Hezekiah is affirmed in Scripture as doing “what was right
in the Lord’s sight” (2 Kings 18:3). The next verse details what Hezekiah did:
“He removed the high places, shattered the sacred pillars and cut down the
Asherah poles. He broke into pieces the bronze snake that Moses made, for the
Israelites burned incense to it up to that time” (2 Kings 18:4).
Surely people understood a strong, spiritual leader
removing the idols (the high places and the Asherah poles) that grabbed the
hearts of the people and stole worship from the Lord. They would expect their
spiritual leader to insist they stop worshiping other gods. But what Hezekiah
did next must have been really unexpected and really controversial. He broke
into pieces the bronze snake Moses made—intentionally. Not by accident. Not “I
was carrying it and it fell.” To break bronze takes some effort.
Eliminating pagan idols is one thing, but “that was the
snake Moses made!” It was the bronze snake God told Moses to make, the one
people looked at to be delivered from their snakebites (Numbers 21).
Hezekiah broke the snake because the people were burning
incense to it. They were worshiping a bronze snake. Tools for transformation
can become objects of worship. In our sinfulness, we can make an idol of just
about anything. In our sinfulness, we tend to make idols of things that are
important to us. Thus, a bronze snake that God used to bring healing, held by
the leader of God’s people during their liberation from slavery, became an
object of worship.
Today is not altogether different. God’s people still
struggle with taking tools for transformation and making them objects of
worship. Here are three common idols in churches:
1. The Place
Because the Lord does a great work in the hearts of His
people when they gather, the places of gathering can move from a tool for
transformation to an object of worship. Thus, if a leader mentions
“relocation,” the leader is essentially threatening to cut a bronze snake into
pieces. We must remind people that the building is not the church, that His
people are the church. God does not live in the place where we gather; He lives
in the hearts of His people.
2. The Past
Because the Lord worked in amazing ways in the past, the
past can become an idol where people long for the past more than they long for
the Lord. Being grateful for the past is one thing, and worshiping it is quite
another. If “former days” were great, they were only great because of the Lord.
3. The Programs
Because God changed lives through a program or event,
people can elevate a program to an unhealthy place. Programs can become ends in
themselves and not tools used in a church’s discipleship process. When this
happens, they exist as modern-day bronze snakes.
How can leaders be like Hezekiah?
How can
modern-day bronze snakes be removed?
Leaders must constantly point people to the person of
Jesus. Only He is worthy of our worship and only He can transform hearts. When
we help people see the greatness of Jesus, idols look less attractive. As we
turn our eyes on Jesus and look full in His wonderful face, the things of this
world (place, past and programs included) grow strangely dim in the light of
His glory and grace.
Leaders must also continually remind people of the purpose
of the church. (Yes, I know it is another “p,” but it fits.)
A church exists to
make disciples. When a church embraces the mission of making disciples,
programs are viewed as tools and not as ends in themselves. When making
disciples is what a church is all about, the place is rightly seen as merely a place
to help make disciples.
Though the Lord instructed the snake to be made, the Lord
affirmed its destruction.
And of Hezekiah, the Scripture says:
Hezekiah trusted in the Lord God of Israel; not
one of the kings of Judah was like him, either before him or after him (2 Kings
18:5)
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