people go. I think God wrote a song about it. But if you don't get that joke, it's probably good because it was kind of dumb.
I don't plan these things. Sometimes they just pop out of my mouth. I wish I could catch them and put them back in. But anyway, so God takes Abraham to go talk to Pharaoh and say, let my people go. And I want to take them and they're going to be my people. And Pharaoh says no.
And God, just across the board, picks Egyptian gods and shows that he's more powerful than them. So he does the plagues of Egypt and it's basically God showing that I'm more powerful than your gods. Like you think this is a God? Cool. Watch me smush him. Okay.
Is this one of your gods? Watch this. I schooled him. Is this one of your gods? And so he does that. And then eventually Pharaoh lets the people go.
God separates the Red Sea so that the Israelites can cross through. The Egyptians chase them. God closes that back up and they drown. And this is where we pick up where God is on Mount Sinai talking to Moses and he's giving them the Ten Commandments. So I'm going to pray and then we're going to hop in into Exodus chapter 20.
God, I thank you for your grace and I pray that you would lead us and teach us tonight to understand more about who you are and how we are designed to follow you in worship and what it looks like a little bit for us when we choose not to. And so God, I pray that you would just give us wisdom and clarity and that your Holy Spirit would speak. We love you and we praise you in Jesus' name. Amen. Exodus chapter 20. This is the Ten Commandments.
So where we pick up, it says, And God spoke all these words. This is God talking to Moses, saying, I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me. You shall not make for yourself a carved image or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above or that is under the earth beneath or that is in the water under the earth. You shall not bow down to them or serve them. For I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing steadfast love to thousands of those who love me and keep my commandments.
Okay. That's the first two commandments of what we call the Ten Commandments. What you understand is the Ten Commandments, what they argue about in front of courthouses and in schools is the Ten Commandments. And primarily, our understanding of how we relate to God is that God shows up and says, I've got rules and you must follow them or you're going to be in trouble. And so that sin is us breaking rules. That God has rules and sin is when we break God's rules.
And that's most often our primary understanding of how we relate to God. But that's actually not how he sets it up. He sets it up as object of worship. His first two commands aren't rules to follow. They are who you worship. And so that's a big deal.
God's not saying I've got rules that you need to follow. That's what Matt talked about last week, where we kind of understand those who follow the rules, who lace up their shoes and who are good little boys and girls, God loves them. And those who disobey the rules, God smites them. That's kind of how we understand it. Or in the story of the two sons where the older brother was like, I've obeyed. I've served.
I've been good. I'm the hero in this story. I'm the good guy. But it's not about following rules. It's about object of worship. And as Matt unpacked that last week, we saw that the son's heart was actually very far from the father's heart.
That he didn't care that his father was hurt. That he didn't care that his father was excited. He just wanted to obey rules and get stuff. So, that's not how God sets it up. He doesn't set it up as rules to follow. God sets it up with this.
I am God. Nothing else is. Nothing. Nothing in heaven. Underwater. On earth.
Pretty much covers everything. He says, don't carve anything. And don't make any kind of likeness of anything anywhere ever. It's me. I'm God. Nothing else is.
He doesn't set it up as commands, but as object of worship. And here's what. Sin is not primarily us breaking rules. Sin is us swapping gods. Sin is us. So that in the moment when we choose to sin, what we have functionally said is that something, someone, is more important, more supreme, bigger to me than God is.
So God says, I am God. And nothing else is. And that's how he sets up how he's going to relate to his people. And when we think of sin as breaking rules, the problem is we don't break any of the other Ten Commandments. We don't break any of the other commandments at all until we've chosen to place something else in our life as more supreme than God. And that is idolatry.
So that when Anna asks me a question and I want to lie to her, when somebody asks me a question and I just met and I want to lie to them about it, lying is one of the Ten Commandments. Like, I shouldn't lie. I'm not supposed to bear a false witness. I'm not supposed to say things that aren't true. And that's a rule. But the problem is, the problem isn't that I break a rule of lying.
The problem is the first thing I say is, hey, you know, Jesus, at this point, I value Anna's opinion more than you. I know you don't want me to do this, but she's bigger right now. I know that this isn't something that honors you, but I really, really need the likes on Facebook. It's a big deal. Does that make sense? Are you tracking?
