{"id":5569,"date":"2010-03-28T18:26:00","date_gmt":"2010-03-28T23:26:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/study\/doctrine-worship-chapter-11-by-mark-driscoll"},"modified":"2015-08-09T18:23:57","modified_gmt":"2015-08-09T22:23:57","slug":"doctrine-worship-chapter-11-by-mark-driscoll","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/2010\/03\/28\/doctrine-worship-chapter-11-by-mark-driscoll\/","title":{"rendered":"Doctrine Worship Chapter 11 by Mark Driscoll"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>CHAPTER 11<\/p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>True worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him.      <br \/>&#8212; JOHN 4 : 2 3<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n<p>In ancient cultures social life revolved around sanctuaries, temples, and    <br \/>stadiums. There, various gods and goddesses were worshiped as people    <br \/>gave their time, talent, and treasure as sacrifices to the adoration of their    <br \/>deity. Even the buildings themselves were built as acts of worship.    <br \/>Today, little has changed. The temple of Ra, the sun god, has now    <br \/>been replaced with warm weather resorts and tanning salons where worshipers    <br \/>pay homage to their bronzing god. The temples of Ptah, the god of    <br \/>craftsmen, are today hardware stores and Craftsman tools. The Temples at    <br \/>Nemea, Olympia, Delphi, and Isthmia included stadiums, which have now    <br \/>been replaced with soccer fields, baseball parks, football stadiums, and    <br \/>basketball arenas where pagan fans dress up- like they always have- as    <br \/>birds and animals to cheer for their gods as they score points. The healing    <br \/>cults of Asklepios, with sanctuaries at Epidaurous and Corinth, have now    <br \/>been replaced with holistic health spas.    <br \/>The Oracular gods often had sanctuaries near fresh water sources that    <br \/>we refer to as beaches, campsites, golf courses, and fishing holes. At the    <br \/>temple of Apollo, prophetic pronouncements about the future were given;    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 337 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>338    <br \/>these have now been superseded by speculating newscasts and blogs as a    <br \/>sort of digital divination by which the future can be predicted. The temple    <br \/>of Thoth was where the god of writing and knowledge was worshiped, and    <br \/>he is now housed in local libraries and universities. Monthu, the god of    <br \/>battle, was worshiped at Armant but is now more commonly found at war    <br \/>and veteran monuments along with appearances in violent video games    <br \/>and cage fights.    <br \/>Min, an early fertility deity, was worshiped at Coptos but today is present    <br \/>at medical fertility clinics. Hathor, the goddess of motherhood, was    <br \/>worshiped at Byblos in ancient days but has relocated to birthing centers.    <br \/>The temple of Neith in the Delta was connected to medical education, which    <br \/>is presently found in medical schools and research centers. The temple of    <br \/>Aphrodite in Corinth where sex was part of worship has now gone global    <br \/>with strip clubs and porn. The small shrines that filled ancient homes and    <br \/>required homage and financial sacrifice have long since been upgraded with    <br \/>home entertainment systems and high-speed Internet connections. Finally,    <br \/>Paul once said that our god is our stomach, and that god is worshiped by the    <br \/>gluttonous and obese at all-you-can-eat buffets.    <br \/>Indeed, when our culture is considered through the lens of worship and    <br \/>idolatry, primitive ancient paganism seems far less primitive or ancient.    <br \/>This is because everyone everywhere is continually worshiping, and idolatry    <br \/>is, sadly, seen more easily when we examine other cultures rather than    <br \/>our own. This is because we often have too narrow an understanding of    <br \/>worship and do not see that idolatry empowers our sin.    <br \/>WHAT IS WORSHIP?    <br \/>Worship, rightly understood, begins with the doctrine of the Trinity and    <br \/>the doctrine of image. In his magnificent book on worship, Harold Best    <br \/>describes the Trinity as the uniquely Continuous Outpourer who continually    <br \/>pours himself out between the persons of the Godhead in unceasing    <br \/>communication, love, friendship, and joy.1 It follows that humans created    <br \/>1See Harold M. Best, Unceasing Worship: Biblical Perspectives on Worship and the Arts (Downers    <br \/>Grove, IL: InterVarsity, 2003), 21.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 338 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 339    <br \/>in God&#8217;s image would also be unceasing worshipers as continuous outpourers.    <br \/>Best says:    <br \/>We were created continuously outpouring. Note that I did not say we    <br \/>were created to be continuous outpourers. Nor can I dare imply that we    <br \/>were created to worship. This would suggest that God is an incomplete    <br \/>person whose need for something outside himself (worship) completes    <br \/>his sense of himself. It might not even be safe to say that we were created    <br \/>for worship, because the inference can be drawn that worship is    <br \/>a capacity that can be separated out and eventually relegated to one of    <br \/>several categories of being. I believe it is strategically important, therefore,    <br \/>to say that we were created continuously outpouring- we were    <br \/>created in that condition, at that instant, imago Dei.2    <br \/>Indeed, worship is not merely an aspect of our being but the essence    <br \/>of our being as God&#8217;s image bearers. As a result, all of life is ceaseless    <br \/>worship. Practically, this means that while worship does include corporate    <br \/>church meetings, singing songs, and liturgical forms, it is not limited by    <br \/>these things, defined solely as these things, or expressed only in these    <br \/>things, because worship never stops. Rather, we are continually giving    <br \/>ourselves away or pouring ourselves out for a person, cause, experience,    <br \/>achievement, or status. Sadly, as the doctrine of the fall reveals, much of    <br \/>how we pour ourselves out and what we pour ourselves into in worship is    <br \/>someone or something other than the Trinitarian Creator God.    <br \/>As the doctrine of image reveals, human beings are unceasing worshipers.    <br \/>We are not created to worship, but rather we are created worshiping.    <br \/>Everyone worships all the time. Atheists, agnostics, Christians, and    <br \/>everyone in between are unceasing worshipers. Everyone, everywhere, all    <br \/>the time, is always worshiping. While the object and method of worship    <br \/>vary, the act of worship does not.3    <br \/>Best synthesizes his thoughts on worship, saying, &#8220;I have worked out a    <br \/>definition for worship that I believe covers every possible human condition.    <br \/>2Ibid., 23, emphasis in original.    <br \/>3See ibid., 17-18.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 339 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>340    <br \/>It is this: Worship is the continuous outpouring of all that I am, all that I    <br \/>do and all that I can ever become in light of a chosen or choosing god.&#8221; 4    <br \/>One of the more insightful sections of Scripture on worship is Hebrews    <br \/>13:15-17, which says:    <br \/>Through him then let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to    <br \/>God, that is, the fruit of lips that acknowledge his name. Do not neglect    <br \/>to do good and to share what you have, for such sacrifices are pleasing    <br \/>to God. Obey your leaders and submit to them, for they are keeping    <br \/>watch over your souls, as those who will have to give an account. Let    <br \/>them do this with joy and not with groaning, for that would be of no    <br \/>advantage to you.    <br \/>In this section we see that worship includes (1) praise; (2) proclamation,    <br \/>i.e., lips that confess his name; (3) service, which means doing good    <br \/>as a demonstration of the gospel to the world; (4) participation, which    <br \/>means sharing with others as a demonstration of grace to the world);    <br \/>(5) sacrifice, the giving of time talent and treasure; and (6) submission,    <br \/>i.e., respecting godly authority placed over us so that we grow in wisdom    <br \/>and holiness.    <br \/>In light of this comprehensive overview of worship acts, we can examine    <br \/>our lives to see if our worship is honoring or dishonoring to God:    <br \/>1) Who or what do you praise most passionately and frequently?    <br \/>2) How commonly and clearly do you confess Jesus Christ in the words    <br \/>you speak, type, and sing?    <br \/>3) Are you one who serves others with gladness in response to God&#8217;s    <br \/>so faithfully serving you? Or are you someone who prefers to be    <br \/>served rather than to serve? Do you serve when it is inconvenient or    <br \/>unnoticed, or when you are unmotivated?    <br \/>4) Are you an active participant in the life of your church and community?    <br \/>Do you give your time, talent, and treasure to share God&#8217;s love    <br \/>in tangible ways with others?    <br \/>4Ibid., 18, italics in original.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 340 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 341    <br \/>5) For whom or what do you sacrifice your time, health, emotion,    <br \/>money, and energy for? What do these acts of worship reveal about    <br \/>what you have chosen to deify in your life?    <br \/>6) Are you submissive to godly authority or do you tend to ignore or    <br \/>rebel against godly authority (e.g., parent, teacher, pastor, or boss)?    <br \/>WHAT IS IDOLATRY?    <br \/>The opposite of worship is idolatry. Every human being- at every moment    <br \/>of their life, today and into eternity- is unceasingly doing either the former    <br \/>or the latter. On this point N. T. Wright says:    <br \/>Christians are not defined by skin colour, by gender, by geographical    <br \/>location, or even, shockingly, by their good behaviour. Nor are they    <br \/>defined by the particular type of religious feelings they may have.    <br \/>They are defined in terms of the god they worship. That&#8217;s why we say    <br \/>the Creed at the heart of our regular liturgies: we are defined as the    <br \/>people who believe in this god. All other definitions of the church are    <br \/>open to distortion. We need theology, we need doctrine, because if we    <br \/>don&#8217;t have it something else will come in to take its place. And any    <br \/>other defining marks of the church will move us in the direction of    <br \/>idolatry.5    <br \/>Worship is a biblically faithful understanding of God combined with a    <br \/>biblically faithful response to him. Conversely, idolatry is an unbiblical,    <br \/>unfaithful understanding of God, and\/or an unbiblical, unfaithful response    <br \/>to him. David Powlison goes so far as to say, &#8220;Idolatry is by far the most    <br \/>frequently discussed problem in the Scriptures.&#8221; 6    <br \/>Underlying idolatry is the lie. In John 8:44 Jesus describes Satan as    <br \/>&#8220;the father of lies.&#8221;  The lie in its various forms says that you are god, you    <br \/>can become a god, you are a part of god, you are worthy of worship as a    <br \/>god, you can be the source of your life&#8217;s identity and meaning, you can    <br \/>5N. T. Wright, For All God&#8217;s Worth: True Worship and the Calling of the Church (Grand Rapids, MI:    <br \/>Eerdmans, 1997), 28.    <br \/>6David Powlison, &#8220;Idols of the Heart and -Vanity Fair,'&#8221;  The Journal of Biblical Counseling vol. 13    <br \/>(Winter 1995): 35. Also available here: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.greentreewebster.org\/Articles\/Idols%20of%20the%20\">http:\/\/www.greentreewebster.org\/Articles\/Idols%20of%20the%20<\/a>    <br \/>Heart%20(Powlison).pdf.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 341 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>342    <br \/>transform yourself, and you can transform the world and its sin problem as    <br \/>a sort of hero\/savior. The answer, therefore, is not to look outward to God    <br \/>for identity, meaning, insight, and salvation. Rather, the answer is to look    <br \/>inward to self for identity, meaning, insight, and personal liberation. The    <br \/>answer, the lie says, is to be found in self rather than in a creator God who is    <br \/>separate from me and rules over me. Helpful in this inward process are such    <br \/>things as drugs, trances, yoga, meditation, self-esteem, self-actualization,    <br \/>self-improvement, and self-help, all of which allow a person to go inward    <br \/>for peace, harmony, and enlightenment, it is said, by enabling him or her    <br \/>to experience oneness with the divine consciousness.    <br \/>This explains why ancient non-Christian spiritual practices are becoming    <br \/>increasingly popular. For example, Wicca and other ancient pagan    <br \/>religious practices, even demonic spirituality, are being promulgated and    <br \/>networked online and are incorporated into the teachings of spiritual gurus    <br \/>such as Deepak Chopra and Oprah and the pagan spiritual leaders she    <br \/>endorses, such as Marianne Williamson and Eckhart Tolle.7 Sadly, some    <br \/>of this is even finding its way into &#8220;Christian&#8221;  worship practices under the    <br \/>guise of ancient-future worship. Just because a practice is ancient does not    <br \/>mean it is Christian. The Bible warns us against adopting pagan worship    <br \/>practices8 and commands us to test the spirits.9 So we examine the    <br \/>source and symbolism of proposed practices. One pagan example is circular    <br \/>prayer labyrinths, where the symbolism is often one walking inward on oneself    <br \/>rather than outward in repentance toward God. This worship is antithetical    <br \/>to the gospel, which commands us to turn to God for our hope and help.    <br \/>Echoing Jesus, Paul examines worship and idolatry brilliantly in    <br \/>Romans 1:18-32 by contrasting the lie of idolatry with the truth of worship.    <br \/>His thesis statement on all this is Romans 1:25, which speaks of idolaters    <br \/>who &#8220;exchanged the truth about God for a lie and worshiped and served the    <br \/>creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever! Amen.&#8221; 10    <br \/>7For one example, my debate with Deepak Chopra on ABC&#8217;s Nightline can be found at <a href=\"http:\/\/www\">http:\/\/www<\/a>.    <br \/>marshillchurch.org\/media\/in-the-news\/nightline-satan-debate.    <br \/>8Lev. 10:1-2; Deut. 12:4; 18:10; 2 Kings 16:3.    <br \/>9Deut. 13:1-11; Matt. 7:15-16; 1 Thess. 5:21; 1 John 4:1-4.    <br \/>10Peter Jones has spent a great deal of his time explaining this issue to me (Mark). Jones is one of the leading    <br \/>experts in the world on paganism, and much of what ensues in this section has been gleaned from time    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 342 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 343    <br \/>The truth is what we will call two-ism. Two-ism is the biblical doctrine    <br \/>that the Creator and creation are separate and that creation is subject    <br \/>to the Creator. Visually, you can think of this in terms of two circles with    <br \/>one being God the creator and the other containing all of his creation (see    <br \/>Chart 11.1).    <br \/>CHART 11.1    <br \/>The lie is what we will call one-ism. One-ism is the pagan and idolatrous    <br \/>doctrine that there is no distinction between Creator and creation,    <br \/>and\/or a denial that there is a Creator. The popular word for this notion    <br \/>is monism. Practically, one-ism is the eradication of boundaries and differences    <br \/>to bring opposites together as one. The materialistic form of    <br \/>one-ism is atheism. Spiritual one-ism is also often called New Age, New    <br \/>Spirituality, or Integrative Spirituality. According to spiritual one-ism, the    <br \/>universe is a living organism with a spiritual force present within everything.    <br \/>Thus, everything is interconnected by the life force or the world    <br \/>soul. This life force manifests as spiritual beings (Christians realize these    <br \/>are demons) that manipulate the course of world events. These spirits can    <br \/>be influenced to serve people by using the ancient magical arts. Humans    <br \/>possess divine power unlimited by any deity. Consciousness can be altered    <br \/>through the practice of rite and ritual. Magic is the manipulation of objects,    <br \/>substances, spirit entities, and minds, including humans and demons, by    <br \/>word (ritual, incantations, curses, spells, etc.) and objects (charms, amuwith    <br \/>him, for which I am very thankful. His thoughts on one-ism can be found at <a href=\"http:\/\/www.purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/?random\">http:\/\/www.theresurgence<\/a>.    <br \/>com\/peter_jones_2008-01-08_audio_walking_in_the_land_of_blur and <a href=\"http:\/\/www.theresurgence.com\/\">http:\/\/www.theresurgence.com\/<\/a>    <br \/>peter_jones_2008-01-08_video_ walking_in_the_land_of_blur.    <br \/>Two-ism    <br \/>Creator Creation    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 343 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>344    <br \/>lets, crystals, herbs, potions, wands, candles, etc.). Visually, you can think    <br \/>of this in terms of one circle in which everything is contained and interconnected    <br \/>as one (see Chart 11.2).    <br \/>CHART 11.2    <br \/>Often, the circle itself serves as the defining symbol of pagan idolatry.    <br \/>This includes the yantra circle used for Hindu worship, the mandala circle    <br \/>of dharma and Dharmacakra used for Buddhist and Taoist worship, the sun    <br \/>cross used by Wiccans (who also gather in a circle), and Native American    <br \/>medicine wheels, dream catchers, and drum circles. A well-known expression    <br \/>of one-ism is found in the popular song from The Lion King that    <br \/>speaks of &#8220;the circle of life.&#8221;     <br \/>As a worldview, one-ism is antithetical to Christian two-ism because    <br \/>it seeks to place everything in the one circle.    <br \/>1) There is no distinction between God the creator and creation. This    <br \/>results in pantheism and panentheism, which even some young &#8220;Christian&#8221;     <br \/>pastors are advocating.11    <br \/>2) There is no distinction between God and mankind. This results in a    <br \/>spirituality that does not look humbly out to God for salvation, but rather    <br \/>arrogantly looks in to self for enlightenment.    <br \/>3) There is no distinction between good and evil. This results in the    <br \/>claim that all we have are perspectives, opinions, and culturally embedded    <br \/>11E.g., see Doug Pagitt, &#8220;The Emerging Church and Embodied Theology,&#8221;  in Listening to the Beliefs    <br \/>of Emerging Churches, ed. Robert Webber (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 2007), 142; Doug Pagitt,    <br \/>A Christianity Worth Believing: Hope-filled, Open-armed, Alive-and-Well Faith for the Left Out, Left    <br \/>Behind, and Let Down in Us All (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2008), 194-95, 226; and Spencer Burke and    <br \/>Barry Taylor, A Heretic&#8217;s Guide to Eternity (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 2006), 195.    <br \/>One-ism    <br \/>Creation\/Creator    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 344 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 345    <br \/>&#8220;values&#8221; ; there are no timeless moral truths that apply to all peoples, times,    <br \/>and places because all that is left is situational ethics. Furthermore, there is    <br \/>no distinction between angels and demons because all spirits and spiritualities    <br \/>are considered only good.    <br \/>4) There is no distinction between mankind and animals. This results    <br \/>in radical animal rights activism, people referring to their pet as their    <br \/>&#8220;baby,&#8221;  and, in some cities, a disdain for children but a love for animals    <br \/>expressed as doggie spas, doggie day cares, and legislation to allow animals    <br \/>to eat in restaurants with their owners.    <br \/>5) There is no distinction between mankind and creation. This results    <br \/>in radical environmentalism that moves beyond stewarding creation to    <br \/>deifying creation as our &#8220;Mother Earth&#8221;  and an opposition to cultivating    <br \/>creation for human life and culture.    <br \/>6) There is no distinction between men and women; gender is reduced    <br \/>to asexual androgyny. This results in lesbianism, transgenderism, homosexuality,    <br \/>cross-dressing, and the like, which Romans 1 says is the logical    <br \/>conclusion of idolatry.    <br \/>7) There is no distinction between religions. The result is a vague    <br \/>pagan spirituality that believes the answers to all the world&#8217;s problems are    <br \/>religious and spiritual in nature and can only be overcome by all religions    <br \/>worshiping together as one. Subsequently, a Christian who makes distinctions    <br \/>(such as between God and man, Jesus and Satan, angels and demons,    <br \/>heaven and hell, man and animals, holiness and sin, the Bible and other    <br \/>texts, male and female, heterosexuality and homosexuality, truth and error,    <br \/>good and evil) is considered a fundamental threat to the utopian world of    <br \/>peace, love, and oneness.    <br \/>While idolatry is manifested externally, it originates internally. This    <br \/>is first revealed in Ezekiel 14:1-8 as God rebukes the elders of Israel who    <br \/>&#8220;have taken their idols into their hearts.&#8221;  Indeed, before people see an idol    <br \/>with their eyes, hold it with their hands, or speak of it with their lips, they    <br \/>have taken it into their heart. What this means is that they have violated the    <br \/>first two of the Ten Commandments, choosing something as a functional    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 345 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>346    <br \/>god they long for in their heart and then worshiping it by their words and    <br \/>deeds.    <br \/>Martin Luther&#8217;s insights on idolatry- that idolatry begins in the heart    <br \/>of the worshiper- are among the most perceptive the world has ever    <br \/>known. Luther says:    <br \/>Many a one thinks that he has God and everything in abundance when    <br \/>he has money and, possessions; he trusts in them and boasts of them    <br \/>with such firmness and assurance as to care for no one. Lo, such a man    <br \/>also has a god, Mammon by name, i.e., money and possessions, on    <br \/>which he sets all his heart, and which is also the most common idol    <br \/>on earth. . . . So, too, whoever trusts and boasts that he possesses great    <br \/>skill, prudence, power, favor, friendship, and honor has also a god,    <br \/>but not this true and only God. . . . Therefore I repeat that the chief    <br \/>explanation of this point is that to have a god is to have something in    <br \/>which the heart entirely trusts. . . . Thus it is with all idolatry; for it    <br \/>consists not merely in erecting an image and worshiping it, but rather    <br \/>in the heart. . . . Ask and examine your heart diligently, and you will    <br \/>find whether it cleaves to God alone or not. If you have a heart that    <br \/>can expect of Him nothing but what is good, especially in want and    <br \/>distress, and that, moreover, renounces and forsakes everything that is    <br \/>not God, then you have the only true God. If, on the contrary, it cleaves    <br \/>to anything else, of which it expects more good and help than of God,    <br \/>and does not take refuge in Him, but in adversity flees from Him, then    <br \/>you have an idol, another god.12    <br \/>For those wanting to avoid idolatry, the following insights might be    <br \/>helpful. Be careful of making a good thing, such as marriage, sex, children,    <br \/>health, success, or financial stability, an ultimate thing, or what Jesus called    <br \/>our &#8220;treasure.&#8221;  Avoid participating in any religious community where the    <br \/>clear truth-claims of Scripture are ignored while contemplative and mystical    <br \/>practices are favored simply for their spiritual experience. Be careful of    <br \/>any church or ministry wherein acts of mercy and environmental steward-    <br \/>12Martin Luther, &#8220;The Large Catechism,&#8221;  in The Book of Concord (St. Louis: Concordia, 1921), 3.5-28,    <br \/><a href=\"http:\/\/www.bookofconcord.org\/lc-3-tencommandments.php\">http:\/\/www.bookofconcord.org\/lc-3-tencommandments.php<\/a>.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 346 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 347    <br \/>ship are devoid of a theology of the cross and wind up being little more than    <br \/>the worship of created people and things. And be careful not to worship a    <br \/>good thing as a god thing for that is a bad thing.    <br \/>HOW DOES IDOLATRY HARM INDIVIDUALS AND SOCIETIES?    <br \/>We were created to worship God and make culture in which God is worshiped    <br \/>in all of life. Subsequently, when idolatry is committed, all of life    <br \/>is implicated, damaging individuals and societies. This reality negates the    <br \/>popular myth that idolatry is not damaging, or that it is merely a personal    <br \/>matter that does not implicate society at large, as if we were each isolated    <br \/>individuals not affected by or affecting others.    <br \/>First, idolatry harms the individuals who participate in it. Commenting    <br \/>on Danish philosopher Sren Kierkegaard&#8217;s 1849 book The Sickness Unto    <br \/>Death, Tim Keller says:    <br \/>Sin is the despairing refusal to find your deepest identity in your relationship    <br \/>and service to God. Sin is seeking to become oneself, to get    <br \/>an identity apart from him. . . . Most people think of sin primarily as    <br \/>&#8220;breaking divine rules,&#8221;  but Kierkegaard knows that the very first of the    <br \/>Ten Commandments is to &#8220;have no other gods before me.&#8221;  So, according    <br \/>to the Bible, the primary way to define sin is not just the doing of    <br \/>bad things, but the making of good things into ultimate things. It is    <br \/>seeking to establish a sense of self by making something else more    <br \/>central to your significance, purpose, and happiness than your relationship    <br \/>to God.13    <br \/>Whatever we base our identity and value on becomes &#8220;deified&#8221; ; this    <br \/>object of worship then determines what we hold in glory and live for. If    <br \/>that object is anything other than God, we are idolaters worshiping created    <br \/>things. For most people, their proverbial &#8220;tell&#8221;  happens when they    <br \/>introduce themselves: they first say their name and then say something to    <br \/>the effect of &#8220;I am a [blank].&#8221;  How they fill in the blank (e.g., education,    <br \/>13Tim Keller, The Reason for God: Belief in an Age of Skepticism (New York: Penguin, 2008), 162,    <br \/>emphasis in original.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 347 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>348    <br \/>vocation, number of children, neighborhood they live in) often reveals what    <br \/>they have deified and are building their life on.    <br \/>The ensuing problem is that our marriage, children, appearance,    <br \/>wealth, success, career, religious performance, political party, cause, loving    <br \/>relationship, possession, hobby, pleasure, status, and power crumble    <br \/>under the weight of being god to us. Regarding the instability of an identity    <br \/>based upon anything other than Jesus Christ&#8217;s saving work to claim us as    <br \/>his own, Keller says:    <br \/>If anything threatens your identity you will not just be anxious but paralyzed    <br \/>with fear. If you lose your identity through the failings of someone    <br \/>else you will not just be resentful, but locked into bitterness. If you    <br \/>lose it through your own failings, you will hate or despise yourself as a    <br \/>failure as long as you live. Only if your identity is built on God and his    <br \/>love, says Kierkegaard, can you have a self that can venture anything,    <br \/>face anything. . . . An identity not based on God also leads inevitably    <br \/>to deep forms of addiction. When we turn good things into ultimate    <br \/>things, we are, as it were, spiritually addicted. If we take our meaning    <br \/>in life from our family, our work, a cause, or some achievement other    <br \/>than God, they enslave us. We have to have them.14    <br \/>As God&#8217;s image bearers we will have a true, lasting, deep, satisfying,    <br \/>and sufficiently rooted identity only in God&#8217;s love. Keller says:    <br \/>Remember this- if you don&#8217;t live for Jesus you will live for something    <br \/>else. If you live for career and you don&#8217;t do well it may punish you all    <br \/>of your life, and you will feel like a failure. If you live for your children    <br \/>and they don&#8217;t turn out all right you could be absolutely in torment    <br \/>because you feel worthless as a person.    <br \/>If Jesus is your center and Lord and you fail him, he will forgive    <br \/>you. Your career can&#8217;t die for your sins. You might say, &#8220;If I were a    <br \/>Christian I&#8217;d be going around pursued by guilt all the time!&#8221;  But we    <br \/>all are being pursued by guilt because we must have an identity and    <br \/>there must be some standard to live up to by which we get that identity.    <br \/>14Ibid., 165.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 348 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 349    <br \/>Whatever you base your life on- you have to live up to that. Jesus is    <br \/>the one Lord you can live for who died for you- one who breathed his    <br \/>last for you. Does that sound oppressive?15    <br \/>This explains why those whose idol is beauty become frantic to    <br \/>maintain their appearance, even if it should compel them toward eating    <br \/>disorders, abuse of cosmetic surgery, and panic as they age. Similarly,    <br \/>this helps to explain why those who are the richest and most famous    <br \/>among us struggle with substance abuse, depression, and even suicidal    <br \/>longings.    <br \/>Second, idolatry harms the societies in which it is practiced to    <br \/>the degree it is practiced. In his book Idols for Destruction, Herbert    <br \/>Schlossberg surveys the various idols of modern life and thought.16    <br \/>According to Schlossberg, the chief errors of our time stem from attempts    <br \/>to deify various aspects of creation: history, nature, humanity, economics,    <br \/>and political power. Only affirmation and application of the Creatorcreature    <br \/>distinction can point the way out. The issues, then, are essentially    <br \/>religious and moral; we will not escape our dilemmas by some new form    <br \/>of political organization or a new economic system.    <br \/>Schlossberg is emphatic to point out that just because a culture turns    <br \/>away from God, it still turns toward something to replace God:    <br \/>Western society, in turning away from Christian faith, has turned to    <br \/>other things. This process is commonly called secularization, but that    <br \/>conveys only the negative aspect. The word connotes the turning away    <br \/>from the worship of God while ignoring the fact that something is being    <br \/>turned to in its place.17    <br \/>One of the great evils of idolatry is that if we idolize, we must also    <br \/>demonize, as Jonathan Edwards rightly taught in The Nature of True Virtue.    <br \/>Tim Keller reminds us that if we idolize our race, we must demonize other    <br \/>15Ibid., 172, emphases in original.    <br \/>16Herbert Schlossberg, Idols for Destruction: The Conflict of Christian Faith and American Culture    <br \/>(Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 1993).    <br \/>17Ibid., 6 emphases in original.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 349 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>350    <br \/>races.18 If we idolize our gender, we must demonize the other gender. If    <br \/>we idolize our nation, we must demonize other nations. If we idolize our    <br \/>political party, we must demonize other political parties. If we idolize our    <br \/>socioeconomic class, we must demonize other classes. If we idolize our    <br \/>family, we must demonize other families. If we idolize our theological system,    <br \/>we must demonize other theological systems. If we idolize our church,    <br \/>we must demonize other churches. This explains the great polarities and    <br \/>acrimonies that plague every society. If something other than God&#8217;s loving    <br \/>grace is the source of our identity and value, we must invariably defend    <br \/>our idol by treating everyone and everything who may call our idol into    <br \/>question as an enemy to be demonized so that we can feel superior to other    <br \/>people and safe with our idol.    <br \/>Some people are aware of this fact and idolize tolerance and diversity,    <br \/>as if they were more righteous because of their open-mindedness.    <br \/>However, even those who idolize tolerance and diversity must demonize    <br \/>those they deem to be intolerant of certain diversities. Simply stated, everyone    <br \/>who idolizes also demonizes and in so doing is a hypocrite contributing    <br \/>to the tearing of a social fabric of love, peace, and kindness they purport    <br \/>to be serving.    <br \/>WHAT IS REQUIRED IN CORPORATE CHURCH WORSHIP?    <br \/>We have established that God alone is to be worshiped. We will now examine    <br \/>how the church is supposed to be a countercultural kingdom community    <br \/>that worships God alone and helps people to see and smash their idols.    <br \/>God&#8217;s people gather for corporate worship (what Harold Best calls    <br \/>&#8220;mutual indwelling&#8221; ) in a way that is somewhat akin to the Trinity. Best    <br \/>describes what this corporate worship looks like:    <br \/>Mutual indwelling demands company. Continuous outpouring demands    <br \/>fellowship. The corporate assembly is where love and mutual indwelling    <br \/>congregate; it is where believers have each other within eye- and    <br \/>earshot, within kindly embrace. If there were no such things as church    <br \/>18Keller, The Reason for God, 168-69.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 350 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 351    <br \/>buildings and regularly scheduled services, Christians would, out of    <br \/>necessity, seek each other out for the sheer pleasure of finding Christ    <br \/>in each other, hearing different stories about his work in them, enjoying    <br \/>the ordinary and the exceptional, and perhaps only then gathering    <br \/>around what we call a liturgy. In such a gathering there would be little    <br \/>need at some point to say, &#8220;Now let us worship,&#8221;  because no one would    <br \/>be able to locate the dividing line between &#8220;now&#8221;  and &#8220;always.&#8221; 19    <br \/>The mutual indwelling that God&#8217;s people enjoy in corporate worship    <br \/>is essential to our growth personally, joy collectively, and witness    <br \/>culturally. God&#8217;s people gather because, in the depths of their regenerated    <br \/>nature, the Holy Spirit gives them deep desires to worship God with his    <br \/>people. We want to see God&#8217;s people, we want to hear of God&#8217;s work in    <br \/>their lives, we want to know of ways we can lovingly serve them, and we    <br \/>want to be part of something bigger than ourselves that reaches beyond    <br \/>the mundane details of life and connects us all together despite our differences    <br \/>in age, race, gender, and income to seek and celebrate evidences    <br \/>of God&#8217;s grace.    <br \/>Regarding how God is to be worshiped, God must be worshiped as he    <br \/>wishes, not as we wish. The Bible is clear that God is to be worshiped in    <br \/>ways and forms that he deems acceptable. This explains why God judges    <br \/>those who seek to worship him with either sinful forms externally20 or    <br \/>sinful hearts internally.21 This is incredibly important. Some churches    <br \/>care more about what is in people&#8217;s hearts than about what they do in their    <br \/>lives, whereas others are more concerned about doing things the &#8220;right&#8221;     <br \/>way and care little about the motivations behind those actions. When it    <br \/>comes to worship, which is all of life, the God of the Bible cares about both    <br \/>what we do and why we do it. We first see this, for example, in Genesis 4    <br \/>where Cain and Abel bring their worship offerings to God and while what    <br \/>is in their hands is acceptable, Cain&#8217;s offering is rejected because what is in    <br \/>his heart is unacceptable to God- he was jealous of his brother.22    <br \/>19Best, Unceasing Worship, 62.    <br \/>20Lev. 10:1-2; Isa. 1:11-17; Jer. 7:9-10; Ezekiel 8-9.    <br \/>21Genesis 4; Isa. 1:11-17; Jer. 7:9-10; Mic. 6:6-8.    <br \/>221 John 3:12.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 351 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>352    <br \/>A biblically informed Christian definition of worship includes both    <br \/>adoration and action. John Frame says:    <br \/>In Scripture, there are two groups of Hebrew and Greek terms that are    <br \/>translated &#8220;worship.&#8221;  The first group refers to &#8220;labor&#8221;  or &#8220;service.&#8221;  . . .    <br \/>The second group of terms means literally &#8220;bowing&#8221;  or &#8220;bending the    <br \/>knee,&#8221;  hence &#8220;paying homage, honoring the worth of someone else.&#8221;     <br \/>The English term worship, from worth, has the same connotation.    <br \/>From the first group of terms we may conclude that worship is active.    <br \/>It is something we do, a verb. . . . From the second group of terms, we    <br \/>learn that worship is honoring someone superior to ourselves.23    <br \/>Our worship also includes what we do as Christians when we scatter    <br \/>for action24 and gather for adoration.25 D. A. Carson has said, &#8220;We    <br \/>cannot imagine that the church gathers for worship on Sunday morning if    <br \/>by this we mean that we then engage in something that we have not been    <br \/>engaging in the rest of the week. New-covenant worship terminology prescribes    <br \/>constant -worship.'&#8221; 26    <br \/>The New Testament is clear that God&#8217;s people are to regularly gather    <br \/>for corporate worship. This is apparent by the frequent use of the Greek    <br \/>word ekklesia, which simply means &#8220;gathered assembly of God&#8217;s people.&#8221;     <br \/>Likewise, Hebrews 10:24-25 commands, &#8220;Let us consider how to stir up    <br \/>one another to love and good works, not neglecting to meet together, as is    <br \/>the habit of some, but encouraging one another.&#8221;  When God&#8217;s people gather    <br \/>for corporate worship, church leaders must ensure that the methods they    <br \/>employ align with six biblical principles for worship.    <br \/>1) Corporate worship is to be God-centered.27 Simply, worship is    <br \/>not an occasion for us to hear sermons about us, sing songs about us, or    <br \/>focus on how to make ourselves feel happily inspired. Since we are prone    <br \/>23John M. Frame, Worship in Spirit and Truth: A Refreshing Study of the Principles and Practice of    <br \/>Biblical Worship (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&amp;R, 1996), 1-2, emphases in original.    <br \/>241 Cor. 10:31.    <br \/>25Heb. 10:24-25.    <br \/>26D. A. Carson, &#8220;Worship under the Word,&#8221;  in Worship by the Book, ed. D. A. Carson (Grand Rapids,    <br \/>MI: Zondervan, 2002), 24, emphasis in original.    <br \/>27Matt. 4:8-10.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 352 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 353    <br \/>to worship ourselves as idols, corporate worship is an important occasion    <br \/>to redirect our worship back to God.    <br \/>2) Corporate worship is to be intelligible.28 This means that not only    <br \/>is the service conducted in the known language of the hearers but also that    <br \/>technical doctrinal terms are explained so that everyone understands what    <br \/>is being said and sung. This also means that the pastor should not seek to    <br \/>impress the congregation with his vast knowledge of Greek and Hebrew    <br \/>terms but, as John Calvin and other Reformers argued, love his people by    <br \/>speaking to them plainly; the pastor should want the people to be impressed    <br \/>with Jesus Christ rather than with himself.    <br \/>3) Corporate worship is to be seeker sensible.29 Because there are    <br \/>non-Christians present in corporate worship meetings, people leading    <br \/>those meetings need to be hospitable to non-Christians. This includes the    <br \/>preacher presenting the gospel to the non-Christians, someone explaining    <br \/>why the church meetings have certain elements such as Communion or    <br \/>singing, and explaining Christian terms in a way that allows the non-Christian    <br \/>to understand what the Bible says. This does not mean that the entire    <br \/>service is to be seeker sensitive and designed mainly as an evangelistic    <br \/>rally but that a sincere effort is made to help non-Christians understand and    <br \/>experience the gospel.    <br \/>4) Corporate worship is to be unselfish.30 If people want to express    <br \/>their personal response to God in a way that draws undue attention to them    <br \/>and distracts others from responding to God, then they should do that kind    <br \/>of thing at home in private, because the meeting is for corporate response    <br \/>to God, not just individual response. In worship, God gives to his people    <br \/>truth, love, hope, and the like, and those who distract others from receiving    <br \/>what God has for them and from focusing on God need to be rebuked so    <br \/>that they may mature and learn to consider others more highly than themselves,    <br \/>as Scripture says.    <br \/>5) Corporate worship is to be orderly.31 While the Bible does not pre-    <br \/>281 Cor. 14:1-12.    <br \/>291 Cor. 14:20-25.    <br \/>301 Cor. 14:26.    <br \/>311 Cor. 14:40.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 353 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>354    <br \/>scribe or describe any church service order, it is important that such meetings    <br \/>actually function with enough administrative foresight to be useful and    <br \/>not frustrating and distracting for the worshipers. While no church is perfect,    <br \/>nor is the goal of corporate worship meetings an impressive performance,    <br \/>musicians who cannot keep time, singers who cannot sing, audio speakers    <br \/>with continual feedback, long awkward pauses because no one knows what    <br \/>is happening next, and people speaking in tongues or prophesying out of    <br \/>turn in a way that the Bible forbids all distract people from being able to    <br \/>focus on God and, furthermore, falsely portray God as chaotic.    <br \/>6) Corporate worship is to be missional.32 Human beings are, as God&#8217;s    <br \/>image bearers, culture makers, receivers, and interpreters. Subsequently, it    <br \/>is nonsensical for Christians to ignore culture or assume that Christianity    <br \/>is in itself a culture that exists completely separated from the cultures in    <br \/>which the church exists. To be missional, a church meeting has to fit the    <br \/>culture it is in rather than being a subculture imported from another time or    <br \/>place. This does not mean that older traditions (e.g., hymns, creeds) are not    <br \/>used, but that they are used because they contribute to informing faithful    <br \/>worship of God rather than perpetuating a dated form that is no longer best    <br \/>for ministry. Such methodology is actually methodology. Still, this must be    <br \/>done with great theological reflection so as not to turn artistic expression    <br \/>and music into idols.    <br \/>If someone is alive, they are cultural. Furthermore, culture, in general,    <br \/>and creativity and the arts, in particular, are expressions of our worship and    <br \/>do not lead us into worship. When such things as the arts and music are    <br \/>used to lead God&#8217;s people into worship, the understanding that we are continually    <br \/>worshiping has been lost and we have supplanted the leading of the    <br \/>Holy Spirit with music and the arts. Such a move is pagan because music    <br \/>becomes mediatorial in a way that only Jesus Christ is supposed to be.33    <br \/>This kind of pagan thinking is commonly articulated following corporate    <br \/>worship services when people say things like, &#8220;The music really led me    <br \/>into God&#8217;s presence,&#8221;  or &#8220;I could not worship well because of the music.&#8221;     <br \/>321 Cor. 9:19-23.    <br \/>331 Tim. 2:15.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 354 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 355    <br \/>When God&#8217;s people gather, the church leaders are also required to    <br \/>ensure that what the Bible commands for worship is actually done. There    <br \/>are certain elements that Scripture prescribes for corporate worship services    <br \/>of the church. Many theologians refer to these as the elements of    <br \/>corporate worship, and they include the following:    <br \/>1) Preaching34    <br \/>2) Sacraments of baptism and the Lord&#8217;s Table35    <br \/>3) Prayer36    <br \/>4) Reading Scripture37    <br \/>5) Financial giving38    <br \/>6) Singing and music39    <br \/>God in his great wisdom has given clear principles and practices to    <br \/>guide the corporate worship of his people. However, he has not given his    <br \/>people clear methods or an order of service. There is no clear prescription    <br \/>of an entire worship service anywhere in Scripture, and there is no record    <br \/>of any early church worship service.40    <br \/>Therefore, while God is very clear on the principles and practices to    <br \/>govern corporate worship, he has left it up to church leaders led by the Holy    <br \/>Spirit to determine the methods and service order used to implement them.    <br \/>This means that, for example, what kind of music is sung, in what order    <br \/>the elements are arranged, how Communion is administered, and the like,    <br \/>can and should vary from culture to culture and church to church because    <br \/>God provides just such tethered freedom for his people.    <br \/>However, this freedom does not include the freedom to sin and do what    <br \/>God forbids in the name of worship. An Old Testament example is found    <br \/>in Deuteronomy 12:4, where God points to how other religions worship    <br \/>their demon gods and commands, &#8220;You shall not worship the LORD your    <br \/>342 Tim. 4:2.    <br \/>35Matt. 28:19; 1 Cor. 11:17-34.    <br \/>361 Tim. 2:1.    <br \/>371 Tim. 4:13.    <br \/>382 Corinthians 8-9.    <br \/>39Col. 3:16.    <br \/>40See Carson, &#8220;Worship under the Word,&#8221;  21-22, and Frame, Worship in Spirit and Truth, 67.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 355 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>356    <br \/>God in that way.&#8221;  Another Old Testament example is found in the second    <br \/>commandment,41 which forbids idolatry- that is, the worship of any created    <br \/>thing, or seeking to reduce God to something that is made.    <br \/>A timely New Testament example is found in 1 Corinthians 10:14-22,    <br \/>where God through Paul forbids Christians from worshiping with members    <br \/>of other religions, because to do so is to entertain demons. In our day, this    <br \/>means that while Christians should have evangelistic interfaith friendships    <br \/>with members of other religions, we must never do such things as pray or    <br \/>sing with members of other religions because they worship different and    <br \/>false gods.    <br \/>HOW DO WE BECOME LIKE WHAT WE WORSHIP?    <br \/>In his book We Become What We Worship, G. K. Beale states, &#8220;What people    <br \/>revere, they resemble, either for ruin or restoration.&#8221; 42 Because we are created    <br \/>in the image of God, everyone is always, without exception, reflecting    <br \/>either God or a god. If we do not reflect our Creator to our restoration then    <br \/>we will reflect creation to our ruin.    <br \/>This explains why one of the recurrent themes in the Bible is that    <br \/>idols are deaf, mute, and blind, and so are idol worshipers who do not hear    <br \/>from God, speak to God, or spiritually see God. Perhaps the most legendary    <br \/>account of idolatry in all of Scripture is the worship of the golden calf    <br \/>in Exodus 32. There, Israel is portrayed mockingly as rebellious cattle    <br \/>because they worshiped a calf and thus became like it. Just like a stubborn    <br \/>cow that refuses to go in the right direction, idolatrous Israel is &#8220;stiffnecked.&#8221;     <br \/>43    <br \/>Idolatry began with our first father, Adam. Because Adam was committed    <br \/>to something over God, namely himself, he was guilty of idolatry.    <br \/>Therefore, Adam set in motion a course of history in which the most common    <br \/>created thing we worship in idolatry is ourselves; we live for ourselves    <br \/>and our perceived glory, which is actually our shame, in priority over God.    <br \/>41Ex. 20:4-6.    <br \/>42G. K. Beale, We Become What We Worship: A Biblical Theology of Idolatry (Downers Grove, IL: IVP    <br \/>Academic, 2008), 16.    <br \/>43Ex. 32:9; 33:3, 5; 34:9; Deut. 9:6, 13; 10:16; 31:27.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 356 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 357    <br \/>In the New Testament Gospels, the idol revered by the Jews and    <br \/>renounced by Jesus is religion. Even though there are not many explicit    <br \/>references to Jewish idol worship in the Gospels, Beale argues that it is    <br \/>clear that the generation of Jews at the time of Christ were at least as sinful    <br \/>as their spiritual forefathers: &#8220;The Jewish nation took pride in the fact    <br \/>that they were not like the nations who bowed down to stone and wooden    <br \/>images. Yet what is also clear is that the majority of the Israelite nation    <br \/>were at least as sinful as their forbearers, especially because they crucified    <br \/>the Son of God (Matt. 23:29-38).&#8221; 44 Israel worshiped their dead tradition    <br \/>rather than the living God according to his living Word.    <br \/>Moving on to the book of Acts, Luke presents the fact that the temple    <br \/>actually became an idol for theocratic Israel. Jesus exposed this idolatry    <br \/>when he said he would destroy the temple. Rather than letting Jesus destroy    <br \/>the temple, the religious leaders chose instead to destroy Jesus. They    <br \/>preferred the temple as their place of meeting with God and presence of    <br \/>God over God himself in their midst. Subsequently, God had the temple    <br \/>destroyed in AD 70.    <br \/>Similarly, in our own day religious people continue in various    <br \/>idolatries when they elevate their denomination, church building, liturgical    <br \/>order, Bible translation, worship music style, pastor, theological    <br \/>system, favorite author, or ministry program to where it is a replacement    <br \/>mediator for Jesus, one in which their faith rests to keep them close to    <br \/>God. This also explains why any change to the tradition of a religious    <br \/>person is met with such hostility- people tend to cling to their idols,    <br \/>including their church buildings, which are worshiped as sacred, just as    <br \/>the temple was.    <br \/>Like the Jews in Jesus&#8217; day, Christians must be continually aware of    <br \/>their religious idols. Religious idols include truth, gifts, and morality.45    <br \/>These are things people trust in addition to Jesus Christ for their salvation,    <br \/>44Beale, We Become What We Worship, 162.    <br \/>45These categories are taken from Tim Keller&#8217;s session, &#8220;The Grand Demythologizer: The Gospel and    <br \/>Idolatry (Acts 19:21-41),&#8221;  at the Gospel Coalition 2009 National Conference, April 21, 2009. The audio    <br \/>and video of his session are available here: <a href=\"http:\/\/www.purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/?random\">http:\/\/www.thegospelcoalition.org\/resources\/a\/The-Grand-<\/a>    <br \/>Demythologizer-The-Gospel-and-Idolatry.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 357 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>358    <br \/>not unlike the Judaizers who added circumcision to the gospel and were    <br \/>rebuked by Paul in Galatians as heretics preaching a false gospel.    <br \/>Truth idolatry is perhaps most common among those who are most    <br \/>committed to sound doctrine and biblical study. These people are prone    <br \/>to think that they are saved because of the rightness of their belief rather    <br \/>than the simple fact that Jesus died for them. Religious people who idolize    <br \/>truth are often guilty of the rankest sense of superiority. They continually    <br \/>enjoy sarcastically making fun of their opponents and find great pleasure    <br \/>on the Internet, where to be famous generally means you have to be a truth    <br \/>idolater who feeds the idolatry of religious mockers for whom their ideology    <br \/>has become their idolatry.    <br \/>Gift idolatry is perhaps most common among those most gifted and    <br \/>capable in ministry service who mistake spiritual gifts for spiritual maturity    <br \/>and spiritual fruit. These people commonly think that they are saved    <br \/>because of the great gifts they possess and that any ministry they have    <br \/>accomplished- and subsequently their faith- rests more on the fact that    <br \/>God is using them than that Jesus died for them. Sadly, this is common    <br \/>among Bible preachers who have made their pulpit into an idol where they    <br \/>go for identity and joy. They seek the approval of their hearers who cheer    <br \/>them on, and eventually the pastor whose idol is preaching becomes the    <br \/>idol of his listening flock, whose devotion to him is nearly god-like, and he    <br \/>becomes virtually sinless in their eyes.    <br \/>Morality idolatry is perhaps most common among the most wellbehaved    <br \/>and decent religious people. Often these people think that they are    <br \/>saved because they have lived a decently moral and good life of devotion    <br \/>and obedience rather than seeing themselves as sinners by nature whose    <br \/>sin is serious enough to require Jesus&#8217; atoning death. Such people are much    <br \/>like the older brother in the story of the prodigal son- they are offended    <br \/>when grace is given to repentant sinners because it is undeserved. Their    <br \/>attitude in such moments reveals their idol of self-performance; their ultimate    <br \/>trust resides in their performance and not in Jesus.    <br \/>One of the lengthiest treatments of idolatry in all the New Testament    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 358 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 359    <br \/>is found in 1 Corinthians 10, where Paul describes idolatry as participation    <br \/>with demons that leads to all kinds of evil, including gluttony, drunkenness,    <br \/>sexual sin, and grumbling. Indeed, the more we commit ourselves to    <br \/>our idol, the more we become one with it and increasingly like it, to our    <br \/>destruction. Furthermore, as 1 Corinthians 10 makes clear, our idolatry    <br \/>also strains our relationships with fellow Christians, gives a false witness    <br \/>to non-Christians, and causes others to be tempted to join us in idolatrous    <br \/>sin. Subsequently, idolatry damages every category of relationship we have    <br \/>and is a deadly cancer in a church body and in society as a whole.    <br \/>Beale concludes his biblical survey of idolatry in the book of    <br \/>Revelation, noting how those who worship idols are referred to as &#8220;earth    <br \/>dwellers.&#8221; 46 According to Beale:    <br \/>[The] earth dwellers [in Revelation] cannot look beyond this earth for    <br \/>their security, which means that they trust in some part of the creation    <br \/>instead of the Creator for their ultimate welfare. Thus people are called    <br \/>&#8220;earth dwellers&#8221;  because this expresses the object of their trust and    <br \/>perhaps of their very being, in that they have become part of the earthly    <br \/>system in which they find security- they have become like it. Because    <br \/>they commit themselves to some aspect of the earth, they become    <br \/>earthy and come to be known as &#8220;earth dwellers.&#8221; 47    <br \/>Lastly, Christians must never forget that they too are prone to the    <br \/>same kinds of idolatry as the &#8220;earth dwellers.&#8221;  Religious idolatry is often    <br \/>the most pernicious of all. Religious idolatry uses God for health, wealth,    <br \/>success, and the like. In this grotesque inversion of the gospel, God is used    <br \/>for our glory; not only do we worship ourselves but we try to make God a    <br \/>worshiper of us. This kind of false gospel preaching is evident whenever    <br \/>Jesus is presented as the means by which idolaters can obtain their idol.    <br \/>Examples include promises that Jesus will make you rich, happy, healed,    <br \/>joyfully married, parentally successful, and the like, as if Jesus exists to    <br \/>aid our worship of idols.    <br \/>46Rev. 8:13; 13:8, 14; 14:6-9; 17:2, 8.    <br \/>47Beale, We Become What We Worship, 255.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 359 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>360    <br \/>HOW ARE REGENERATION AND WORSHIP RELATED?    <br \/>Because sin is not merely doing bad things but an even deeper problem of    <br \/>building our identity on someone or something other than God alone, the    <br \/>solution to idolatry is not to change our behavior but to have a complete    <br \/>reorientation of our nature at the deepest level of our being, or what Jesus    <br \/>called being born again.    <br \/>In the third chapter of John&#8217;s Gospel, a man named Nicodemus came    <br \/>to meet with Jesus. Nicodemus was a devoutly religious man. As a Pharisee    <br \/>he would have committed large sections of the Hebrew Old Testament to    <br \/>memory and been revered as morally upright, intelligent, and among the    <br \/>holiest of men. In John 3:3, Jesus said to him, &#8220;Truly, truly, I say to you,    <br \/>unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.&#8221;  This confused    <br \/>Nicodemus, so Jesus explained that there are two births. The first birth is    <br \/>our physical birth that occurs when our mother&#8217;s water breaks and we are    <br \/>brought into this world. By virtue of our first birth we are physically alive    <br \/>but spiritually dead. The second birth is our spiritual birth whereby God    <br \/>the Holy Spirit causes us to be born again so that we are both physically    <br \/>and spiritually alive.    <br \/>Nicodemus considered himself spiritually alive by virtue of his religion,    <br \/>spirituality, theology, and morality. But he was likely astounded when    <br \/>Jesus told him plainly, &#8220;You must be born again.&#8221; 48    <br \/>In this way he was much like those today who know some theological    <br \/>truth, have been baptized, attend religious meetings, live a moral life,    <br \/>believe in God, devote time to serving others, and even give some of their    <br \/>income to spiritual causes and organizations as members, leaders, and pastors,    <br \/>but who need to be born again. Why? Because they are living out of    <br \/>their old nature solely by their will and effort rather than out of a new nature    <br \/>by the power of God the Holy Spirit. John Piper says:    <br \/>What Nicodemus needs, and what you and I need, is not religion but    <br \/>life. The point of referring to new birth is that birth brings a new life    <br \/>into the world. In one sense, of course, Nicodemus is alive. He is    <br \/>48John 3:7.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 360 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 361    <br \/>breathing, thinking, feeling, acting. He is a human created in God&#8217;s    <br \/>image. But evidently, Jesus thinks he&#8217;s dead. There is no spiritual life in    <br \/>Nicodemus. Spiritually, he is unborn. He needs life, not more religious    <br \/>activities or more religious zeal. He has plenty of that.49    <br \/>Being born again is theologically summarized as the doctrine of    <br \/>regeneration, which is the biblical teaching that salvation includes both    <br \/>God&#8217;s work for us at the cross of Jesus and in us by the Holy Spirit. To    <br \/>say it another way, regeneration is not a separate work of the Holy Spirit    <br \/>added to the saving work of Jesus; rather, it is the subjective actualization    <br \/>of Jesus&#8217; work.    <br \/>While the word regeneration appears only twice in the Bible,50 it is    <br \/>described in both the Old and New Testaments by a constellation of images.    <br \/>It is important to note that each signifies a permanent, unalterable change    <br \/>in someone at his or her deepest level.    <br \/>The Old Testament frequently speaks of regeneration in terms of    <br \/>deep work in the heart, our total inner self, so that a new life flows from    <br \/>a new heart empowered by the Holy Spirit, just as Jesus explained to    <br \/>Nicodemus.51    <br \/>Like the Old Testament, the New Testament speaks on many occasions    <br \/>of being born again.52 The New Testament uses many other images to    <br \/>explain regeneration. These include &#8220;partakers of the divine nature,&#8221; 53    <br \/>&#8220;new creation,&#8221; 54 &#8220;new man,&#8221; 55 &#8220;alive together with Christ,&#8221; 56 and &#8220;created    <br \/>in Christ Jesus.&#8221; 57    <br \/>Three very important truths help to illuminate regeneration in the    <br \/>New Testament. First, regeneration is done to ill-deserving, not just    <br \/>undeserving, sinners.58 Therefore, regeneration is a gift of grace, as    <br \/>49John Piper, Finally Alive: What Happens When We Are Born Again (Fearn, Scotland: Christian Focus,    <br \/>2009), 29.    <br \/>50Matt. 19:28; Titus 3:5.    <br \/>51Deut. 30:6; Jer. 24:7; 31:31-33; 32:39-40; Ezek. 11:19-20; 36:26-27.    <br \/>52John 1:13; 1 Pet. 1:3, 23; 1 John 5:1.    <br \/>532 Pet. 1:4.    <br \/>542 Cor. 5:17.    <br \/>55Eph. 2:15; 4:24.    <br \/>56Eph. 2:5; Col. 2:13.    <br \/>57Eph. 2:10.    <br \/>58Eph. 2:1-5.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 361 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>362    <br \/>Titus 3:5 says: &#8220;He saved us, not because of works done by us in righteousness,    <br \/>but according to his own mercy, by the washing of regeneration    <br \/>and renewal of the Holy Spirit.&#8221;  Second, regeneration is something    <br \/>God the Holy Spirit does for us.59 Therefore, unless God accomplishes    <br \/>regeneration in people, it is impossible for them to live as worshipers of    <br \/>God. Third, without regeneration there is no possibility of eternal life in    <br \/>God&#8217;s kingdom.60 Therefore, regeneration is required for someone to be    <br \/>a true worshiper of God.    <br \/>Accompanying the new birth are ten soul-transforming, life-changing,    <br \/>and eternity-altering occurrences.61    <br \/>1) Regenerated people have the Trinitarian creator God of the Bible    <br \/>as their new Lord, thereby displacing all other false and functional    <br \/>lords who had previously ruled over them.62    <br \/>2) Regenerated people are new creations so that they are transformed at    <br \/>the deepest levels of their existence to begin living a new life. People    <br \/>being renamed upon conversion, so that Saul becomes Paul and    <br \/>Cephas becomes Peter, illustrates that we are new people in Christ.63    <br \/>3) Regenerated people have a new identity from which to live their new    <br \/>life because their old identity no longer defines them.64    <br \/>4) Regenerated people have a new mind that enables them to enjoy    <br \/>Scripture and thus to begin to think God&#8217;s truthful thoughts after    <br \/>him.65    <br \/>5) Regenerated people have new emotions so that they love God, fellow    <br \/>Christians, strangers, and even their enemies.66    <br \/>6) Regenerated people have new desires for holiness, and no longer is    <br \/>their deepest appetite for sin and folly.67    <br \/>7) Regenerated people enjoy a new community and fellowship with    <br \/>other Christians as members of the church.68    <br \/>59John 3:5-8.    <br \/>60John 3:3, 5; cf. 1 Cor. 2:6-16.    <br \/>61For further reading, see Question 4 in our book Religion Saves: And Nine Other Misconceptions    <br \/>(Wheaton, IL: Crossway, 2009).    <br \/>621 John 5:18.    <br \/>632 Cor. 5:17; Gal. 6:15.    <br \/>64Eph. 4:22-24.    <br \/>65Rom. 7:22; 1 Cor. 2:14-16; 1 Pet. 2:2.    <br \/>661 John 4:7.    <br \/>67Ps. 37:4; Rom. 7:4-6; Gal. 5:16-17.    <br \/>681 John 1:3.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 362 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 363    <br \/>18) Regenerated people live by a new power to follow God by the Holy    <br \/>Spirit&#8217;s enabling.69    <br \/>19) Regenerated people enjoy a new freedom to no longer tolerate,    <br \/>manage, excuse, or accept their sin but rather to put it to death and    <br \/>live free from habitually besetting sin.70    <br \/>10) The culmination of the effects of regeneration is a new life of worship    <br \/>that is markedly different from how life would otherwise be.71    <br \/>In some ways our new birth is like our physical birth. At birth babies    <br \/>cry, move, hunger, trust their father to protect and provide for them, enjoy    <br \/>human comfort, and begin to grow. Similarly, newly born-again people cry    <br \/>out to God in prayer, move out in new life, hunger for the Scriptures, trust    <br \/>God as Father, enjoy God&#8217;s family the church, and begin to grow spiritually,    <br \/>maturing in their imaging of God. Beale explains regeneration in    <br \/>terms of how Christians become restored into the image of God:    <br \/>It is in Christ that people, formerly conformed to the world&#8217;s image    <br \/>(Rom. 1:18-32), begin to be transformed into God&#8217;s image (Rom.    <br \/>8:28-30; 12:2; 2 Cor. 3:18; 4:4). . . . This process of transformation    <br \/>into the divine image will be completed at the end of history, when    <br \/>Christians will be resurrected and fully reflect God&#8217;s image in Christ    <br \/>(1 Cor. 15:45-54; Phil. 3:20-21). They will be resurrected by the    <br \/>Spirit-imparting power of the risen Christ. Since it was the Spirit who    <br \/>raised Jesus from the dead (Rom. 1:4), so the Spirit of Christ will raise    <br \/>Christians from the dead at the end of the age. . . . The Spirit&#8217;s work in    <br \/>people will enable them to be restored and revere the Lord and resemble    <br \/>his image, so that God will be glorified in and through them. 72    <br \/>Therefore, it is only through the regenerating and ongoing empowering    <br \/>ministry of the Holy Spirit that we can worship, until one day in our    <br \/>glorified resurrected state we will image God perfectly as unceasing worshipers.    <br \/>This is exactly what Jesus meant when he said in John 4:24, &#8220;God    <br \/>69Rom. 8:4-13.    <br \/>70Rom. 6:6; 7:6.    <br \/>71Gal. 5:19-23.    <br \/>72Beale, We Become What We Worship, 282.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 363 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>364    <br \/>is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spirit and truth.&#8221;     <br \/>Commenting on this verse, Andreas Kstenberger says:    <br \/>The terms &#8220;spirit&#8221;  and &#8220;truth&#8221;  are joined later in the expression &#8220;Spirit    <br \/>of truth,&#8221;  referring to the Holy Spirit (see 14:17; 15:26; 16:13; cf. 1    <br \/>John 4:6; 5:6; see also 2 Thess. 2:13) . . . the present reference therefore    <br \/>seems to point John&#8217;s readers ultimately to worship in the Holy Spirit.    <br \/>Thus, true worship is not a matter of geographical location (worship in    <br \/>a church building), physical posture (kneeling or standing), or following    <br \/>a particular liturgy or external rituals (cf. Matt. 6:5-13); it is a matter    <br \/>of the heart and of the Spirit (Talbert 1992: 115). As Stibbe (1993:    <br \/>64) puts it, &#8220;True worship is paternal in focus (the Father), personal in    <br \/>origin (the Son), and pneumatic in character (the Spirit).&#8221; 73    <br \/>Because of our new hearts, worshiping God by imaging him well through    <br \/>the empowerment of the Holy Spirit is exactly what we want to do in our    <br \/>innermost depths. Speaking of the Spirit-empowered regenerated desires of the    <br \/>heart, Psalm 37:4 says, &#8220;Delight yourself in the LORD, and he will give you    <br \/>the desires of your heart.&#8221;  Practically, this means that as we enjoy and delight    <br \/>in who God is, what he has done, and what he will do for us, our regenerated    <br \/>hearts share in the same desires of God. Subsequently, unlike religion, which is    <br \/>based on fear that forces people to do what they do not want to do, regeneration    <br \/>is based on love and on God inviting new people to live new lives of worship,    <br \/>which is exactly what their new hearts want to do at the deepest level. The result    <br \/>is ever-growing, never-ending, ever-worshiping, passionate joy!    <br \/>HOW DOES WORSHIP TRANSFORM US?    <br \/>Because we worship our way into sin, ultimately we need to worship our    <br \/>way out.74 As we have studied, when Christians commit sin, they do not    <br \/>73Andreas J. Kstenberger, John: Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament (Grand Rapids,    <br \/>MI: Baker Academic, 2004), 157.    <br \/>74Much of what ensues in this chapter was shaped and informed by a collection of biblical counseling    <br \/>resources from the Christian Counseling and Educational Foundation (CCEF) at www.ccef.org, including    <br \/>the Journal of Biblical Counseling. CCEF is directly affiliated with Westminster Theological Seminary,    <br \/>and the contributors to the Journal promote biblical counseling from a distinctly Reformed, gospelcentered    <br \/>theological paradigm.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 364 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 365    <br \/>cease worshiping. Rather, their worship is directed away from the Creator    <br \/>and toward created things. Repentance is the act of turning from sin and    <br \/>returning to God by trusting in Jesus Christ, who alone is the perfect worshiper.    <br \/>This fact helps idolaters be transformed into worshipers. John had    <br \/>just this in mind when he summarized his entire epistle with the closing    <br \/>line, &#8220;Keep yourselves from idols.&#8221; 75 The following examples are intended    <br \/>to be of some practical help in uncovering our idols so that we can smash    <br \/>them in repentance and worship God alone.    <br \/>Following a sermon on dating, a young woman, who claimed to be a    <br \/>Christian but was dating, sleeping with, and living with a non-Christian,    <br \/>came forward for prayer. She asked me (Mark) to pray that God would save    <br \/>her boyfriend so they could marry and be a Christian family. I then quoted    <br \/>Romans 11:36-12:1 to her: &#8220;To him be glory forever. Amen. I appeal to    <br \/>you therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a    <br \/>living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.&#8221;     <br \/>I explained to the woman that their bed was a pagan altar and that    <br \/>when she lay down on it with her boyfriend, she was presenting her body    <br \/>as a living sacrifice to the guy as her real god and that their fornication was    <br \/>her idolatrous worship of a created thing, namely, her boyfriend. Thus, she    <br \/>was choosing the guy over Jesus as the most important person in her life,    <br \/>the basis of her identity, the source of her joy and love, and her hope for    <br \/>affection.    <br \/>A young man had suffered from panic attacks for some months and    <br \/>the various medications he had taken were of no help. He was a newer    <br \/>Christian, and his family was avowedly anti-Christian and very angry that    <br \/>he had converted to Christianity and that he was greatly enjoying such    <br \/>things as church attendance, fellowship, and Bible reading. His immediate    <br \/>and extended family were very close, but they had been shunning him    <br \/>and mocking him in an effort to get him to stop practicing his faith. When    <br \/>that did not work, his parents cut off his college funding, which required    <br \/>him to start working long hours to pay his way through school. The situa-    <br \/>751 John 5:21.