
X-Ray Questions
David Powlison, Seeing with New Eyes (pg. 132-40)
1. What do you love? Hate?
2. What do you want, desire, crave, lust, and wish for? What desires do you serve and obey?
3. What do you seek, aim for, and pursue?
4. Where do you bank your hopes?
5. What do you fear? What do you not want? What do you tend to worry about?
6. What do you feel like doing?
7. What do you think you need? What are your 'felt needs'?
8. What are your plans, agendas, strategies, and intentions designed to accomplish?
9. Whatmakes you tick? What sun does your planet revolve around?What do you organize your
life around?
10. Where do you find refuge, safety, comfort, escape, pleasure, security?
11. What or whom do you trust?
12. Whose performance matters? On whose shoulders does the well-being of your world rest?Who can make it better,make it work, make it safe, make it successful?
13. Whom must you please? Whose opinion of you counts? From whom do you desire approval and fear rejection? Whose value system do you measure yourself against? In whose eyes are you living? Whose love and approval do you need?
14. Who are your role models? What kind of person do you think you ought to be or want to be?
15. On your deathbed, what would sum up your life as worthwhile? What gives your life meaning?
16. How do you define and weigh success and failure, right or wrong, desirable or undesirable, in any particular situation?
17. What wouldmake you feel rich, secure, prosperous? What must you get to make life sing?
18. What would bring you the greatest pleasure, happiness, and delight? The greatest pain or
misery?
19. Whose coming into political power would make everything better?
20. Whose victory or success wouldmake your life happy? How do you define victory and success?
21. What do you see as your rights? What do you feel entitled to?
22. In what situations do you feel pressured or tense? Confident and relaxed? When you are
pressured, where do you turn?What do you think about?What are your escapes? What do you
escape from?
23. What do you want to get out of life? What payoff do you seek out of the things you do?
24. What do you pray for?
25. What do you think aboutmost often? What preoccupies or obsesses you? In the morning, to
what does yourmind drift instinctively?
26. What do you talk about? What is important to you? What attitudes do you communicate?
27. How do you spend your time? What are your priorities?
28. What are your characteristic fantasies, either pleasurable or fearful? Daydreams? What do your night dreams revolve around?
29. What are the functional beliefs that control how you interpret your life and determine how you act?
30. What are your idols and false gods? In what do you place your trust, or set your hopes?What do you turn to or seek? Where do you take refuge?
31. How do you live for yourself?
32. How do you live as a slave of the devil?
33. How do you implicitly say, "If only..." (to get what you want, avoid what you don't want, keep what you have)?
34. What instinctively seems and feels right to you? What are your opinions, the things you feel
true?
35. Where do you find your identity? How do you define who you are?

I feel certain that I have only begun to barely see the tip of the iceberg when it comes to the issue of idolatry in scripture and in my own life. As I have looked at this issue, there is one thing that becomes absolutely certain; I'm riddled with sin. I know what you're thinking, "I'm glad he has realized that". Before you stop reading, let me clarify. It is one thing to be able to say that you are sinful; it is quite another to have your heart truly believe it. There is nothing like being humbled by the scriptures to realize that one has absolutely zero chance of becoming a son of the King apart from the redemptive work of Christ. I realize this post is long, but lets be honest, there just isn't any way to silver spoon significant and life altering truths of Scripture. To learn, I have always had to dig. I'll simply start the digging for you, but there is much more digging to be done. Also, I want to say that I am a student as well. I humbly submit my thoughts to you and I do think they are in accordance with scripture. However, I leave room for error and correction as God gives me understanding.
What is Idolatry?
When people think of idolatry, they typically think of
pitiful people bowing down to statues like golden calves offering the blood of
chickens and goats to somehow appease the god of sun, rain, or fertility. We
all probably remember reading about the Israelites worshipping the golden calf
while Moses was receiving the Ten Commandments in Exodus 32.
Idolatry is not just the worshipping of statues as a god.