So we don't break any other commandments until we've first broken the first one, which is we have swapped something out as functionally greater for us. That's what we saw on that slide there. It's where Romans says that we swapped out worshiping the creator for the creature, that we believe the truth, believe the lie rather than the truth. And we swapped out and worshiped creature rather than creator. Okay, I saw a comedian one time and he said that he's not a Christian, but he was talking about God and stuff. Because, you know, things to make fun about and jokes about or whatever.
But he said, he goes, I imagine after God created everything, that at some point he was a little surprised that humans just ate everything. That in heaven at some point an angel was like, oh God, you're going to want to come see this. You know those animals you made? They're eating all of them. And he said it's kind of funny because we were like, oh, oh cows, I'm going to go. Just went around eating everything and then got to dogs and cats and we're like, no, no, no.
This one lives in my house. It's my friend. I've named him Friskers. But the truth is we did humans domesticated dogs. So we own dogs.
You have friends that own dogs. You most likely don't have a friend who owns a tiger because they're harder to domesticate. But we've got people own dogs. And when we first domesticated dogs, we domesticated them for like an actual useful purpose. So like they help us herd cattle or they help hunt or chase people down who've escaped from prison.
So they're like really good at smelling. So what we would do is we'd take a dog and go, all right, I'm going to own a dog and I want it to be helpful to me. So I'm going to breed it for this purpose. And so we'd say, well, this one's good at this. This one's good at this. Let's breed them together.
Hey, this one's better at that. Oh, this one's good. Let's breed them together. And finally we have breeds of dogs that are designed for a purpose, for work or for hunting or for protection. Basically this dog, hey, this dog is going to really like you and really hate everyone else. It's a great dog.
You just put it near your house. It'll like you and it'll bite strangers and you won't have to worry about things. And so we bred dogs. But now what happens is humans' life changed. And so now we started breeding dogs and their sole purpose is to watch TV with me in my one-bedroom apartment. Like that's why this dog exists.
It has nothing else that it's good at other than sitting on a couch. Like that's the goal of this dog. So like I work at Sears. People walk through with like a work dog that's there for a certain purpose to help certain elderly people need a dog to like alert people. Some people come through and they have a seeing eye dog. And then you'll see like a woman with a dog in her purse.
That dog serves zero purpose other than to, I guess, get in the way of her finding things and leave stuff in her purse that she doesn't want there. Like I don't know. Like I've seen them pushing like a baby carriage with a dog in it. And I just want to be like, please just get out. This is ridiculous. But it's like, oh, you have a child.
Oh, my goodness. So I looked up things on the Internet. We now have a Bugs, which is a Boston Terrier and a Pug. We have a Golden Doodle, which is a Golden Retriever and a Poodle. We have a Labradoodle, which is a Labrador and a Poodle. We have a Poma Poo, which is a Pomeranian and a Poodle.
We have a Yorkie Poo, which is a Yorkie and a Poodle. I think it's fun just to breed them with a Poodle because then you get to say Doodle or Poo at the end of their name. So I think people are just like, half of it's got to be a Poodle. It's just so I can say Poo all the time. We have a Bascotti, which is a Basset Hound and a Scottish Terrier, which I'm pretty sure Bascotti, it was bred to be eaten with coffee. I think that's the point of that dog.
These dogs, sole purpose, designed to live in a relationship with a human. That's it. They are designed to live in a relationship with a human. You've never been flipping through National Geographic and seen the sheep-oos of the Serengeti. That's not a show. You've never heard a news report of campers being attacked by a wild pack of Labradoodles.
It just doesn't happen. You can't go into Appalachian Mountains because of those roaming Labradoodles. You've got to hide all your food. They love peanut butter and jelly sandwiches. They'll come get you. It's not a thing.
It's not a thing you worry about. But these designer dogs, if they're not with a human, they do this funny thing called they die. That's it. They don't hunt. They yip. They basically run around in the wild and say, I'm defenseless.
Come eat me. That's all they do. They don't have opposable thumbs, so they can't work a can opener, so they'll never get food. Like, they just can't. They were designed, they were created to live in a relationship with a human. And what I want us to understand is, in a very similar way, humans were created to exist in a relationship with God.
