Friday, June 19, 2009

A Word from Piper About Idolatry

So my Godly husband, who is my spiritual leader, forwarded me this e-mail the other day. There are 12 things John Piper mentions in this article about idolatry in our lives. Too many to post here so I thought I'd just post the ones that hit me the hardest. You can read the full article by clicking below. Enjoy!

Discerning Idolatry in Desire
12 Ways to Recognize the Rise of Covetousness

June 17, 2009 By John Piper
Read this article on our website.

Most of us realize that enjoying anything other than God, from the best gift to the basest pleasure, can become idolatry. Paul says in Colossians 3:5, “Covetousness is idolatry.”
“Covetousness” means desiring something other than God in the wrong way. But what does that mean—“in the wrong way”?


The reason this matters is both vertical and horizontal. Idolatry will destroy our relationship with God. And it will destroy our relationships with people.

All human relational problems—from marriage and family to friendship to neighbors to classmates to colleagues—all of them are rooted in various forms of idolatry, that is, wanting things other than God in wrong ways.

So here is my effort to think biblically about what those wrong ways are. What makes an enjoyment idolatrous? What turns a desire into covetousness, which is idolatry?

1. Enjoyment is becoming idolatrous when it is forbidden by God. For example, adultery and fornication and stealing and lying are forbidden by God. Some people at some times feel that these are pleasurable, or else we would not do them. No one sins out of duty. But such pleasure is a sign of idolatry.

2. Enjoyment is becoming idolatrous when it is disproportionate to the worth of what is desired. Great desire for non-great things is a sign that we are beginning to make those things idols.

3. Enjoyment is becoming idolatrous when it is not permeated with gratitude. When our enjoyment of something tends to make us not think of God, it is moving toward idolatry. But if the enjoyment gives rise to the feeling of gratefulness to God, we are being protected from idolatry. The grateful feeling that we don’t deserve this gift or this enjoyment, but have it freely from God’s grace, is evidence that idolatry is being checked.

4. Enjoyment is becoming idolatrous when it draws us away from our duties. When we find ourselves spending time pursuing an enjoyment, knowing that other things, or people, should be getting our attention, we are moving into idolatry.

5. Enjoyment is becoming idolatrous when it is not working a deeper capacity for holy delight. We are sinners still. It is idolatrous to be content with sin. So we desire transformation. Some enjoyments shrink our capacities of holy joy. Others enlarge them. Some go either way, depending on how we think about them. When we don’t care if an enjoyment is making us more holy, we are moving into idolatry.

6. Enjoyment is becoming idolatrous when its loss ruins our trust in the goodness of God. There can be sorrow at loss without being idolatrous. But when the sorrow threatens our confidence in God, it signals that the thing lost was becoming an idol.

For myself and for you, I pray the admonition of 1 John 5:21, “Little children, keep yourselves from idols.”

1 comment:

David and Katie Kizziah said...

Lydia ~
Thank you SO MUCH for this post. It was very timely for me.

We so enjoyed your husband's company and teaching this week at the beach. He did a wonderful job (what I was able to hear - couldn't be at all of the sessions.) So sorry about the "we aren't going" and "now we are going" to the beach ... last minute David needed more female adults. i do wish your whole crew could have been there though. we will hopefully have some good time together as families before too long.

Lots to talk to you about regarding childbirth!

Love you and so glad to see your family is doing so well. Thanks again for the encouraging and challenging post.

Love,
Katie