It is the worshipping of anything as a god. Here are two definitions that are
excellent:
"An
idol is anything in your life that is so central to your life that you can't
have a meaningful life if you lose it." - Tim Keller
"Idolatry is taking a good thing, making it a
god thing and that's a bad thing." - Mark Driscoll
Idolatry
is ultimately a worship issue. We were and are created to be worshippers. We
will worship something. We can't fight that. The terrifying part is that our
heart is inclined to worship anything other than God. We will either worship
the uncreated, Sovereign, Omniscient and Holy God of the scriptures or we will
worship some created thing (an idol).
There is no possibility of us worshipping nothing.
When reading Exodus 20:1-17, we learn of the Ten
Commandments. Look closely at the first two commandments,
"You shall have no other gods before me. You shall not
make for yourself a carved image, or any likeness of anything that is in heaven
above, or that is in the earth beneath or that that is in the water under the
earth. You shall not bow down to them or serve them, for I the Lord your God am
a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children to the
third and the fourth generation of those who hate me, but showing steadfast
love to thousands of those who love me and keep my commandments."
The
very first two commandments are about Idolatry. Think about that. The very
first and most important issue closest to the heart of our Lord was for us to
love nothing more than Him. Martin Luther, the reformer, argued that if you
didn't break the first two commandments, then you wouldn't break the following
eight commandments. He argued that Idolatry is not a sin among many sins but it
is the sin
that underlines all other sins. Later, Jesus would reiterate this in the New
Testament in Matthew 22:36-40, and Mark 12:28-34. I find the Mark passage
fascinating because Jesus says that the man answered wisely.
"28 And one of the scribes came up and heard them
disputing with one another, and seeing that he answered them well, asked him,
"Which commandment is the most important of all?" 29 Jesus answered, "The most
important is, 'Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one. 30 And you shall love the Lord
your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind and
with all your strength.' 31 The second is this: 'You shall love your neighbor as
yourself.' There is no other commandment greater than these." 32 And the scribe said to him,
"You are right, Teacher. You have truly said that he is one, and there is
no other besides him. 33 And to love him with all the heart and with all the
understanding and with all the strength, and to love one's neighbor as oneself,
is much more than all whole burnt offerings and sacrifices." 34 And when Jesus saw that he
answered wisely, he said to him, "You are not far from the kingdom of
God." And after that no one dared to ask him any more questions."- Mark
12:28-34
What
was so wise about this man's response to Jesus? This man understood that burnt
offerings and sacrifices was not the ultimate evidence of authentic love for
his Lord. He understood that they were equivalent to works-righteousness, (an
effort to earn righteousness or God's acceptance through our own efforts and
good works) not as a response to a gracious God from a heart that longs to obey
and honor his Lord. This man sees a contrast between 'burnt offerings and
sacrifice' and 'love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your
soul and with all your mind and with all your strength . . .' He sees that to
love God with ALL your heart, soul, mind and strength should have a deeper
impact on us than just simply burning a sacrifice. This man seems to see that
Jesus cares about receiving authentic Worship from us, not just lip-service or
routine actions. Jesus seems to commend this man for seeing the difference and
realizing that Idolatry is a worship issue; it is the worship of something
other than God. Often, the things
we love are good things, but we must be careful that we don't begin to love
these things more than God.
Ultimately,
idolatry is enslavement to something we love. We love our family, friends,
health, wardrobe . . . all of which is in and of itself fine. It's good
things that become elevated for us to the point that they become gods. We end
up giving our time, our money, or lives and love to these things, which makes
us slaves to them.
Getting
Practical and Painful
Typically,
the way we make something an idol is we think of our fears (I'm afraid of being
poor, I'm afraid of being fat, I'm afraid of being lonely, I'm afraid of being
thought of as stupid or incompetent, I'm afraid of having lots of obligations
and duties, I'm afraid of being unappreciated, I'm afraid of losing the respect
of others) and we make those fears our 'personal hell'. In order to get out of
the concept of hell you have created, you need a savior. This savior is not Jesus. This savior
is an idol, a god you create. This idol, you perceive will save you from your
concept of hell, we will call a 'functional savior'.
For example:
- If
your hell is being fat and ugly: Your functional savior is a personal trainer,
a gym, a diet, a treadmill, and spending hours of time, money and energy to
counting calories . . . because you'll be happy if you're thin and beautiful.