We were created by a good God who made us and designed us to exist in a relationship with Him. And outside of that, we do not ever exist without something as supreme in our lives. It is a design flaw in humans. It worked great for the first two chapters of the Bible. And after chapter 3, when we chose to place something else in a point of supremacy in our lives that was not God, it became a very big problem for us. We were created by God to exist with Him in the place of supremacy.
And what that means is, because we're designed that way, humans do not have the choice of, I will worship God, I'll worship the God of the Bible, or I'll have no God. No God is not a choice for a human. We always have to have something in that place. So the question for us is, do I want to have a good God or a bad one? Because no God isn't an option. We were designed to have something in the place of supremacy.
And so you'd say, well, what about like atheists? Okay, they've just put something else there. Science. That's what they base life off of. That's how they know whether they're in or whether they're out. That's how they know whether their life has meaning.
It may just be their brain. And you'll meet a lot of people who would never say, my God is popular opinion. But you can watch their life and see that it is. That that takes the place of supremacy in their heart. We tracking? Does that make sense?
Okay. So, the question I want to ask tonight is this. I want all of us to ask this. If our options are good God or bad God. If our options are God, the God of the Bible, or something else. What I want us to ask is why would we want it to be God, the God of the Bible?
We exist as a church plant because we think it should be God, the God of the Bible. We gather in homes throughout the week and walk through life together because we think it should be God, the God of the Bible. I pray for the people I work with because I want them to know God, the God of the Bible. But I want us to ask the question, why? If I'm going to worship something. Let's just assume I was designed to worship something.
I'm going to worship something. Why would I want it to be God rather than any of the other something else's? And I want you to ask that question. If you're in here tonight, I want us to try to answer this question. So, if you're a believer, if you say, I worship God. I worship God in Christ.
I worship Jesus. He's my God. Then I want, hopefully, to encourage us into why that's a good thing. Why you should be very, very excited that Jesus is your God. And if you're in tonight and you say, I don't worship God. And you may be even arguing, I don't have something I worship.
Okay. Okay. I'd like to submit that you do. And I just want you to help ask the question. If I'm going to spend my life worshiping something, is comfort a good one? Is partying a good thing to worship?
Is that a good God or should I pick something else? I'll just at least ask that question. And hopefully you'll see why we think Jesus would be the best thing to worship. So, that's what we're asking. If we've got options, why God? So, I think I need to address something here.
I think I need to address two quick things. One is, for some of us, the answer will be, and mostly for people who grew up in church or grew up in the south and are kind of used to this, the answer will be this. The reason we worship God is because God's God. Checkmate. Can't fight logic. Like, you know, but legitimately, that's kind of an answer.
And in some ways, that's fair. But most often, if you get that answer, it's because there's this vague belief that God is somehow like a cosmic mob boss. Like, he shows up and is like, I offer you my protection. If you follow my rules. If not, things can go very, very poorly for you. Like, that's kind of how we treat God.
It's like, alright, if I obey him, things will be good. That's why a lot of times, and the Bible doesn't say that, a lot of times people get really frustrated with God for promises he never made. For not keeping promises he never made. And we think, if I'm bad, then he'll come, you know, knock me to the ground and smite me. Like, God's waiting in heaven going, mess up. Just mess up, just one time.
I'm just looking for something. Like, he's got his laptop open, he has a smite button, and he just puts his cursor over someone and just presses smite, and it just like blows up or whatever. Like, he's a cosmic mob boss. And some of us have that understanding. And what, biblically, the Bible would say, actually, that's not the God of the Bible. So, if you believe in a cosmic mob boss, I don't know where you got that from.
It's not here. He's not waiting to crush you. And we'll get into that in a little while. He is God. And so, some people, when you have that, well, God is God. And so, some people on the other side will say, well, God shows up and says, I'm God, worship me.
Isn't that a little narcissistic? Who does God think he is? He does think he's God, just for the record. Like, that's why he shows up and says, worship me. He's kind of allowed to say that. The other thing is, when we argue that God is narcissistic, we're assuming that he should point us to something else.
That God should show up and be like, I'm God. And I created everything. And I just wanted to let y'all know, money, that's a really good one to chase after. I'll give you my top five things that y'all should pursue outside of the good God who created all of this. And so, the truth is, first of all, he is God, so it's not narcissistic for him to claim to be God, just for the record. That's how that works.
