{1 Kings 18:36-37; ESV}
And at the time of the offering of the oblation, Elijah the prophet came near and said, “O Lord, God of Abraham, Isaac, and Israel, let it be known this day that you are God in Israel, and that I am your servant, and that I have done all these things at your word. Answer me, O Lord, answer me, that this people may know that you, O Lord, are God, and that you have turned their hearts back.”
It is easy to give our hearts away.
Many of us do it without thinking. It is part of our culture.
We are encouraged to give our hearts away to all sorts of things.
This reality is seen in the die hard Denver Bronco fan who says, “I bleed orange and blue.”
It is seen in devoted fisherman who wears the shirt, “Fishing is life, the rest is just details.”
It is seen in the patriotic veteran who declares, “I regret that I only have one life to give to my country.”
It is seen in the love struck young man who tells the girl of his dreams, “I give you my heart.”
None of these things are necessarily bad.
The problem is that each one has the potential to become the most important thing in our lives.
Idols are often good things that we have given our hearts to.
I know we don’t often think that we have an idol problem. We don’t have statutes of wood, silver, or even gold that we bow down to and worship. Christians living in the West believe they are much too sophisticated to do something so silly.
It is easy for us to talk about how foolish these ancient Israelites were to give their hearts to idols. We see ourselves as much smarter. After all, we would never worship something that we had created with our own two hands. Our education has taught us that these things have no power.
In spite of this reality, if we would take a little time to examine our hearts, we would discover that we are not very different than this ancient people. We too worship equally worthless things.
Part of the Gospel is the declaration that even though we have given our hearts to inferior things, God still loves us and longs for us to return to Him.
In 1 Kings we are told that Elijah proclaimed to the crowd that God was the One turning their hearts back to Him.
He was the One calling people to Himself.
They weren’t looking for God.
They weren’t loving God.
But God was calling to them!
God continues to call to us. He still desires that we give Him our hearts.
We have guilt because of our sin. God is calling to us to return to Him.
We are discontent with life. God is calling to us to follow Him.
We experience constant pain. God is calling to us to find hope in Him.
We believe we are worthless. God is calling to us to discover our purpose in Him.
No matter who we are, no matter where we have gone, and no matter what we have done, God loves us. He wants our hearts!
God uses the guilt, discontentment, pain, and worthlessness to get our attention. He wants us to see how fake our idols are and the great love He has for us.
Think about the events surrounding Elijah’s challenge to the prophets of Baal. For three years it hadn’t rained in Israel. This was the mother of all droughts.
Don’t you think that many people in Israel experienced pain because of these circumstances?
Hunger and thirst couldn’t ever be quenched because there just wasn’t enough food and water.
It took these difficult circumstances for the people to begin to question the power of Baal and Asherah and to seek the powerful God of their ancestors.
God had to tear down their delusions before they would be ready to love Him.
When it was all said and done and the divine fire had consumed the sacrifice that Elijah had presented, God ordered the death of the false prophets of Baal. These men had to be destroyed if Israel was going to have a hope of being free.
This is where many of us are weak.
We have heard God’s call and realize the powerlessness of the “idols” in our lives.
The problem is that we are not willing to do whatever it takes to eradicate them from our hearts. We allow them to continue to live there. This enables them to continue to plague us and prevent us from truly giving God our hearts.
In order to be free we must carry out the death sentence of our idols. God will not exterminate them for us.
God desires for us to be part of His family and He is calling us to join Him.
We have to make a choice: we are going to give our hearts to God or are we going to continue to serve our little puny idols?
Even today we must answer the call Elijah gave to Israel: “How long will you go limping between two different opinions? If the Lord is God, follow him; but if Baal, then follow him.” (1 Kings 18:21; ESV)
Who are you going to follow?