Barry's BlogWednesday, October 21 2009 American Idols...
Tim Keller has been teaching and preaching in Manhattan over the past twenty years. His book, The Reason for God, is currently on The New York Times bestseller list, as he seeks to address the most commonly held objections to Christianity. He was recently interviewed by Sarah Pulliam Bailey of Christianity Today, about his book just released, Counterfeit Gods: The Empty Promises of Money, Sex, and Power (Dutton Adult, 240 pp, $13.99). Keller is no stranger to the allure of this triad of temptations, and I believe you will find this interview to be quite interesting:
How should Christians think of money, sex, and power? All three are vying to be counterfeit gods in our culture because the living God is, culturally speaking, no longer much of a factor. In the Christian community, they shouldn't be calling the shots. Richard Foster wrote a book on money, sex, and power, which offered a good understanding of how a Christian view of society differs from the world's. His book was about how to do it in Christian community. I'm trying to do a cultural analysis, using the category of idolatry, to help Christians see how they get sucked in.
What makes these three so enticing and difficult to control? We tend to worry about drugs, drinking, and pornography. But it's not bad and nasty things that are our biggest problems. Sex, work, and money are great goods. They are intrinsic to our being made in God's image. If God is second place in your life and one of them is first, you're cooked. These things are candidates for first place because they are so great. I'm not saying, "Let's move out to the desert and pray and read our Bibles."
Do Christians have blind spots when it comes to false gods? An idol is something you rely on instead of God for your salvation. One of the religious idols is your moral record: "God accepts me because I'm living a good life." I'm a Presbyterian, so I'm all for right doctrine. But you can start to feel very superior to everyone else and think, God is pleased with me because I'm so true to the right doctrine. The right doctrine and one's moral record are forms of power. Another is ministry success, similar to the idol of achievement. There are religious versions of sex, money, and power, and they are pretty subtle.
How does someone identify their idols? Look at your daydreams. When you don't have to think about something, like when you are waiting for the bus, where does your mind love to rest? Or, look at where you spend your money most effortlessly. Also, if you take your most uncontrolled emotions or the guilt that you can't get rid of, you'll find your idols at the bottom. Whenever I hear someone say, "I know God forgives me, but I can't forgive myself," it means that person has something that is more important than God, because God forgives them. If you look at your greatest nightmare-if something were to happen that would make you feel you had no reason to live-that's a god.
How do we get rid of idols? I confess that I don't say much about that. Practicing spiritual disciplines is another book. I do say that analyzing and recognizing an idol is a step away from its power over you. You also have to have a heck of a prayer life. That prayer life can't just be petitioning. There has to be encounter, experience, and genuine joy. You have to have Jesus Christ increasingly capture your affections.
Is it necessary to suffer disappointment before seeing that idols don't satisfy? I fear you may be right. I don't want that to be true. Very often it's much stronger than disappointment. It's hard for me to look at a young person and know what their idols are, because usually something has to happen in their life to frustrate them for them to see that something has inordinate power over them. No one learned about their idols by being told about them.
A wise sage once observed, "In worship, we bring the gods that we have made before the God who has made us." So what are the rival idols in our lives? Post your comments:FinishingWell is not responsible for the content of these Comments
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