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Tag Archives: idolatry
Biblical Theology: The O.T. Confession of Faith (Exodus 32-34, Class 8)
After this class, I had to apologize to my co-teacher Kevin, and now I need to apologize to the class as a whole, both in person and online. In preparing for this class, we exchanged emails and Kevin sent a … Continue reading
Bury Your Idols
Idolatry is the root cause of all of the symptoms of sin. The envy, the deceit, the lust, the anger, the gossip—they all have their source in “the one great sin that all others come from”—idolatry (Idleman). That is why the very first of the Ten Commandments is “you shall not have any other gods before me.” As Martin Luther says, “We never break the other commandments without breaking the first one.” Continue reading
Posted in Bible, Family, Sermons, Theology
Tagged Asherah, Genesis 6, idolatry, Micah 7, Molek, Romans 1:21-31, what is an idol?
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America’s Other Religion (Hint: It Is Not Islam)
According to Pew Research center, 70 percent of Americans identify as Christian. This includes evangelical protestants, who make up the largest bloc in American Christendom, along with Catholics, mainline protestants, Mormons, and Jehovah’s Witnesses.
The next largest religious bloc in Pew’s study is Judaism, which comprises a little less than 2 percent of the population. Then Islam, which makes up less than 1 percent. Some have argued that the second largest bloc, dwarfing both Judaism and Islam, are those who identify as “nothing in particular.” They come in at about 16 percent of the total population.
It is, however, debatable that the “nothing in particular” folks form a religious bloc. It’s like giving an empty space on my bookshelf a catalog number. However, there is another religious group that is much larger and more influential than all those listed above, with the possible exception of Christianity.
Unlike the “nothing in particular” group, this bloc clearly meets the criteria to be considered a religious group, though it is entirely overlooked by Pew and by most sociologists. This group has no official structure or hierarchy, but it invokes a god, possesses a historical narrative (or mythology, as some deem it), and reverences its saints.
This religion has received various labels over the years, but the one that has been around longest, given to it by Rousseau before the American Revolution, is “Civil Religion.” According to the sociologist Robert Bellah, Rousseau outlined the simple dogma of Civil Religion as: “the existence of God, the life to come, the reward of virtue and the punishment of vice, and the exclusion of religious intolerance.”
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Too Sophisticated for Idolatry? Think Again
Moderns think of idolatry as something that died a natural death in the early centuries of the common era. Zeus fell on hard times. His children, no longer fed by the worship of the humans, grew emaciated and wasted away to nothing.
Hardly. They merely changed their names. Athena became Education. Ares became Technology. Hermes became Media. Plutus became Economy. Nike – okay, Nike stayed Nike. Humans merely shifted their hopes for success and security from the old gods to the new or, more precisely, to the same gods in different guise. Continue reading
Posted in Spiritual life, Theology, Worldview and Culture
Tagged Economy, education, idolatry, Ten Commandments
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The Danger of Idolizing Technology
Every era has its gods – the powerful entities that people routinely turn to for protection, provision, and personal fulfillment. In our era that god is technology. Technology has achieved ascendancy in this generation, at least in the West, but … Continue reading
Posted in Spiritual life, Worldview and Culture
Tagged idolatry, Technology and faith
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Hope for those who lack the “religion gene”
The look on his face was classic. It registered surprise and a touch of indignation, which was a little humorous. We were sitting across the table from each other and he had just told me that he “wasn’t religious.” Since … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged gene, hypocrisy, idolatry, Oswald Chambers, religion, righteous indignation
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