Posted in theology

Why do I feel dry? How do I get the joy back?

By Elizabeth Prata

I am so encouraged by women who ask how to regain the joy of their earlier walk. And those who who care that they feel they are not walking as closely with the Lord as they might! So much better than apathy! They inspire ME to walk more closely with Him, or to be making sure to.

I am sorry if you, dear sister and reader, are having a dry season. During these time when you don’t feel the impact of the Lord’s word as much, it’s the time for faith to to into high gear- because you just have to trust that the Spirit IS impressing it in you. That is His ministry. As long as you are absorbing it, trying with fullest attention as you can, He WILL illuminate it.

Remember, our feelings are deceptive. Emotions are fleeting. Who can know our own heart? We cannot, it is desperately sick. We might feel dry, we might feel distant from the Lord, but HE is the fountain, HE is always with us till the end of the age. HE hasn’t moved.

Yet, the dry season might be real. It might be like this, from 1 Peter 1:6 KJV,
Wherein ye greatly rejoice, though now for a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness through manifold temptations…

Do you feel a heaviness instead of lightness in joy?

You’ve repented, asked of the Lord, and that is a good thing. Keep inquiring of the Lord. Remember the Persistent Widow. She sought justice, and we seek release from your spiritual drought, but the point is, Jesus praised that she kept asking. So did Hannah, in her time of sorrow and confusion.

John 4:12-14 NASB – Jesus answered and said to her, “Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again; 14 but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him shall never be thirsty; but the water that I will give him will become in him a fountain of water springing up to eternal life.”

You have a fountain in you! It might feel frozen, but it’s there because the Spirit is in you if you are a believer. The rivers of living water are promised in John 7:38 and given to every believer.

Remember, your dryness is just a feeling. Feeling dry doesn’t mean God was neither present nor at work. John 5:17, “My Father is working until now, and I Myself am working.

Spurgeon preached on the 1 Peter text in a sermon called The Christian’s Heaviness and Rejoicing

EPrata photo

“I was lying upon my couch during this last week, and my spirits were sunken so low that I could weep by the hour like a child, and yet I knew not what I wept for—but a very slight thing will move me to tears just now—and a kind friend was telling me of some poor old soul living near, who was suffering very great pain, and yet she was full of joy and rejoicing. I was so distressed by the hearing of that story, and felt so ashamed of myself, that I did not know what to do; wondering why I should be in such a state as this; while this poor woman, who had a terrible cancer, and was in the most frightful agony, could nevertheless “rejoice with joy unspeakable, and full of glory.”

“And in a moment this text flashed upon my mind, with its real meaning. I am sure it is its real meaning. Read it over and over again, and you will see I am not wrong. “Though now for a season, if need be, ye are in heaviness.” It does not say, “Though now for a season ye are suffering pain, though now for a season you are poor; but you are ‘in heaviness;'” your spirits are taken away from you; you are made to weep; you cannot bear your pain; you are brought to the very dust of death, and wish that you might die. Your faith itself seems as if it would fail you. That is the thing for which there is a needs be. That is what my text declares, that there is an absolute needs be that sometimes the Christian should not endure his sufferings with a gallant and a joyous heart; there is a needs be that sometimes his spirits should sink within him, and that he should become even as a little child smitten beneath the hand of God.”

Spurgeon surmised a reason for this sinking joylessness:

“Yet again; if the Christian did not sometimes suffer heaviness he would begin to grow too proud, and think too much of himself, and become too great in his own esteem. Those of us who are of elastic spirit, and who in our health are full of everything that can make life happy, are too apt to forget the Most High God. Lest we should be satisfied from ourselves, and forget that all our own springs must be in him, the Lord sometimes seems to sap the springs of life, to drain the heart of all its spirits, and to leave us without soul or strength for mirth, so that the noise of tabret and of viol would be unto us as but the funeral dirge, without joy or gladness. Then it is that we discover what we are made of, and out of the depths we cry unto God, humbled by our adversities.”