- If
the fear of losing God's acceptance is my hell, then religion becomes your
functional savior. If I read my bible more, If I don't smoke, if I don't cuss,
if I am a good person, if I stop drinking, if I don't lie, if I don't watch bad
movies . . . then God will love me and He will save me.
Remember,
Idolatry is taking a good thing, making it a god thing and that's a bad thing.
These things can be good things. However, when they are worshipped as
god things . . . then they become bad things.
Mark
Driscoll, says this about Sports:
"Sporting events are idol gatherings. The stadium is a
temple. Great sacrifices have been made to create that temple. Those that come
in are nothing short of gods. We wear their names on the back of our shirts. We
cheer for them. Their photos are larger than life. That's idolatry. It's wrong
to worship someone or something other than God."
Remember,
sports isn't bad, it's the worship of sports that's bad. How many guys do you
know who sacrifice their time and money to engage for hours determining a
roster for a fantasy sports football league? How many times have you seen
people scream obscenities at a television with rage in their eyes over a missed
call or a decision by an official that person didn't like. When people mess
with our gods, we don't like it.
Bands: People dress and act like their
favorite bands. They make sacrifices to go to their shows and purchase their
products. They follow them from city to city. They raise their hands and praise
them as they sing.
Idolatry is taking a good thing, making it a god thing and that's a bad thing.
In
2009, Michael Jackson's funeral was held in Staples Arena in Los Angeles with
thousands of people. Millions more were watching via television around the
world. NBC's Brian Williams estimated that the memorial would be viewed
"in part or in all" by between 750 million to one billion people
around the world. His death is literally the death of an idol to many.
Occasionally the camera cut to a location and you could see people crying and
raising their hands in grief. Chants of, 'Michael, Michael, Michael' would occur between the different
celebrities who would take the stage and offer their worship to Michael. Those
that spoke would say things like, 'I will always love you. You will always
live in my heart. God must have needed you. You are the King. You were the
greatest entertainer that ever lived. You were a genius. You helped me through
aspects of my life.'
The only thing that wasn't said was. 'You are a god.' Clips of his music videos were
played and people would scream and reach out for the screen. People would cry
out for him. In the live concert video's that were shown Michael would stretch
out his arms as the song would end and he would enjoy the screaming fans
throwing their worship to him. Make no mistake. Michael was an idol. He was
worshipped like a god and he loved it. There is no King other than Jesus Christ
the King. He alone is worthy of our worship.
Idolatry
is taking a good thing, making it a god thing and that's a bad thing.
Mark
Driscoll does an excellent job explaining the next few examples:
Marriage: Single men and women who are
terrified of being lonely are constantly searching for a savior . . . a
boy/girl friend . . . a spouse or a pet that will save them from their
loneliness. Because once they have someone to love them, then they will be
happy.
"Guys, if you want to hurt the women you say you love
in your marriages or your dating relationships, it is very simple and easy to
do. Simply deify her {make her like a god}, make her give you joy, value,
meaning, significance, purpose, and encouragement. Put all of that divine
responsibility on her and watch her crumble under the weight of your unmet
expectations. Idolatry destroys the people we love the most." - Mark Driscoll
Idolatry
is taking a good thing, making it a god thing and that's a bad thing.
Sex:
"Sex is the number one religion in the world. We spend
more money on pornography than we do foreign aid in the United States. Just as
Christianity has three major denominational streams, Protestant, Catholic and
Orthodox; there are three major denominations in sexual sin idolatry: Gay,
Straight and Bi. It is their identity, they are evangelists for their causes
recruiting others to participate in their pagan worship acts of nudity and
sexuality. That's why when two people are dating and they go to bed together
that bed becomes an alter on which they are offering their bodies as living
sacrifices. People say, "We're just having sex, what's the big deal?"
That bed is an alter. That room is a temple. You are an idolater worshiping
created things rather than the creator God." - Mark Driscoll
Idolatry
is taking a good thing, making it a god thing and that's a bad thing.
Food:
"I recently saw an advertisement on the food network. It said, "coming up next a whole show on comfort food." When you're hurting you don't go to the Bible and pursue God, you go to the fridge. Some women put their finger down their throat to throw it all up because they worship the god of appearance and the god of food and those two gods are at odds with each other." - Mark Driscoll
Idolatry
is taking a good thing, making it a god thing and that's a bad thing.