And he does deserve worship. And here's why. It's actually good for him. And so, in this passage, he says, I'm a jealous God. He says, you shall not bow down to them or serve them. That's verse five.
For I, the Lord, am a jealous God. I heard Oprah one time say that she was hearing this taught at one point. And she was like, wait, wait. God's jealous of me? And that it kind of messed up the whole Christianity thing for her because she was like, wait. If God's jealous of me, like, first of all, she had the right conclusion.
If God's jealous of you, you probably shouldn't worship him. That's not a very powerful, mighty God. Like, if he's in heaven going, oh, that's it. Man, if I could just be Chet. My brain would be smaller. I'd make bad decisions.
That would be great. I would have bad knees. Weird breath in the morning. Like, I just wish. Like, if that was true, then I wouldn't worship God because that's really sad. Like, if y'all were like, I want to be like you, I'd try to talk you out of it.
But if God did it, I'd be like, okay, this is enough. When he says he's jealous, he's not jealous of. He's jealous for. However, so, like, if I watched Anna talking to a guy and I felt jealous. Anna's my wife. If I saw her, like, after we got done here, she's hanging out talking to somebody.
Or I'm out at a store and I see her just talking away with some guy or in high school, whatever. And I feel jealous. I'm not jealous of her. I'm not going, I want to talk to that guy. I wish he'd look at me like that. Like, I'm not, that's not what's, that's not what's happening.
I'm not going with his cool, gelled hair and his sparkly, sparkly brown eyes. Like, I'm not jealous of her. I'm jealous for her. I want to physically destroy him with my bare hands. Because I care about her. And the truth is, that's actually appropriate.
She's my wife. If she was talking to some guy and they were holding hands and you're like, dude, I was holding that guy's hand. I was like, yeah, whatever. You'd be like, bro, you're the worst husband I've ever seen. Like, what are you doing? Like, you'd coach me up.
It's appropriate for me to want to physically assault someone who's messing with my wife. That's the right response. That's how that should work. And so when God says he's jealous for us, he's jealous for the relationship he designed to exist. So for me to go to Anna and say, I want you to love me.
I want us to have time together. I want us to connect. I want there to be joy in our relationship. That's appropriate. And as a husband, I should work to pursue that. And so when God says I'm jealous, he's meaning he's jealous for us, meaning he wants the relationship.
He doesn't want us chasing after other gods. He wants us to have the one that we're supposed to have. He wants us in the appropriate relationship. It's the same thing with a good father. The Bible talks about God as father. A good father wants a relationship with his children.
None of us argue, you know what? Those kids would be way better off if they didn't have that good dad. Nobody's making that argument. A good father is healthy for children. Statistics back that up. Kids are designed to have a father and have a father that protects and that leads and that defends and that cares for them and that trains them.
And so when a father fights for the right to be around his children and doesn't want to be replaced by a video game, doesn't want to be replaced by a coach, doesn't want to be replaced by any other person at all, but wants that relationship. It's appropriate and it's fitting and it's good. And when God declares, I want this relationship, it's not odd, it's right. It's appropriate, it's fitting, and it's the way it's designed to be. And the truth is, it's actually, not only is it good and fitting, it's actually for our joy. Because we become like what we worship.
In Jeremiah 3, God says that they chased after worthless things and became worthless. We become like what we worship. That's just how that works. So you meet somebody and they care about physical fitness. They worship physical fitness in a way. Or they wouldn't put it that way, but they just care about it.
They just, I like paying attention to diet and to exercise and those kind of things. Those people slowly over time become more physically fit. That's just how that works. If you worship basketball, over time you learn more about it. You grow to be better at it. Or you realize you're not good at it and you find something else to care about.
Or you learn all the stats and everybody's names. Like you've got a few options there. But that's kind of, that's how that plays out. So someone who's like, I don't worship things. I just like, I don't want rules and I just want like, I just want people to stay out of my business. And I just, I just want to be left alone and I have structure and I have all these things I've got to do.
And it's like, okay, well eventually you won't have a job. And it's a good thing you don't like structure because you're going to be wearing sweatpants. Because you won't fit into your other pants anymore because you had no structure on anything. And all you ate was cheeseburgers and Oreos and played video games. So well done.
And we slowly become more like what we chase after, what we pursue. And so when God says that he's jealous for us, when he wants that relationship, God is joyful. And he's merciful. And he's good. And so it's actually for our good to have God as the object of supremacy in our life because he draws us into himself. And we become more like what we worship.