He assures his listeners,

“I think I have said enough about this heaviness, except that I must add it is but for a season. A little time, a few hours, a few days, a few months at most, it shall all have passed away; and then comes the “eternal weight of glory, wherein ye greatly rejoice.”

He goes on to the joy after that!

Apostle Paul felt joy in hard circumstances but he wasn’t joyful every second. We know he was frustrated, perplexed, and angry at times. In Psalm 42, David felt spiritually dry.

Adrian Rogers advised on how to get the joy back: (How to Experience God’s Joy Every Day)

“One of the keys to experiencing joy is to cultivate the habit of thankfulness. To regularly remember and reflect upon all the blessings that God has given us and then to pour out praise and thanksgiving to God. Psalm 9:1 says, “I will praise You, O Lord, with my whole heart; I will tell of all Your marvelous works.”

Rogers continues, “If we want to experience the joy of the Lord, we must recount all the wonderful deeds that He has performed on our behalf (all the ways He has blessed us), and then pour out thanksgiving to God. The more we do this, the more we’ll experience deep, abundant, overflowing joy.”

So instead of confessing, switch to praising.

If your season of dryness goes on for an uncomfortably long while, first check to ensure you are actually IN the faith. This resource may help

Is It Real? 11 Tests of Genuine Faith


Then, once assured that you are in the faith, if you want to endure in ministry, in your walk, persevering to the end, there are three words. “Remember Jesus Christ.” I recommend this sermon highly.

Abner Chou | TMS Chapel | The Secret To Endurance

Stay in the Word, praise the Savior more than eve, even praising Him for your spiritual dryness, keep to the spiritual disciplines, and eventually they will begin to move again. Look to those in the Bible who endured the same: Moses 40 years after killing the Overseer, Hannah plagued by Penninah, David dry and crying out to the Lord.

Psalm 30:5-
For His anger is but for a moment,
His favor is for a lifetime;
Weeping may last for the night,
But a shout of joy comes in the morning
.

Posted in theology

Of Pocket Notebooks and Jonathan Edwards

By Elizabeth Prata

It all started with this pocket notebook I found at a thrift store:

When I’m out and about, and the Holy Spirit connects something I’m doing or seeing to a previous biblical thought, I need to capture it. My mind’s thoughts are increasingly ephemeral, fleeting, mist-like. So I need a notebook around me to write down the connections I’m formulating. The little but pretty notebook got me thinking about pocket notebooks, thoughts, and on-the-go connections my mind might be knitting.

Continue reading “Of Pocket Notebooks and Jonathan Edwards”
Posted in theology

Prata Potpourri: Fascinating stories, helpful tips, and lifestyle videos, this week there’s a lot to choose from!

By Elizabeth Prata

Spring is in the air. And in the ground. Forsythia and daffodils are springing up. So are dandelions. It doesn’t take that weed long to sprout, does it? There are leaf buds on the trees. The morning low temps are above freezing now, and the daytime is pleasant. Pear trees are blooming.

The cycle of seasons in their regular courses is a wonder and a relief. God said in Genesis 8:22, “While all the days of the earth remain, Seedtime and harvest, And cold and heat, And summer and winter, And day and night Shall not cease.

And the regular courses of social media also continue. There are flowers and weeds. Some spring up and some are later to sprout. It is a joy that there is good material to read online, and a blessing to be able to ignore the weeds. Here are some flowers for your social media garden today:

Sarah Ivill at Ligonier has some good things to say about the book of Ezra. I highly recommend reading the Old Testament. Even if you don’t understand everything at first, just keep reading. As the years go by and you continually pass through these texts in your annual reading plan, it eventually becomes clear.


Gossip involves saying behind a person’s back what you would never say to his or her face. Flattery means saying to a person’s face what you would never say behind his or her back.” R. Kent Hughes, Disciplines of a Godly Man


Phil Johnson, one of my favorite pastor- teachers, asks, Did Tongues Cease or Not?


