Thinkingstuff said:
Really? That's all you got? Lets really take a look at the verses you quote here. Taken in context: "Or any likeness of anything that is in heaven above" So what is the heaven that he's talking about?
I honestly don't know what is so difficult about these verses that people stumble on. They are very simple. An idol is anything that comes between you and God.
In the OT the idols were more on the shelf:
In the NT the idols are more in the "self."
You can think about that for a while.
Here are some examples from the OT.
In Exodus Moses brought Israel out of Egypt. He went up Mount Sinai to receive the Law from the hand of God. When he came back down he saw the Israelites dancing naked around a golden calf made by Aaron himself. Study the text out. The Israelites had not left the worship of Jehovah. They had gotten impatient waiting for Moses and didn't know much about Jehovah. The molten calf they had made was Jehovah or represented him. It was an image or likeness of Jehovah. They danced around it and make a feast unto the LORD or unto Jehovah. This was breaking the commandment:
Exodus 20:4 Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing that is in heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water under the earth:
And it was breaking the following command about bowing down and worshiping it. They had made a graven image in the likeness of God. It was made from the earth beneath. It is not the only time an animal or some other object was used in the worship of Jehovah.
After Gideon was successful in his campaigns, he made an ephod, and Israel worshiped the ephod. The ephod took the place of Jehovah. It took their focus off of the oen and true God.
In the Book of Hosea, Hosea warns Israel about impending judgement about to come from Israel. Why? This time it is become Israel had acted like a prostitute and had gone after other gods, primarily Baal. Their religion had now become syncrestic. They were trying to worship Baal and Jehovah at the same time. Baal was a pagan Canaanite. Their sacrifices to Jehovah were empty and hollow. They were liturgical. There wasn't much meaning. They were void of meaning because their hearts were not right. This time they had made images of other gods. They were bowing down to other gods. They were worshiping other gods. They were still transgressing the commandment. They had made an image, were bowing down before it, and praying before it: whether they called it Baal or Jehovah made no difference. It was still wrong.
John 4:24 God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth.
In the heavens: Jeremiah speaks of the "Queen of Heaven," its worship, and condemns it. There is a Queen of Heaven that remains in the RCC to this day and is still worshiped 2,700 years after Jeremiah warned against doing so.
60 years after the death of Christ, John still had to give this warning:
1 John 5:21 Little children, keep yourselves from idols. Amen.