Showing posts with label Graven image. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Graven image. Show all posts

Friday, May 29, 2020

YOU SHALL NOT MAKE FOR YOURSELF ANY GRAVEN IMAGE - Identify your gods - confess your sin of idolatry to God - break the cycle of idolatry in your life. Then, renew your vows before God - tell Him that He alone is worthy - make Him the Lord of your life. When the Lord Jesus Christ is the focus of all praise and worship, everything and everyone else takes their rightful place - Idolatry is the worship of anything or anyone other than God. Think about this as we try to understand the enormous significance of God’s decree to Moses from the top of Mount Sinai. God created us so that we might worship Him. This commandment is both an encouragement and a warning to us: “You shall not make for yourself an image in the form of anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the waters below. You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me.” When we worship, we place our complete confidence and trust in God’s ability to do for us what neither we, nor anyone else, nor anything else, can do for us. This is what God expects and demands of all who believe in His name. The sweet aroma of worship between God and man was clearly seen in the beginning. God wants to have intimacy with us. He wants us to look to Him. He wants us to lean on Him.

Understanding Israel's 10 Commandments - Biblical Archaeology Society
..............................................................................................................................................
praying to idols – Truth in Grace'You Shall Not Make For Yourself Any Graven Image'
.
The Ten Commandments: a guide to life? – The Gisborne HeraldIdentify your gods – pray and ask the Lord to help you. Confess your sin of idolatry to Him - break the cycle of idolatry in your life. Then, renew your vows before God - tell Him that He alone is worthy - make Him the Lord of your life. When the Lord Jesus Christ is the focus of all praise and worship, everything and everyone else takes their rightful place  
The Ten Commandments: Part One of Three
BY DON WILTON  