Both started out well. What went wrong?

The Difference Between Saul and David
God doesn’t use the perfect. He uses those who are quick to repent and throw themselves on his mercy.


FASCINATING story!


We HAVE TO think about this more.

Undying Worm, Undying Men: The Eternal Horrors of Hell
Today, some Christians seem embarrassed by the doctrine of hell. As such, they either omit discussing it, or they reinvent the doctrine and rob it of any real horror. Our Lord, however, was not afraid to talk about hell.


The title got me right away:


Church is a blessing and so is fellowship after, but there are also stresses, especially for moms of tots.

The website Good, Cheap Eats has a listing of “30-Minute Main Meals“. We are all looking to save a bit of time, right? Why do they need to eat every day?? LOL.


If you are considering the farming life, this UK woman seems to have lived it and written about the life honestly, much to the UK’s acclaim:

Helen Rebanks: Farming, food, the meaning of life… and dogs stealing birthday cakes:

Helen Rebanks went from farmer, wife and mother to publishing sensation last year when her first book, The Farmer’s Wife, earned huge success and a legion of fans — not least the likes of bestselling author Raynor Winn and Times columnist Caitlin Moran. Her bestselling tale of everyday life on the Cumbrian farm which she runs alongside husband James is a wonderfully honest look at the ups and downs of what it means to raise — and feed — a family while keeping a roof over everyone’s heads.


Housing is getting difficult around here. Purchasing a home in this increasingly-less-rural corner of my world is out of reach for many people. The decide to rent instead. Even rents are getting high, and salaries are not keeping up. In any case, if you rent, here are some tips for dealing with an absentee landlord. I’ve rented since 2004 and I’ve always been blessed with good landlords, but I understand and empathize the frustration of having issues where you live and seemingly no resolution.

Apartment Therapy advises, How to Deal With Your Landlord Ignoring You (According to Experts)

Rajiv Surendra is an HGTV online personality. He seems to be able to do it all, from restoring frames to bookbinding, thrifting, learning how to sing, iron a shirt, to renovating an entire apartment. His videos are calm and informative, and as mentioned, on a wide array of topics. I like his thrifting/antiqueing videos, they are helpful. Here is his Youtube channel:

https://www.youtube.com/@rajivsurendra


Posted in theology

Idolatry roundup, finale, & resources

By Elizabeth Prata

Last weekend I did a deep dive into the concept of idolatry. I’d researched the “Trad Wife/Trad Life” trend and realized that for many women who live this aesthetic, it’s an idol for them. Meaning, it isn’t based on humble obedience to biblical standards for our gender, but a performance of works for the public to see, thinking this pleases God.

To better understand idolatry, I started researching what exactly IS an idol, delving into scripture, commentaries, then a Free Grace Broadcaster from Mt Zion Chapel Library. The FGB was chock full of essays commenting on idolatry.

I ended up posting 5 successive essays all around the concept of idolatry. Here they are:

What IS Idolatry?

Some Protestant Truth about Mary, Jesus’ Mother

How to make an idol: Nehushtan

Idolatry: Did You Know About these Two False Gods?

There are no other gods

I’ll end this week with a quote from Charles Spurgeon from that same Free Grace Broadcaster, called “Idols Abolished” (full sermon here).

You remember the Rich Young Ruler? You remember the Rich Man (Lazarus used to lay at his gate?) You remember the Pharisees, Saul/Paul among them? They all had the same idol:


SPURGEON: “Attend earnestly dear hearers, for, perhaps, some of you may be worshipping idols now. We will go into the temple of your heart, and see whether we can find a false god there. I go into one heart, and, as I look up, I see a gigantic idol; it is gilded all over and clothed in shining robes: its eyes seem to be jewels, and its forehead is “as bright ivory overlaid with sapphires”; it is a very lovely idol to look upon. Come not too close, do not examine too severely, nor so much as dream of looking inside the hollow sham. Within it you will find all manner of rottenness and filthiness, but the outside of the idol is adorned with the greatest art and skill, and you may even become enamoured of it as you stand and gaze upon it.”