So,
How do I fight Idol Worship in my Life?
1. Recognize Idols: We must see and
name our idols. If you can't see idols in your life, then you aren't looking
very hard. John Calvin, the theologian said, "The human heart is an idol
factory." Our
heart cannot be trusted. We need to recognize there is a sickness in us. Ask
yourself the following questions to help you see where the idols are in your
life.
The
following are questions to help you uncover your functional saviors:
1.
What
am I most afraid of?
2.
What
do I long for most passionately?
3.
Where
do I run for comfort?
4.
What
do I complain about most?
5.
What
angers me most?
6.
What
makes me happiest?
7.
How
do I explain myself to others?
8.
What
has caused me to be angry with God?
9.
What
do I brag about?
10. What do I want to have more than
anything else?
11. Who do I sacrifice the most for in
my life?
12. If I could change one thing in my
life what would it be?
13. Whose approval am I seeking?
14. What do I want to control/master?
15. What comfort do I treasure the
most?
Remember!
Idols tend to be good things that turn into god things, which makes them bad
things.
2. Repent: Confess to Jesus your false gods and break them. Acknowledge the idolatry in your life. Our hearts need to change. Repentance is not just something you preach it is first what you practice. The first requirement of the Gospel is repentance. Anyone who doesn't repent doesn't know the Gospel. Pray and ask God to forgive you of your idolatry. Be broken by your sin.
Our heart must be one that desires to be worshipers of God, NOT to be one that only desires to modify and change our behaviors. We need to displace sinful affections with deeper greater affections. We need to enjoy Christ, treasure Christ, and be satisfied in Christ . . . alone.
3. Replace: We have to replace our idol worship with authentic worship of Jesus. Everyone is a worshipper. The only question is who or what god will you worship? For a believer in Christ, Jesus alone is our Savior. He alone can save us. If we truly worship Him above all other gods, then we have our love, stability and significance in Jesus and not in other gods. We don't need 'functional saviors' because we have the real savior in Jesus. We can cast our fears on Him. Psalm 55:22 says, "Cast your cares on the LORD and he will sustain you; he will never let the righteous fall." 1 Peter 5: 6-7 says, "Humble yourselves, therefore, under God's mighty hand, that he may lift you up in due time. Cast all your anxiety on him because he cares for you." When our heart worships Jesus and we are no longer worshipping things, people, places, emotions . . . idols; only then can we be free to enjoy life and bare fruit in all aspects of our lives as worship to God. We give Jesus our idols and in return we receive something worthy of worship, something that can truly fulfill the desire our hearts have for worshipping something . . . He gives us Himself.
4. Rejoice: Through Jesus, idols are
exchanged for the real God, and works-righteousness is replaced with
transforming grace, thereby enabling us to worship as God created us to.
In closing, I think it is important to see our idolatry as God sees it. How wicked would it be to prefer a photograph of your spouse to having the real flesh and blood person of your spouse? How insulted and wounded would he/she be to know that a photograph or an idea of him/her is what you truly love? How wicked would it be to honor the achievements and architecture at the hands of men and malign the beauty of all creation at the hands of the one true God? How wicked would it be to worship something created (things, people, places, emotions) by God rather than God himself? God paints this idea beautifully in Isaiah 40:18-26,
"18 To whom then will you liken
God,
or what likeness compare with him?
19 An idol! A craftsman casts
it,
and a goldsmith overlays it with gold
and casts for it silver chains.
20 He who is too impoverished for
an offering
chooses wood that will not rot;
he seeks out a skillful
craftsman
to set up an idol that will not move.21 Do you not know? Do you not
hear? Has it not been told you from the beginning?
Have you not understood from
the foundations of the earth?
22 It is he who sits above the circle of the earth,
and
its inhabitants are like grasshoppers;
who stretches out the heavens like a
curtain,
and spreads them like a tent to dwell in;
23 who brings princes to
nothing,
and makes the rulers of the earth as emptiness. 24
Scarcely
are they planted, scarcely sown,
scarcely has their stem taken root in the earth,
when
he blows on them, and they wither, and the tempest carries them off like
stubble. 25 To whom then will you compare me,
that I should be like him?
says the Holy One.
