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A Heart Without Idols
By: Francis Frangipane
When we first come to Jesus, He accepts us just as we are: problems, sins,
and all. As our needs are met, however, we gradually discover that God is
seeking something from our lives. What He seeks is our worship. But true
worship is the consequence, the result, of seeing God as He is. It springs
naturally from a soul purified by love; it rises like incense from a heart
without idols.
The God Whose Name Is Jealous
Christ does not personally destroy the idols of sin and self within us.
Rather, He points to them and tells us to destroy them. This message is
about repentance. If you withdraw from the sound of that word, it is
because you need a fresh cleansing of your soul. In fact, we are talking
about a type of repentance that is uncommon to those who only seek
forgiveness but not change. We are speaking of deep repentance a vigilant,
contrite attitude that refuses to allow sin or self to become an idol in
our hearts.
In Exodus we see Christ's view of idols. He warns,
"Watch yourself that you make no covenant with the inhabitants of the land
into which you are going, lest it become a snare in your midst. But
rather, you are to tear down their altars and smash their sacred pillars
and cut down their Asherim for you shall not worship any other god, for
the Lord, whose name is Jealous, is a jealous God." Exodus 34:12-14
There are many aspects to the nature of Christ. He is the Good Shepherd,
our Deliverer, and our Healer. We perceive God through the filter of our
need of Him. And thus He has ordained, for He Himself is our one answer to
a thousand needs.
But how does Jesus see us? Looking through His eyes, the church is His
bride: bone of His bones and flesh of His flesh (Eph. 5:22 32). He has not
saved us so we can live for ourselves again; He has saved us for Himself
(Col. 1:16). True salvation is a betrothal. He purifies us for our
marriage. From His perspective, our independent ways are idolatrous. They
kindle the fires of His jealousy.
An idol is not an occasional sin; it is something that rules us and makes
us its slave. For some, fear is an idol; for others it is lust; for still
others it is rebellion or pride. Whatever challenges Jesus' right to our
hearts becomes His enemy, which He will confront. Because of His jealousy
toward us as His bride, in regard to these false gods, the Lord demands we
destroy these idols ourselves.
From the above Scriptures we see that Jesus does not want us to "carefully" take down that hidden altar of sin so we will not break it;rather He commands that we "TEAR DOWN" what is offensive. He is not politely asking us to dismantle, bolt-by-bolt, our pillars of pride;
instead, He demands that we "SMASH" them to pieces. When He shows us an
inner idol, we must demolish it completely. We cannot secretly harbor the
slightest intention of ever using that idol again. It must be destroyed.
You may feel you are not worshiping any idols. You do not stand, morning
by morning, before a statue of Baal and praise it as your god. Indeed, we
do not worship the idols of the ancient heathen. Like everything in our
modern world, man has sophisticated idolatry as well. Paul talks of the
antichrist who will appear in the last days as that one "who opposes and
exalts himself above every so-called god or object of worship, so that he
takes his seat in the temple of God,displaying himself as being God" (2
Thess. 2:4).
Where is the temple of God on earth is it a building? Perhaps, but in no
other place in Paul's teaching does he refer to the temple of God as
anything other than the church. Yet, even if Paul is referring to a man
seated as a god in Jerusalem, somewhere in that man's life he had to first
think of himself as "being God."
Let us perceive the antichrist as did the apostle John, who saw it not
only as one who was coming, but also as a spiritual enemy that sought to
infiltrate and then replace true Christianity (1 John 2:18; 4:3). The
antichrist spirit is a religious spirit; it is manifested in that thinking
which refuses to be taught and corrected by Christ or anyone else. The
spirit of antichrist is resident in much of the church today, opposing the
move of God, displaying itself as being God.
Simply put, the spirit of antichrist is that spirit which exalts self as
deity. You see, the spirit of antichrist is much more subtle than someone
suddenly announcing to the world he is the Creator. Again, our world is
far too sophisticated for that. For us today, we must look for the
influence of antichrist in our religious traditions: are those traditions
founded upon Scripture or upon man? And then, beyond our traditions, in
the immediacy of our own hearts, we must discern the disposition of the
antichrist spirit in the thought structure of our flesh nature. Is there
something in your soul which opposes and exalts itself above God, taking
its seat in the human temple of God, displaying itself as being God? The
resistance in you against God is an idol. It is the most powerful idol in
the human heart.
But the false god of self-rule does not stand alone in man. The ancient
god Mercury would be hard pressed to keep pace with today's gods of
Anxiety and Haste. The world has taken its bloodlust out of the ancient
Roman arenas and put it into violent movies. They have taken the goddesses
of fertility from the Greek hillsides only to idolize sex in our theaters
and televisions. What mankind has done is move the pagan temples from the
high places of the countryside to the hidden places of the human heart.
If we exalt money, status, or sex above the Word of God, we are living in
idolatry. Every time we inwardly submit to the strongholds of fear,
bitterness, and pride, we are bowing to the rulers of darkness. Each of
these idols must be smashed, splintered, and obliterated from the
landscape of our hearts.
"I Am a Jealous God"
"You shall not worship any other god, for the Lord, whose name is Jealous,
is a jealous God!" (Ex. 34:14) The Lord did not say He was, at times,
jealous; He said His Name, which reveals His nature, is Jealous. Right
next to His Name "I AM" is His Name "JEALOUS." His love is not some
ethereal principle of "higher cosmic consciousness." His love is focused
upon us, actually jealous for us as individuals. He "calls his own sheep
by name" (John 10:3). Jesus knows your name. He loves you personally. The
fact that Christ is jealous for us as individuals, caring and providing
for each aspect of our lives, and that He suffered humiliation and death
on the cross to pay for our sins, demonstrates how great a love it is with
which He loves us. He gave all. He deserves all.
His jealousy for us is perfect. It is not the same as human jealousy:
petty, possessive, and insecure. He is not sitting in heaven wringing His
hands, wondering what we really think of Him. His jealousy is based upon
His pure love for us and His desire to bless us and fulfill our lives in
Him. He understands us, yet knowing our weaknesses, He still "jealously
desires the Spirit which He has made to dwell in us" (James 4:5). His
promise to us is faithful: "I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee"
(Heb. 13:5 kjv). He refuses to stop loving us. You may think of yourself
as a sinner, as unlovable as though no one wants you, but Jesus desires
you.
Early in my ministry, upon occasion I gave up on certain individuals,
people who seemed to me hopelessly unreceptive to God. As the years
passed, I would later discover these same individuals were now walking
with God. Jesus is faithful. He loves you with a love that is jealous for
you as a person.
God knows, however, that in order for you to experience His love, the
idols of self and sin must be destroyed. And to prove our intentions and
love for Him, He tells us to smash these idols. Would you be holy? Then
remove the idols of self and sin from within you. For holiness exists in a
soul purified by love; it exudes like incense from a heart without idols.
Francis Frangipane
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