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 365 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>366    <br \/>tion escalated when his parents found out he had met a Christian woman    <br \/>he loved and was considering pursuing marriage with her. The couple    <br \/>was considering attending seminary and preparing for a life of ministry    <br \/>together. His parents sat him down in front of the rest of the family, and he    <br \/>was belittled and berated for hours. It was obvious that he loved Jesus and    <br \/>his family and that his understandable anxiety was caused by being forced    <br \/>to choose between them.    <br \/>I explained to him that his anxiety and subsequent panic attacks were    <br \/>the result of being conflicted between the fear of the Lord and the fear of    <br \/>man. Proverb 29:25 says, &#8220;The fear of man lays a snare, but whoever trusts    <br \/>in the LORD is safe.&#8221;  Indeed, this man&#8217;s family had set the snare he was in,    <br \/>as they sought to control him through the fear of man. Biblical counselor    <br \/>Ed Welch says:    <br \/>Fear in the biblical sense . . . includes being afraid of someone, but    <br \/>it extends to holding someone in awe, being controlled or mastered    <br \/>by people, worshipping other people, putting your trust in people, or    <br \/>needing people. . . . The fear of man can be summarized this way: We    <br \/>replace God with people. Instead of a biblically guided fear of the Lord,    <br \/>we fear others. . . . When we are in our teens, it is called &#8220;peer pressure.&#8221;     <br \/>When we are older, it is called &#8220;people-pleasing.&#8221;  Recently, it has been    <br \/>called &#8220;codependency.&#8221; 76    <br \/>The only way out of his panic was to fear God, as Proverb 1:7 says:    <br \/>&#8220;The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge.&#8221;  While he should    <br \/>not stop loving his family, praying for his family, and honoring his parents    <br \/>while guarding his heart from bitterness, he needs to obey God, even if that    <br \/>should mean disobeying his family. If he were to obey his parents, he would    <br \/>turn them into an idol, placing them above God as the true Lord of his life.    <br \/>Conversely, if he were to obey God, he would no longer be controlled by    <br \/>the idol of his family. Since he had been using them for everything from    <br \/>financial support to identity and approval over the years, releasing them as    <br \/>76Edward T. Welch, When People Are Big and God Is Small: Overcoming Peer Pressure, Codependency,    <br \/>and the Fear of Man (Phillipsburg, NJ: P&amp;R, 1997), 14.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 366 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 367    <br \/>an idol would allow him to actually stop using them and start loving them    <br \/>by doing and saying what was truthful and best for them without regard    <br \/>for their judgment of him.    <br \/>A woman revealed that she had had a few abortions before becoming a    <br \/>Christian, marrying a godly man, and birthing their own healthy children.    <br \/>She explained that she had been tormented by her sin and did not how to    <br \/>get out of the pit of despair she was living in. With tears streaming down    <br \/>her face, she explained how she had confessed to God her sin of murdering    <br \/>her unborn children and did believe that Jesus Christ&#8217;s death had paid her    <br \/>penalty and secured her forgiveness. I explained to her that although her sin    <br \/>was grievous, I did not understand why she was not enjoying forgiveness.    <br \/>She said it was because even though God had forgiven her, she could not    <br \/>forgive herself. So I explained to her that she had become her own idol,    <br \/>the lord and functional god of her life. In saying that Jesus had forgiven    <br \/>her but she could not forgive herself, she was in effect saying that she was    <br \/>a god above Jesus, and although her lesser God, Jesus, was forgiving, her    <br \/>highest god, herself, was not.    <br \/>In a pastoral counseling session, a man confessed to being sexually    <br \/>addicted to pornography and masturbation and was guilty of committing    <br \/>adultery on his wife and even engaging in homosexual sex. He had been    <br \/>meeting with a counselor who was not a Christian and was merely trying    <br \/>to modify his behavior rather than smash his idol. His questions to me were    <br \/>all about behavior modification; he was trying to figure out how to avoid    <br \/>television and Internet access.    <br \/>To be fair, he knew that sin leads to death and that his sin was killing    <br \/>him and his wife and their marriage. He meant well, but he had been    <br \/>pointed in the wrong direction in pursuit of a solution. I explained that    <br \/>while we must not tempt our flesh and that the changes he had made were    <br \/>likely good, they were not nearly enough, because his real issue was not the    <br \/>Internet but rather idolatry. What he needed was not behavior modification    <br \/>but worship transformation.    <br \/>In his condemnation of idolatry, Paul predicted the same lifestyle that    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 367 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>368    <br \/>this man was living.77 Those who fail to worship God their creator worship    <br \/>that which is created. This can be any created person or thing but is    <br \/>often the worship of the self and sex. Why? Because, of all the things God    <br \/>made, the human body is the apex of God&#8217;s creative work.78 This fact    <br \/>makes its passions and pleasures the most likely candidate for idolatrous    <br \/>worship. In our age, this includes an addiction to beauty, pornography,    <br \/>sexual sin, drunkenness, drug abuse, people-pleasing fear of man, and gluttony,    <br \/>as Paul said, since for some people their god is their stomach.    <br \/>For this man, the real issue was that he was worshiping the created    <br \/>body rather than the creator God. He was therefore breaking both the first    <br \/>and second commandments, which led to his breaking the seventh.    <br \/>Lastly, upon entering the home of an understandably tired young    <br \/>mother, I (Mark) heard her lament the fact that her house was not tidy. She    <br \/>also described how she had prayed to Jesus for the kids to be more organized    <br \/>and clean but that Jesus was of no help at all. As I looked around the    <br \/>house, it actually seemed quite clean and tidy for being occupied by young    <br \/>children. There were a few toys out on the floor, but that was about it. Later    <br \/>in our visit, she actually said, &#8220;Everything is perfect until the kids wreck it.&#8221;     <br \/>Her home had become her idol. Whenever her children left a toy out    <br \/>or spilled their juice, they were not merely sinning or making a mistake. To    <br \/>her, they were ruining her life and vandalizing her perfect, heavenly home.    <br \/>Or, to say it another way, they were not worshiping her idol. So she prayed    <br \/>to Jesus, asking him to turn her children into idol worshipers who never left    <br \/>anything out or made a mess. Her frustration with Jesus was that he did not    <br \/>respect her dominion in her home\/kingdom and was refusing to submit to    <br \/>her rule and serve her idol.    <br \/>Furthermore, she was making her children miserable, with the exception    <br \/>of one daughter who labored to keep the house clean like her mom    <br \/>and berated her siblings; she was turning into a second-generation, selfrighteous    <br \/>idol worshiper. Making matters worse, when Dad got home from    <br \/>work he would grab a beer, sit in his chair, watch his television, and tune    <br \/>77Rom. 1:25-28.    <br \/>78Gen. 1:31.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 368 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Worship: God Transforms 369    <br \/>out his wife and children, ignoring what was going on in the home. His    <br \/>idol was comfort, and his beer, chair, and flat-screen television were his    <br \/>functional saviors that he preferred worshiping over Jesus, who wanted him    <br \/>to apply the gospel to himself, his wife, and their children so that they could    <br \/>each smash their idols and live as worshipers of God alone and wait for    <br \/>the day when they get to enjoy the perfect home Jesus is preparing for us.    <br \/>The examples are endless because, as John Calvin rightly said, the    <br \/>human heart is an idol factory. Thankfully, as we seek and smash our idols    <br \/>by the grace of God, our lives are transformed into acts of worship to God&#8217;s    <br \/>glory, our joy, and others&#8217; good as we enjoy and steward created things    <br \/>without deifying them and love people rather than using them.    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 369 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM    <br \/>Doctrine.06253.i02.indd 370 11\/30\/09 12:01 PM<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>CHAPTER 11 True worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him. &#8212; JOHN 4 : 2 3 In ancient cultures social life revolved around sanctuaries, temples, and stadiums. There, various gods and goddesses were worshiped as people gave their time, talent, and treasure as&#8230;<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":14,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"twitterCardType":"","cardImageID":0,"cardImage":"","cardTitle":"","cardDesc":"","cardImageAlt":"","cardPlayer":"","cardPlayerWidth":0,"cardPlayerHeight":0,"cardPlayerStream":"","cardPlayerCodec":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-5569","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5569","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/14"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=5569"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/5569\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=5569"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=5569"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/purposedriven.ca\/wiki\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=5569"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}