“What is its name? Its name is self-righteousness.”

–end Spurgeon


And the LORD alone will be exalted on that day, And the idols will completely vanish. (Isaiah 2:17b,18)

EPrata photo

Owen Strachan comments on the Trad Wife phenomenon with utter clarity and refreshing articulateness: https://youtu.be/2e2QYmXE_0U?si=IYzdHMw5ewwbdyf_ . 30 min of diamond bright insight.

Posted in false gods, theology

Idolatry: Did you know about these two false gods?

By Elizabeth Prata

I finished reading through Amos. A hard book, but a majestic one. God is at the center of it. His wrath, righteousness, and holiness. It ends with a promise, as do most of the prophetic books-

I will plant them on their land,
and they shall never again be uprooted
out of the land that I have given them,
says the LORD your God.
Amos 9:15

Continue reading “Idolatry: Did you know about these two false gods?”
Posted in idolatry, theology

There are no other gods

By Elizabeth Prata

Someone commented this week on the blog that “As a Christian woman, I respect the Feminine representation of God; which is what Rachel, and early Hebrews call “Asherah”.”

See how easy it is to make an idol?

There are no other gods. God revealed Himself as Yahweh. He desires to be seen as male, He, Father.

O come, let us sing for joy to the Lord,
Let us shout joyfully to the rock of our salvation.
2 Let us come before His presence with thanksgiving,
Let us shout joyfully to Him with psalms.
3 For the Lord is a great God
And a great King above all gods,
(Psalm 95:1-3)

There are no other gods

There is no Allah
There is no Zeus no Mars no Dagon
Nammu, An, Ki are ephemeral as vapor
Amun and Horus are fictitious myths
Freyr and Loki … figments and chimera

All other gods are illusory
Their names hold no power
and their existence is in wood and statue only

Let the heathen howl
their bitterness at an unseen and unknown god’s failure
Spurious and futile gods who remain silent at man’s pleas
Let the pagan rail
their outrage at the silent deity who cannot and will never help

Let the godless who appeal to no-god
wail in frustration
for prayers that are never answered
For God is the only God.

Let the hopeless come to the throne of hope
Let the disillusioned bask in the fountain from the Rock
Let the helpless find help in Immanuel’s outstretched arm
Let the discouraged find eternity in God
The only God.

idols verse
Posted in asclepius, brazen serpent, moses, spurgeon

How to make an idol: Exhibit A- Nehushtan

By Elizabeth Prata

In around 1400 BC, Moses led the Israelites into the wilderness. They had been released from slavery by powerful acts of God, including ten plagues and parting the Red Sea to aid their escape. (Exodus 1-15)

However, it wasn’t long before the Israelites grumbled. They were sick of manna, they wanted an easier life, they wanted to get there. (Numbers 20:4). So they grumbled some more, against Moses and against God.

God heard their grumbles.

Continue reading “How to make an idol: Exhibit A- Nehushtan”
Posted in theology

Some Protestant truth about Mary, Jesus’ Mother

By Elizabeth Prata

Virgin of Quito from the sculpture of the same name, is a monument in Quito, Ecuador. It is located on the top of the hill of El Panecillo, a loaf-shaped hill in the heart of the city and serves as a backdrop to the historic center of Quito. Wikipedia. EPrata photo.

Yesterday I wrote about idolatry: what is it, how we manufacture idols, and worshipping an idol isn’t always (or even very frequently) bowing down to a wooden idol.

It made me think of the idolatry Catholics people have for Mary.

Due to Mary’s role in being selected to gestate and birth the incarnated Jesus and to raise Him alongside Joseph, the Roman Catholic religion has exalted the woman to a position she does not biblically hold. The Roman Catholic believers call Mary a co-redemptrix along with Jesus, the Queen of Heaven, and more. They pray to her, ask for her blessings, and more.