So we have more grace for each other. We have more joy in our lives. It's good for us. But I want to point something else out to you. Verse 1. God spoke all these words saying, I am the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.
You shall have no other gods before me. God does not start off by handing out rules. He doesn't even start off by addressing this object of worship. He starts off by rescuing. He says, I'm the God who sets you free from slavery. He didn't say, alright Moses, we're going to go get them out.
I need you to pass out these regulation sheets and once everybody's following them, I'm going to come rescue you. He didn't show up and say, get it right. That guy just lied. Ten more years. He didn't do that. He shows up and rescues and then says, I'm the God who rescued you.
Now here's how this relationship is designed to work. So, we see this actually playing out in the New Testament. And so in Romans 5, and flip there with me because that's where we're going to spend most of the rest of our time. I'll refer back to some of that other stuff, but we're going to unpack Romans 5. So we see this playing out because God shows up and rescues before he ever says, this is how this relationship is going to work.
This is what you have to do to follow me. This is what this looks like. So, functionally in life, we will say, this situation, and we'll define for ourselves like a functional hell. We'll spend more time unpacking some of this next week, but this is a functional hell for me. Like being single is a functional hell. That would be the worst.
But being married and being in this relationship, that would be heaven. That's where you graduate to married life. And so for us, we have a functional savior that bridges the gap between our functional hell and our functional heaven. So we have something that, so getting married, finding a significant other is going to rescue us from hell and put us into heaven. Does that make sense? And so when we pursue those things, when we place our hope in those things, when we chase after anything else, we swap God out and make something else supreme.
The problem with that is that none of those functional saviors are a savior like Jesus is. Or a God like God is. And biblically, Jesus is God who came to earth. So, let's look at Romans 5, and we're going to unpack this. Verse 1. Therefore, since we have been justified by faith.
Justified just means made right. We've been made right before God by faith. Faith just means that we place our hope, our faith in God. So it is not, faith isn't working. It's not me doing something really well. It's actually me realizing that I can't and just being like, God, I just trust that you've got this.
Like, this is on you. So we've been justified. We've been made right by faith. We have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Through Him, we have also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. More than that, we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, and endurance produces character, and character produces hope.
And hope does not put us to shame, because God's love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us. For while we were still weak, at the right time, Christ died for the ungodly. For one will scarcely die for a righteous person, though perhaps for a good person, one would dare even to die. But God shows His love for us, and that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Since therefore we have now been justified by His blood, we've been made right by His death, so justified by His blood, much more shall we be saved by Him from the wrath of God. For while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son, much more now that we are reconciled, shall we be saved by His life.
Paul says that Jesus died for us while we were weak, while we were sinners. And he says, look, somebody might die for a good person. They might. They might dare even to die for a good person, but nobody does what Jesus did. Nobody. Like, none of us are going to go knock on the door of a prison and be like, who's your worst death row inmate?
Who's the guy who did some really heinous, horrible stuff? I want to die for that guy. I want to swap my life out for him. I'd really love for him to get extra years because I took his place. Paul says, no one does that. But that Jesus died for us while we were weak, meaning we had no value of our own.
We had nothing to show Him that we had merited salvation. Nothing to show Him that said, we deserve to be died for. We deserve for you to be killed in our place. While we were weak, while we were ungodly, the opposite of pursuing Him. We were pursuing everything else while we were sinners. And it says, while we were His enemies, Christ died for us. no other God does that.
Work does not do that. Work does not die for you. Work does not forgive you. Work does not offer you grace. Work bases your salvation, your life, your hope, off of how well you stand in it. So when you're getting promotions, when you're getting the attaboys, when you're getting bumped to a better office, when you're making the sales, it's going really well.
But when that stops playing out for you, when that stops working out for you, it does not forgive you. It does not offer grace. It does not die for you in your weakness. It does not rescue you when you are at its enemy. Approval? The approval of other people.
Basing your life and your hope off of how other people feel about you. They do not ever die for you. They do not ever base their caring for you off of anything other than how well you fit up in their structure. Money doesn't love you. None of our gods do anything for us like Jesus does. Jesus rescues us while we're weak, while we're broken, while we're his enemies.
