In the first command God gave, he revealed himself as the God who stands alone. There is no God besides him, and he will not accept people worshiping any “gods” besides him.
In the second command, God reveals something else about himself: He is a God that cannot be shaped.
He commanded the Israelites,
You shall not make for yourself an image in the form of anything in heaven above or on the earth beneath or in the waters below.
You shall not bow down to them or worship them. (Exodus 20:4-5)
The idea is two-fold.
Number one, we are to worship the Creator, not created things.
In Isaiah 44, God mocks those who would worship created things, especially things they created with their own hands.
They cut down a tree, and with half of the wood they heat their houses and cook their food, and with the other half, they make an idol and fall down and worship it, praying “Save me. You’re my god.”
In verse 19, God says,
No one stops to think, no one has the knowledge or understanding to say,
“Half of it I used for fuel; I even baked bread over its coals, I roasted meat and I ate. Shall I make a detestable thing from what is left? Shall I bow down to a block of wood?” (Isaiah 44:19)
In Romans 1, Paul talks about how people stopped worshiping the true God and started worshiping images made to look like humans, animals, or reptiles.
In doing so, Paul said,
They exchanged the truth about God for a lie, and worshiped and served created things rather than the Creator—who is forever praised. (Romans 1:25)
So God makes it very clear. Don’t worship created things. Only one person deserves our worship, our Creator.
In the old days, worshiping created things often meant worshiping the sun, or moon, or idols.
These days it might mean worshiping money, or our car, or our possessions.
What dominates your thought life? What do you think about as soon as you wake up? What do you think about as you go to sleep?
Whatever dominates your thoughts, that’s your god.
But the other idea God is trying to get across in this second command is, “I am not a God that you can shape.”
Of course this means that we shouldn’t make idols and worship them as if they were gods.
But I think it goes beyond that.
God demands that we recognize him as he is, not as we want him to be.
What does that mean practically?
Well, for example, a lot of people like to think of God as a God of love.
“Oh yes, God loves me. He accepts me. He loves everyone.”
That’s true. But how many people like to think of God as a God of justice?
How many people like to think of God as a holy God who must punish evil?
How many people like to accept the fact that there are people who will go to hell because they won’t put their faith in Jesus Christ?
Most people don’t.
Honestly, I don’t like the idea of hell. I’d like to think that everyone would go to heaven.
But I can’t just shape God to make him as I wish. He is holy. He cannot tolerate sin.
And because of that, there are people who will go to hell.
Not because God isn’t love. But because God is holy and cannot just let sin go unpunished.
Other people try to shape God in other ways.
They almost see God as their personal servant. They believe if they just have enough faith, God has to give them whatever they wish. Money. A Mercedez Benz. A mansion. Whatever.
Or they believe that if they’re sick, but they have enough faith, God has to heal them.
But God cannot be coerced. He is sovereign. We are not.
And yet, so many people don’t want to see God that way. Instead, they try to control him.
They try to bend God to their will, instead of bending themselves to God’s will.
But in trying to control God, they’re not worshiping God; they’re making themselves God. And God won’t accept that.
How do you see God?
Do you see God as how you want to see him?
Do you try to shape him into the image you want?
Or do you worship him as he has revealed himself? Do you worship him as he truly is?
God won’t accept anything else.