  
What Does the Bible REALLY Say About Statues? | Parousia MediaIdolatry is the worship of anything or anyone other than God. Think about this as we try to understand the enormous significance of God’s decree to Moses from the top of Mount Sinai.
To begin with, we must understand that God created us so that we might worship Him.
This commandment is both an encouragement and a warning to us: “You shall not make for yourself an image in the form of anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the waters below. You shall not bow down to them or worship them; for I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, punishing the children for the sin of the parents to the third and fourth generation of those who hate me” (Exodus 20:4-5).
When we worship, we place our complete confidence and trust in God’s ability to do for us what neither we, nor anyone else, nor anything else, can do for us.
This is what God expects and demands of all who believe in His name.
The sweet aroma of worship between God and man was clearly seen in the beginning.
The fellowship God had with Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden provides a precious picture of God’s intended purpose for those He loves.
He wants to have intimacy with us. He wants us to look to Him. He wants us to lean on Him.
He wants us to walk with Him. He wants us to be one with Him. He wants us to have peace with Him.
But when Adam and Eve sinned against God, this beautiful and harmonious relationship between the sovereign God and His created person was shattered.
Man had not only succumbed to the deceit of Satan, he had transferred his confidence away from God, thus violating God’s supreme demand.
It immediately became impossible for sinful man to have any semblance of fellowship with a righteous and holy God.
Consequently, man was thrown out. God would not share His holy space with another.
This is why the Lord Jesus Christ came to this Earth to take on Himself the sin of man. By virtue of His death and resurrection, Jesus conquered this rupture in the relationship between God and man.
When we confess our sin, repent before God and put our faith and trust in Him, we can, once again, have peace with God.
The Israelites did not get it. After more than 400 years of slavery, God delivered them.
He parted the sea and provided every means for them to survive — even in the wilderness.
And yet, when their leader went up Mount Sinai to hear from the Lord, they began to worship another god.
Our world is not very different. How blessed we are. Despite so many who have immense needs and who suffer greatly, we are still a blessed people.
As a hymn writer has reminded us; “Count your blessings, name them one by one. And it will surprise you what the Lord has done!”
Despite our blessings, we have become an increasingly idolatrous people.
God cannot be pleased. We worship so many of our blessings instead of simply thanking God for them and enjoying them.
So Catholics Worship Statues? | Catholic AnswersWe worship sport, celebrities, clothes, money, church buildings, politics, positions, abilities and capabilities.
Idolatry is the worship of anything or anyone other than God.
So, what should we do? This second commandment is no joke. After all, it is here that God invokes our children.
Why would the Lord involve our children and grandchildren? Here is what I suggest we do in order to grasp fully God’s intended understanding of this commandment.
Five things will help position us to hear from the Lord.
First, pray. Talk to the Lord. Have a conversation with Him.
Second, affirm His greatness. God wants us to praise His name. Jesus taught us to do this upfront when He said: “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be your name” (Matthew 6:9).
Third, release any and all personal opinions and pet peeves about what you have and what you may think about this subject.
Tell the Lord Jesus you are letting go of anything and anyone other than God.
Fourth, listen! We are surrounded and constantly accompanied by a cacophony of sound and distraction so that it is increasingly difficult to listen to God.
Whatever it is, turn it off. Lay it down. Stop and listen, because the Lord will speak to you from the mountain.
Remember, the Ten Commandments are God’s invitation to come up to where He is, rather than to go down to where man is.
Finally, determine to obey. Make the decision to submit to all the Lord says, and you will be blessed indeed.
Having positioned ourselves before God, we now can consider the meaning of what it was God was saying about idols and images.
First, God was cementing an absolute truth. He is the only one we can trust in all things.
Jesus Christ affirmed this even at the entry point of salvation when He said: “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6).
Back in the very beginning, God, who is both the beginning and the end, makes this truth both absolute and irrevocable.
He, alone, is worthy of worship because He alone is the only one qualified to “meet all your needs according to the riches of his glory in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:19).
Second, He was settling an absolute issue. One of the foremost issues in our world today concerns which god is God.
“I am the Lord your God” (Exodus 20:2) summarily eliminates anything or anyone else — whether in Heaven or on Earth or under the Earth.
Third, God was charting an absolute course. He was showing us the way to forgiveness, reconciliation, peace and eternal life. No other god could offer what only He can offer.
Fourth, He was issuing an absolute warning. Whether we like it or not, God was warning all of us about the generational consequences of worshiping idols.
It is very clear in Deuteronomy that “each will die for their own sin” (Deuteronomy 24:16), but children reared in an idolatrous environment will become infected by that environment.
They will become practitioners of that environment. They will become victims of that environment.
Finally, God was giving an absolute invitation. From Genesis to Revelation we hear Him say, “Come to Me! Worship only Me. Trust in Me.”
Here is what I suggest you do. Identify your gods. Pray and ask the Lord to help you.
Confess your sin of idolatry to Him. Break the cycle of idolatry in your life.
Then, renew your vows before God. Tell Him that He alone is worthy. Make Him the Lord of your life.
Here is the bottom line: When the Lord Jesus Christ is the focus of all praise and worship, everything and everyone else takes their rightful place. 

Don Wilton is senior pastor of the First Baptist Church of Spartanburg, S.C., and president of “The Encouraging Word” broadcast ministry. He is a frequent speaker at The Cove, where he is scheduled to lead a Seminar this November. For more information about the Seminar, visit TheCove.org or call 1-800-950-2092 or 828-298-2092 from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. ET, Monday through Friday.
What are the ten commandments given in the Bible? - Quora
Downes | Hillsong Church Watch
Idolatry Is Rampant In The Philippines | There Is No Other NameAre the Ten Commandments really the basis for our laws?Do Catholics Worship “Graven Images”? | Defenders of the Catholic ...