And he makes us right with him, not based off of us, but based solely, always, only, off of him. So that we stand forever right with God because we are in Christ. So we will only be right with money when we're in money, functioning appropriately. We will only be right with approval when we're walking through that well and gaining the approvals of others. And when that falls off, because it's always only based off of us and how things are working out, and Jesus only, always, is based off of him forever. Because at no point did we ever merit anything that gave us worth or value.
We were weak, we were ungodly, we were sinners, and we were enemies. And he died to give us life. The reason we want God to be our God is because he's the only God who does that. He's the only God that rescues us based off of himself and not off of anything else. Only, always, based in Christ and never given back over to us. And that is good news.
That Jesus rescues us on his own merit, on his own back, with his own blood, through his own death, so that we might actually have hope and life. All other gods that we worship will eventually fail us, will eventually crush us. There is no freedom in chasing after approval. There is no freedom in it. Having to check status updates, having to see how people care about you, there is no freedom in it. It enslaves us.
And God shows up and says, I'm the God who sets you free from slavery. If we base our life off of money, that does not free us, it enslaves us. And Jesus shows up and says, I'm the God who sets you free from slavery. All other gods will crush us. Jesus was crushed for us. Our life is only, always based in him.
And that makes him a good God. And a good savior. And the reason we want to proclaim it to others, and the reason that we care about other people, is because every other God will eventually destroy you. You will eventually fail it. Your health will fail. Your physique will fail.
Your money will fail. Your family will fail. If you base your life off of your children, and you're happy while they're happy, and things are good while they're good, and whether or not they're enjoying themselves, eventually that will fail, and it won't forgive, and it won't offer grace. It doesn't die for us when we're weak, and when we're its enemies, but Jesus does. All other gods will crush us. Jesus is the only God that was crushed for us.
And it offers us freedom, and life, and hope in him. It says that, verse 10, For while we were enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of his son. Much more now that we are reconciled, shall we be saved by his life. Jesus died on a cross in our place. Adam and Eve stepped out and swapped themselves for God. They wanted to be God, and we consistently throughout our lives have looked at God and said, something else is more important to me than you.
And Jesus stepped down, and he swapped himself, who was God, for us. So he stepped in and took the place of man, so that he might die in our place, and he was brutally murdered, placed in a grave, and three days later, he rose again to life. Jesus is not dead. He is alive, and we have hope in his life. He gives us life in his life. And there's joy, and there's freedom in that.
Having God be your God is captivating, but it never places us in captivity. It sets us free. So that in Christ, if my worth is always in Christ, you know what that means? It means I don't have to be good at everything. It means I can do really stupid stuff, and it doesn't crush me, because my value doesn't come from it. It also means that I can be successful, and it won't destroy me, because my value doesn't come from it.
My hope's not wrapped up in it. All my joy isn't based in it. It sets us free. Worshiping Jesus, having Jesus in the place of supremacy, does not crush us, because he was crushed for us, and it gives us life and freedom and hope forever. So the band's going to come back up.
I want us to do a few things. We're going to take the next four weeks, and we're going to unpack what it looks like for us, as we swap out other things as functionally greater in our lives than Jesus, that we would rather worship and love than Jesus. And so as we gather together in our community groups this week, we're going to begin to unpack that idea. But here's what I want to happen tonight. If we're in here tonight, and you say, I am a Jesus follower. I am a Christian.
My hope is in Him. Then I want us to celebrate. I want us to celebrate that only, always, and forever is our life based in Him, is our salvation based in Him, is our joy based in Him. And if you're in here tonight, and you would say, Jesus isn't my God, I want you to know that He was crushed for you. That whatever it is you're pursuing will eventually crush you. And some of you are aware of that, because it's happening now.
Because you are failing your God, and your God is not forgiving. And I want you to know that you can have life, and joy, and hope forever in Jesus, through faith, and faith alone. Which is where you go to Jesus and say, all my faith is placed in you. That you died in my place. That my hope is in you, and nothing else. God, I pray that you would speak to us, that your Holy Spirit would move in this place tonight.
That we would, you would, through your Holy Spirit, enlighten us to what it is that we have functionally placed us greater in our lives than you. That we might repent. That we might turn from that. That we might run to you. That we might quit serving false things, God. That we might serve you and you alone.
In Jesus' name.