Lesson 2: Idolatry
I. INTRODUCTION
A. Long before Hosea began his ministry,
1. When God made His covenant with
2. After Moses interceded for the children of
3. This same pattern of history was continued during the time of the kings. The last judge, Samuel, had led
B. By the time Hosea prophesied,
1.
2. Perhaps the crowning achievement of
C. Is there anything for us to learn today from
1. In the
2. The truth is that there is more to idolatry than carved statues. We may not have graven images, but types of idolatry are all around us.
II. SPIRITUAL ADULTERY
A. The idolatry of
1. In the illustration, God is pictured as a faithful and loving husband who provides everything for his wife.
2.
3. Thus,
B. Hosea’s marriage was a model for this spiritual relationship between God and
1. “When the LORD first spoke through Hosea, the LORD said to Hosea, ‘Go, take to yourself a wife of harlotry, and have children of harlotry; for the land commits flagrant harlotry, forsaking the LORD.’” (Hos. 1:2)
2. Hosea obeyed the voice of God, taking Gomer, a harlot, as his wife (Hos. 1:3).
3. Gomer bore three children, and all were given prophetic names that were symbolic of
a. Jezreel, meaning “God scatters”
b. Lo-ruhamah, meaning “not pitied”
c. Lo-ammi, meaning “not my people”
4. Although it is not explained in detail, it appears that Gomer abandoned Hosea for other lovers and eventually became someone’s property as a slave. Hosea redeemed her from slavery and restored her as his wife with the condition that she would no longer play the harlot (Hos. 3:1-3).
5. This repulsive and shameful harlot Gomer was a potent symbol to communicate to
a. She was completely faithless and disloyal to her benevolent husband just as
b. Her children were the children of harlotry just as the spiritual offspring of
c. Although she was worthless and deserving of punishment, Hosea redeemed her just as God would redeem the faithless children of
C. Therefore, we can understand how degrading it is for men to forsake God and worship false gods.
1. When men reject God, they foolishly reject the one who has created all things and provided everything for them (Rom. 1:18-21).
2. When men turn to false gods, they foolishly place their hope and confidence in a lie that has no substance (Rom. 1:22-25).
3. When men do these things, they reveal the depth of their stupidity, giving up that which is eternal in favor of that which is corruptible and bound for destruction.
III. IDOLATRY AMONG US
A. The form of idolatry practiced by
1. Americans do not carve statues and images to worship as gods.
2. However, this does not mean that idolatry is not among us today.
B. The form of idolatry that corrupts the
1. This doctrine is openly declared in the Humanist Manifesto I (1933) and the Humanist Manifesto II (1973). From these documents, we can understand exactly what this philosophy entails.
2. Humanism is a monistic philosophy, which means that it views all reality from a single standpoint. That standpoint is the material world.
3. Therefore, humanism denies the existence of anything spiritual, claiming that there is not sufficient evidence to believe in anything that cannot be evaluated with the natural senses.
4. Humanism goes beyond simply denying spirituality. It teaches that spirituality and religion are actually harmful to individuals and society because they promote false hope in a life beyond the material world.
5. Thus, the goals of humanism are to focus the minds of men upon the things that will be most beneficial and pleasing to men in this world and to convince men not to waste their efforts toward a non-existent god.
6. Therefore, each individual is elevated to the status of his own god. Man the god dictates to himself what he must do. He must provide for himself whatever he desires. He must make his own morality and ethics. He must determine his own destiny.
C. Is humanism really a religion and therefore a form of idolatry?
1. The humanists say that humanism is not a religion because there is nothing sacred about it.
2. However, notice how the first chapter of Romans describes idolatry:
a. Because the idolater believes that he has attained wisdom, he “exchanged the glory of the incorruptible God for an image in the form of man” (Rom. 1:18-23).
b. Moreover, the idolater “exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and worshiped and served the creature rather than the Creator” (Rom. 1:25).
3. This describes exactly what the humanist has done.
a. The humanist thinks that he knows better than to believe in God. So he gives up what is truly glorious (God) for that which is simply an image – the humanistic concept of man.
b. As a result of this decision, the humanist worships and serves the creature – himself, mankind – rather than God, the Creator.
4. The spiritually minded understand that anything elevated to preeminence above God becomes a god. That is what idolatry is.
a. A person is a slave to whomever he serves, including himself (Rom. 6:16).
b. A humanist makes himself to be the master, lord, and god of himself. He becomes his own idol.
D. The practical results of humanism are exactly the same as the results ascribed to idolatry.
1. Our nation is bearing the fruits of humanistic philosophy, and they are evident all around us:
a. The denial of God, which is made possible by the theory of evolution (Rom. 1:19-21)
b. Homosexuality (
c. Immorality, promiscuity, lasciviousness (Rom. 1:28)
d. “…being filled with all unrighteousness, wickedness, greed, evil; full of envy, murder, strife, deceit, malice; they are gossips, slanderers, haters of God, insolent, arrogant, boastful, inventors of evil, disobedient to parents, without understanding, untrustworthy, unloving, unmerciful” (Rom. 1:29-31)
e. Beyond this, humanists have an agenda to promote these same things (Rom. 1:32).
2. When the nation of
a. Our nation has turned its children over to godlessness and humanism, raising them in a culture that has no regard for Christ, His church, or His word.
b. Even worse, our people’s pursuit of self-serving and immoral pleasure has led to the murder of 47 million unborn children via abortions in the U.S. since the Supreme Court ruled in Roe v. Wade in 1973 (National Right to Life Committee, Abortion in the United States: Statistics and Trends, “Total Abortions Since 1973”).
E. Very few Americans confess to be humanists. Many do not even know what humanism is.
1. However, many are humanists in their thinking. Their careless, self-serving ways are the products of the humanistic philosophy.
2. The influence of humanism is throughout the schools, movies, television programs, books, and even many churches in this nation. Although they do not often call their teachings “humanism,” this is exactly what it being taught.
IV. CONCLUSION
A. “For they sow the wind, and they reap the whirlwind” (Hos. 8:7)
1. One variety of wind sown by the Northern Kingdom of Israel was the seeds of idolatry in their beliefs and their practices.
2. The whirlwind they reaped was destruction as a nation.
B. Our nation is sowing the same seeds today. Should we not expect to reap the same results?
C. Yet for God’s people, the
1. While the world descends into evil around us, let us remain faithful to our Father in heaven.
2. “And the seed whose fruit is righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace” (Jas. 3:18).