Saturday, June 2, 2018

.GRAVEN IMAGE - Believers are not to worship anything that is earthly as a representation of God. All attempts to make a physical representation of Yahweh’s eternal Being were forbidden and would result in capital punishment. The New Testament extends idolatry to anything that is worshiped instead of God. “You shall not make for yourself a carved image—any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; you shall not bow down to them nor serve them.” The concept of a graven or carved image in the second of the Ten Commandments is sometimes misunderstood. The main thrust of this commandment is that believers are not to worship anything that is earthly as a representation of God. The emphasis was on worshiping the idol, the image of an earthly thing, or the earthly thing itself in place of God. Idolatry is nearly always a major problem and downfall of God’s people. The first four commandments involve the direction of how we should relate to God; the remaining six describe our relationship with each other. Although the Lord Jesus Christ is most certainly God in the triune Godhead and co-equal in every way to the Father and the Holy Spirit, in the incarnation Jesus became man so that the work of salvation could be completed. While He was on Earth, Jesus was most certainly physical—He was true man—and He clearly demanded worship of Himself and obedience to His teachings.


.
 Graven Image
What Is a Graven Image?

 By Henry M. Morris III, D.Min. 




“You shall not make for yourself a carved image—any likeness of anything that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth; you shall not bow down to them nor serve them.” (Exodus 20;4-5)



The concept of a graven or carved image1 in the second of the Ten Commandments is sometimes misunderstood.
What exactly does God mean by this term?
1. The main thrust of this commandment is that believers are not to worship anything that is earthly as a representation of God.
The emphasis was on worshiping the idol, the image of an earthly thing, or the earthly thing itself in place of God.
Idolatry is nearly always a major problem and downfall of God’s people—both then and now.
2. The first four commandments involve the direction of how we should relate to God; the remaining six describe our relationship with each other.
3. Although the Lord Jesus Christ is most certainly God in the triune Godhead and co-equal in every way to the Father and the Holy Spirit, in the incarnation Jesus became man so that the work of salvation could be completed.
While He was on Earth, Jesus was most certainly physical—He was true man—and He clearly demanded worship of Himself and obedience to His teachings.2
4. The first four commandments focus on Yahweh:  “Now to the  King eternal, immortal, invisible, to God who alone is wise, be honor and glory forever and ever. Amen” (1 Timothy 1:17).
And these commandments specifically insist that there is nothing on Earth, or under Earth, or above Earth that could be like Yahweh, “who alone has immortality, dwelling in unapproachable light, whom no man has seen or can see, to whom be honor and everlasting power. Amen” (1 Timothy 6:16).
All attempts to make a physical representation of Yahweh’s eternal Being were forbidden and would result in capital punishment.
5. The New Testament extends and applies idolatry to anything that is worshiped instead of God.3 
The key is the worship of a thing or practice that takes the place of God.
Attempting to portray the work of the Lord Jesus on Earth, in story form, is not worship or idolatry. That portrayal is merely an effort to tell the story of what Christ did while on Earth so that the gospel can be made clear and efficacious.
Very few Christian groups use idols as a means to worship.
.
The Institute for Creation Research is known for holding to the literal words of Scripture in a day of “enlightened” science. We would never knowingly violate the words of Holy Scripture in any way. We are most careful in everything we produce.
.
No picture or statue of the Lord Jesus as He was on Earth is idolatry—unless that image is used as something to worship.
.
Films portraying the life of Christ have helped win hundreds of thousands to the Kingdom over the years. If the actor portraying Jesus is an idol, then the Lord God would never bless and harvest through that medium.
.
Such representations of the Lord Jesus on Earth are not graven images or idols—He was here and could be physically seen and touched (1 John1:1).
.
Even His resurrected body is still human in form.
It is the “God [who] is Spirit” who cannot be seen or represented in any physical form that is the focus of the second commandment (John 4:24). 
References
1. “Graven image” is used in the King James and Revised Standard translations and “carved image” in the New King James and English Standard translations.
2. In Matthew 4:18-22, Christ called the four fishermen Peter, Andrew, James, and John as His disciples. They physically left their nets that very day and followed Christ’s person during His entire ministry.
3. “Therefore put to death your members which are on the earth: fornication, uncleanness, passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry” (Colossians 3:5).
Dr. Morris is Chief Executive Officer of the Institute for Creation Research.
http://www.icr.org/article/9858




 






.