The Catholics will complain that ‘we just don’t understand’ about Mary, but if you look at their Papal Bulls, Catechisms, and other material, it’s all there. They worship Mary, which is bad and wrong and heresy.

It is always good to push back on the blasphemies and promote the truth about Mary.

Ex-Catholic VM Swiderski published some refutations on Twitter, which as expected, Catholic believers complained about. Catholicism is a false religion, but I do admire their adherents’ vigorous protection of their reputation. Satan does a good job of pushing back. What follows is her material, which is also linked above-


VM Swiderski @VMSwiderski wrote:

I was raised Roman Catholic. When God caused me to be born again by His Spirit, I began reading, understanding, and devouring His Word. I began rejecting false doctrines I had been taught. In the process, I overlooked something very important. Mary.

Mary was chosen by God.
Mary worshiped God.
Mary was humble.
Mary was submissive to the will of God.
Mary was favored by God.
Mary was blessed by God.
Mary was a virgin before Jesus was born.
Mary had many children after Jesus was born.
Mary was among the disciples.
Mary prayed to God.

Bible verses about Mary:

“Greetings, O favored one, the Lord is with you!” Luke 1:28

“And the angel said to her, ‘Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God.’” Luke 1:32

“And Mary said to the angel, ‘How will this be, since I am a virgin?’” Luke 1:34

“And Mary said, ‘Behold, I am the servant of the Lord.’” Luke 1:38

“‘Blessed are you among women, and blessed is the fruit of your womb!’” Luke 1:42

“‘And blessed is she who believed that there would be a fulfillment of what was spoken to her from the Lord.’” Luke 1:45

“‘My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior.’” Luke 1:46

“‘And holy is his name. And his mercy is for those who fear him from generation to generation.’” Luke 1:49-50

“‘For behold, from now on all generations will call me blessed; for he who is mighty has done great things for me.’”

“But Mary treasured up all these things, pondering them in her heart.” Luke 2:19

“And his mother treasured up all these things in her heart.” Luke 2:51

“‘Behold, this child is appointed for the fall and rising of many in Israel, and for a sign that is opposed (and a sword will pierce through your own soul also).” Luke 2:34-35

“‘Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary and brother of James and Joses and Judas and Simon? And are not his sisters here with us?’ And they took offense at him.” Mark 6:3

“But standing by the cross of Jesus were his mother and his mother’s sister…” John 19:25

“All these with one accord were devoting themselves to prayer, together with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and his brothers.” Acts 1:14

end of VM Swiderski’s material


Like all men and women who are mentioned in the Bible positively, Mary was not only favored, but selected to become virginally pregnant with Jesus, to raise Him, and sadly, also to witness His horrible death – as Simeon prophesied. (Luke 2:35; John 19:25).

However, we must remember Mary was a sinner. She herself recognized that fact when she acknowledged “my Savior”. (Luke 1:47).

Mary was not a perpetual virgin. She bore other children after Jesus. (Mark 6:3).

Mary was not conceived immaculately. Many people errantly believe the Immaculate Conception refers to Mary’s conception of Jesus by the Holy Spirit. No. It is the Roman Catholic idea that MARY was conceived immaculately, that is, she was free from sin. Yet Romans 3:10 says we are all sinners, there is none righteous, no not one.

Only Jesus is preeminent. He is not Co-preeminent with Mary. She is not “Queen of Heaven.” There is only one Sovereign in heaven, and that is Jesus, King of Kings and Lord of Lords. There are no queens. Daughters, yes. But Mary was a human, lived and died, and is in heaven awaiting her resurrected body and is in the throng praising and worshiping her King, just like the rest of the redeemed. Jesus alone is supreme. (Colossians 1:18).


Pope Benedict XVI had just placed a crown on the statue of the Virgin Mary
at the Vatican Basilica on the occasion of the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes. source

The following was a sermon by Dr. D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones titled “The Roman Catholic Church,” preached at Westminster Chapel in London, and originally published in The Westminster Record, May 1963.