26 Lift up your eyes on high and see:
who created these?
He who brings out their host by number,
calling them all by name,
by the
greatness of his might,
and because he is strong in power
not one is missing."
It is my prayer that we will be men and women who repent and truly love our Lord. I hope these thoughts help you process this important truth in Scripture.
Sincerely,
Craig
For
further study I highly recommend:
"Counterfeit Gods" by Tim Keller and a talk given by Mark Driscoll here.

Over the last several weeks we have been going though "How to Read the Bible" in our summer Gospel Classes. This has been a helpful study for our church as we have sought to accurately read and interpret the Bible so that we can find the person and work of Christ. Last night we looked at "Simple Hermeneutics" (which is defined in the study guide) but the basic definition is... the system of how to interpret the Bible. Our class was only an hour so we barely scratched the surface on this massive topic. Since I didn't want to leave anyone empty handed I have added some audio by Wayne Grudem on how to interpret the Bible (found on monergism.com). This is a 7 part series on this subject. Hope you take time to listen.
I recently found this article by Mark Driscoll. In the article he describes a process a leader can use to effectively make his or her idea into a reality. When you are planning for any type of project, it's important to ask your idea questions. You would be surprised how much more effective you'll be when you take the time to answer as many questions about your idea before you actually launch it.
I thought I'd share this process in hopes the leaders of Integrity Church would take the time to plan, prepare and see their good ideas to reality.
Change. Every leader wants it. And some are more effective at making it happen. In addition to God's grace, the following process has proven invaluable to me, as I have consciously used it for over a decade. I offer it in hopes of serving those who serve others.
Vision
At this phase, an idea emerges that seems worthwhile but the following questions need to be answered in order to determine its viability. In answering these questions, the input of the staff and deacons, as well as other selected people, will be very helpful to you.
1. What are the measurable outcome goals and do they correlate with the mission objective you are seeking to accomplish?
2. Is this idea best suited for your area of responsibility or should someone else be appointed to lead it since it best fits his or her ministry area?
Plan
At this phase, the idea and its goals are clarified in a detailed written proposal. The proposal could be presented to the staff and elders for approval. Answers to the following questions can provide details for the proposal, specifically details about what implementing the idea would require.
1. What is your biblical/theological justification for this ministry?
2. How long will this take to implement and what is the time line for the phases necessary to implement it?
3. Who will be responsible for it and how many hours will it require of them to launch and also oversee the ministry?
4. How much will it cost, both to launch and maintain?
5. How many volunteers will be needed and whom do you have in mind?
6. What facilities will it require?
7. What promotions will it require?
8. What type of people are you anticipating will attend and/or participate?
9. How will this require time and energy of the elders and deacons?
10. How might this compete with and/or negatively impact other ministries?
11. How can people pray for this ministry?
Implement
The idea has been justified, planned, and approved; it now needs to be launched as a reality. The plan needs to be executed and at this phase, the hard work begins in an effort to build momentum and make the idea a reality.
Manage
At this phase, the idea has become a new reality but shortly thereafter the ministry will likely lose momentum as the work becomes routine, the systems that were planned need to be upgraded for efficiency, and faithful people need to ensure the ministry continues forward and that the devoted people serving do not grow weary or lose heart.
In my limited experience in ministry I've seen this happen quite frequently. Perhaps we launch a new process for following up with first-time guest, or a new method for set-up/tear-down. It goes smoothly for the first couple months and then it begins to lose steam. The systems that you launch and manage have to be constantly upgraded and the glitches need to be corrected.
I like to relate "planting" new ministry's or beginning new ideas to a garden. In order for your garden to bear good vegetables, it needs to be watered, have insecticide, weeded, etc... or your garden will fail. The same is true with any new ministry that is launched. If you don't constantly "water" it. It will lose momentum and eventually fail.
Review
At the six-month and one-year marks of each ministry (as well as other designated times), the leader of that ministry must ensure that accurate and meaningful reviews are conducted to answer the following questions and determine if the ministry should continue, be changed, or cease.
1. Have you met your objectives?
2. Why or why not?
3. Should this ministry continue?
4. How can you improve?
5. What changes must be made?
-Jake Sherron