Martyn Lloyd-Jones [MLJ] said, ‘You and I, as Christians, go to Him to confess; they [Catholics] go to the priest.

MLJ: The cult of the Virgin Mary in Roman Catholicism is increasing rapidly in an alarming manner. They say that she is the “Queen of Heaven,” and that she is the one to whom we should go primarily. In many of their churches you will find that she is placed in front of the Lord Jesus Christ, who is almost hidden by her somewhere in the background. Why? This is what they say, that she being human is much more loving and tender than He is; that He is so great and powerful and authoritative, that He is so stern—this is what they teach, this is the whole explanation of the cult of the Virgin Mary—that He is such that we cannot go to Him directly.

The cult of the Virgin Mary in Roman Catholicism is increasing rapidly in an alarming manner. They say that she is the “Queen of Heaven,” and that she is the one to whom we should go primarily.
Ah, but fortunately she is there, and she is loving; and after all she was His mother and she can influence Him.

So we should pray to the Virgin Mary and ask her to intercede on our behalf. She is right there between us and the Son of God, the Saviour of our souls. And increasingly they have been adding to her power.

They began in 1854 to teach the “Immaculate Conception” which means not only that the Lord Jesus Christ was born free from sin, but that Mary was also.

The recently they have announced this doctrine of the “Assumption of Mary,” that she never died like everybody else and was buried, but that she literally ascended up to heaven even as her Son did.

And this, you see, so builds up the Virgin Mary, and makes her so prominent that Christ Himself is hidden out of sight. –end MLJ


The Kaaba is built around a sacred black stone, a meteorite that Muslims believe was placed by Abraham and Ishmael in a corner of the Kaaba, a symbol of God’s covenant with Abraham and Ishmael and, by extension, with the Muslim community itself. Source

We make idols out of anything. Real things like a big black cube the Muslims worship, or idols out of people like the Catholics did for Mary, or idols out of concepts & philosophies like appearance, communion, comfort, motherhood, and so on.

The depths of our sin know no bounds, thus, it’s easy for satan to tempt us to make idols out of good things.

Little children, guard yourselves from idols. (1 John 5:21 LSB)

Further Reading

GTY: Who Mary was (and wasn’t)

Ligonier: The Messiah’s Mother

GotQuestions: What is Marioloatry?

Posted in theology

What IS idolatry?

By Elizabeth Prata

EPrata photo

I recently wrote about the “Trad wife/Trad life” issue. I said that idolizing a lifestyle can replace genuine worship of biblical life standards. Anything can be an idol, including a lifestyle.

I decided to look into the topic of idolatry to understand it better. Also to make sure I was not misrepresenting it to you or to myself. When sin is on the table, our sinful nature wants to marginalize it, water it down, or ignore it. We always should strive for understanding, even when we think we already understand. The depths of God’s word never end.

I happened to have on hand a Free Grace Broadcaster from Mt. Zion Chapel Library. Chapel Library is a marvelous ministry, offered free to one and all. You can read online, or order a hard copy to be mailed to you for free. Yes, free. Their monthly magazine is based on one topic each month and contains essays from old-timey theologians and pastors of the past on that topic. In this Idolatry edition I found so much to bookmark and ponder and I’d only read 3 of the essays yet!

I constantly think on these things. I ask myself- is my blog my idol? Is my comfort an idol? Is my apartment and idol? I must always be vigilant. I’d read a startling thought in Spurstowe’s book “The Wiles of Satan.” One of satan’s strategies is to tempt us. We know that. But an even wilier strategy is to “cease to tempt, or to feign flight.” Have you ever thought of that? It’s to provoke our pride. We SEEM to have won the battle. We think, ‘Oh great, I’ve got this temptation licked! I got the victory of that sin!’ But no. Just as we release our guard, satan comes back! (Luke 4:13).

Within this Free Grace Broadcaster issue are so many nuggets, which I will share. Here is the link to the entire pamphlet if you care to read it online.

Martyn Lloyd Jones preached “Keep Yourself from Idols,” verse from 1 John 5:21. His was one of the articles in the pamphlet.

“Let me, therefore, put this in the form of three propositions. The first is that the greatest enemy that confronts us in the spiritual life is the worshipping of idols. The greatest danger confronting us all is not a matter of deeds or of actions, but of idolatry… What is idolatry? Well, an idol can be defined most simply in this way: an idol is anything in our lives that occupies the place that should be occupied by God alone…Anything that holds a controlling position in my life is an idol.”

“Of course, an idol may indeed be an actual idol. … idolatry may consist of having false notions of God. If I am worshipping my own idea of God and not the true and living God, that is idolatry… But let me go on to point out that idolatry can take many other forms. It is possible for us to worship our religion instead of worshipping God.”

“It is possible for us to worship not only our own religion but our own church, our own communion, our own religious body, our own particular community, our own particular sect, our own particular point of view—these are the things we may be worshipping.”


In this next excerpt on Idolatry, from “Soul Idolatry Excludes Men out of Heaven,” in The Works of David Clarkson, Vol. II. Clarkson (c. 1621-1686) we read that was a Puritan preacher, colleague of John Owen, and successor to Owen’s pulpit. Misunderstanding who God is can be idolatry:

“If either you do not think of God or think otherwise of Him than He is—think Him all mercy, not minding His justice; think Him all pity and compassion, not minding His purity and holiness; think of His faithfulness in performing promises, not at all minding His truth in execution of threatenings; think Him all love, not regarding His sovereignty—this is to set up an idol instead of God. Thinking otherwise of God than He has revealed Himself or minding other things as much or more than God is idolatry.” –end Clarkson


Charles Spurgeon notes that idols are not merely graven images but can be philosophies and concepts. Even though he wrote this in 1874, his warning is fresh today.

“I would say to you, beloved, in closing my observations upon this point: in the matter of your faith, be sure to keep yourselves from the idol of the hour. Some of us have lived long enough to see the world’s idols altered any number of times. Just now, in some professedly Christian churches, the idol is “intellectualism,” “culture,” “modern thought.” Whatever name it bears, it has no right to be in a Christian church, for it believes very little that appertains to Christ.”

…[T]he minister who goes into a pulpit and addresses people when he knows that he does not believe any of the doctrines that are dearer to them than their own lives. Yet, the moment the congregant is called to account for his unbelief, he cries out, “Persecution! Persecution! Bigotry! Bigotry!” A burglar, if I found him outside my bedroom door and held him till the policeman came, might consider me to be very bigoted because I did not care to have my property stolen by him and because I interfered with his liberty. So, in like manner, I am called bigoted because I will not allow a man to come and assail from my own pulpit the truths which are dearer to me than my life.”

“Believe me, my brethren, that the Church of Christ, if not the world, shall yet learn that the highest culture is a heart that is cultivated by divine grace; that the truest science is…Jesus Christ and Him crucified; and that the greatest thought and the deepest of all metaphysics are found at the foot of the cross; and that the men who will keep on simply and earnestly preaching the old-fashioned gospel, and the people who will stand fast in the old paths are they who will most certainly win the victory.” –end Spurgeon


John Calvin, in his The Institutes of the Christian Religion, famously said that the heart and mind of man is “a perpetual forge of idols.” (1:11.45) This has often been translated as an “factory of idols.”

We create idols for ourselves when we’re not paying attention. We create idols for ourselves when we are paying attention. We create idols for ourselves when we are asleep. We create idols for ourselves when we are awake. MLJ wrote of the 1 John 5:21 verse (Keep yourselves from idols), that those were very likely the last words John wrote. He said the point cannot be proved, but if those were the last or nearly last words John wrote, we must pay even closer attention, saying,

“The last words of all people are important, but the last words of great people are of exceptional importance, and the last words of an apostle of the Lord Jesus Christ are of supreme importance…”

Keep. Yourselves. From. Idols.