THE
SECOND
COMMANDMENT
"Thou
shalt not make unto thee any graven image, or any likeness of anything
that is in the heavens above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that
is in the water under the earth:
"Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them: for I the
Eternal thy God am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers
upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate
Me; "And shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love Me, and keep
My commandments." (Exodus 20:4-6)
Obviously, the First and Second Commandments directly
overlap.
The most blatant method of
breaking the First Commandment is by also breaking the second! Pagan races
down through history have done precisely that.
From the ancient Egyptian,
Babylonian, Greek and Roman monuments comes a "wealth" of pagan
idolatry in the form of obelisks, temples, bas-reliefs, icons, statuaries
and idols in an amazing number of forms.
Not only did these ancient
pagans make representations of everything they could imagine from "the
heavens above," "the earth beneath" and the "waters
under the earth," but they ascribed enormous human, physical appetites
to their "gods." and wallowed in a veritable sea of ignorance,
blind superstition and fear as they "served" their imaginary
"gods."
Ancient temples and idols depicted
the "host of the heavens," which God directly commands is not
to be worshipped, as the "gods" of the ancient Babylonians,
Assyrians and other nations.
Frequently, the appearance
of cherubim was graven by the hand of man on the walls and entrances
of palaces of kings.
The famed "winged bulls
of Bashan" and the man-headed, eagle-winged, lionlike bodies with
oxen's feet that decorated the entrance to Sargon's palace and the palaces
of Asshur-bannipal and Asher-nasirpal are cases in point.
The eagle-headed men's bodies,
the lion's body with a man's head (the Sphinx) of Egyptian monuments and
many of those in Greece and Rome are further evidence of the blatant worship
of "graven images" which represented the "host of heaven."
Satan the devil is called "the
cherub that covereth." Cherubim are clearly defined in Ezekiel 1
and Ezekiel 10 as having four appearances; that of a man, a lion, an eagle
and an ox.
Pagan races have tended to
idolize these four, and even to mix them together!
Even today, the national symbols
of many nations
include eagles (Imperial
Germany, the United States, Mexico, etc.) or lions (Great Britain).
And even civic clubs, sports teams and other associations call themselves
by the names of the principal types of animals and birds.
By applying your mind to it
for a few moments, you can see dozens of other areas where nations of
the world have flagrantly broken the Second Commandment.
Of course, some who profess
to be "Christian," and who nevertheless have little idols about
the house, on the dashboard of their automobile, or look to various figurines
in their churches and cathedrals, will argue it is not the statue or the
figurine to which they look, but what it represents!
This is the flimsiest of all
possible excuses, however, for it is the very purpose for which
the idol is made!
Even the pagan Babylonians,
Egyptians and Greeks had sense enough to know that the idol itself
was not the "god" they were worshipping, but that the idol
merely represented that "god."
One of the greatest controversies
of all history, which split the ancient Roman Catholic Church right down
the middle, and formed the Greek Orthodox Church, was the argument over
the efficacy of idols, meaning a separate statuary and sculptures
of "saints," as opposed to icons, which are partially
raised figures in bas-relief.
The famous "iconoclastic
controversy" of history is easily researched, and when one is spoken
of as breaking with tradition he is called "iconoclastic." ("Clas"
means to cleave, to rupture, shatter or to break; thus to break
an icon was "an iconoclast.")
The obvious thrust of the Second
Commandment is that "images" were not to be made for the
purpose of worship!
However, a simple amount of
research will prove that Almighty God Himself approved the use
of various figures and representations of cherubim as a part of the tabernacle
in the wilderness, and the temple of God!
The great difference is
that wherein God allowed Moses and the children of Israel to decorate
the tabernacle in the wilderness with the figures of cherubim, and ordered
Moses to hold a brazen serpent aloft to stop a plague of snakes, it was
authorized of God, and done for the purposes of God, and not as
a representation of "God" or something to be worshipped.
Some modern cults have even
eschewed photographs, and many a pagan tribe believes there is
something of "magic" or "witchcraft" in the taking
of pictures!
But a picture is not a
"graven image" for the purpose of worship, and is certainly
not a breaking of the Second Commandment!
All that I have said concerning
pagan nations of the world in relationship to the First Commandment applies
equally to the second. The two are closely intertwined.
If the ancient races of Babylon,
Egypt, Greece and Rome had accepted the knowledge of the true God,
and had not bowed before their hundreds of variations of "graven
images," all of world history would have been dramatically different.
Even today, major oriental
religions bow before graven images. Buddhists have their various forms
of Buddha, and the religions of Nepal, Thailand, India, Bangladesh, Japan
and China, many nations in Africa and the whole Catholic world regularly
go through rituals in various forms of church services beneath the
statuary of their various prophets, "gods" and saints.
God wants His children to look
at our beautiful earth, all of the fabulously lovely things upon it, such
as the breathtaking beauty of verdant pastures and forest lands, awesome
sunsets, lovely carpets of wild flowers in the spring, inspiring living
creatures such as the great whales, the beautiful animals of earth (and
what is more beautiful than a herd of Thompson's gazelles leaping gracefully
in flight?) and to see in all of these things the handiwork
of God!
To the Eternal Creator, it
is the utterest and most abysmal form of gross stupidity for mankind
to turn his back on the breathtaking and awesome beauty all around him,
chisel out a leering, ugly face from a block of stone and then bow down
before it and call it "god."
The Creator God, who gave man
the mind, the ability to use his muscles in forming and shaping
that stone, and who made the rock itself asks a simple and yet
a profound question: "Who would not fear thee, O King of nations?
For to thee doth it appertain: for as much as among all the wise men of
the nations, and in all their kingdoms, there is none like unto thee.
"But they are altogether
brutish and foolish: the stock is a doctrine of vanities ['stock' means
idol].
"Silver spread into plates
is brought from Tarshish, and gold from Uphaz, the work of the workman,
and of the hands of the founder: blue and purple is their clothing: they
are the work of cunning men.
"But the Eternal is the
true God, He is the Living God, and an everlasting King: at His wrath
the earth shall tremble, and the nations shall not be able to abide His
indignation.
"Thus shall ye say unto
them, the gods that have not made the heavens and the earth, even they
shall perish from the earth, and from under these heavens.
"He hath made the earth
by His power, He hath established the world by His wisdom, and hath stretched
out the heavens by His discretion.
"When He utters His voice,
there is a multitude of waters in the heavens, and He causeth the vapors
to ascend from the ends of the earth; He maketh lightnings with rain,
and bringeth forth the wind out of His treasures.
"Every man is brutish
in his knowledge: every founder [worker in metals] is confounded by the
graven image:
for his molten image is falsehood.
and there is no breath in them.
"They are vanity, and
the work of errors: in the time of their visitation they shall perish.
"The portion of Jacob
[God] is not like them: for He is the former of all things; and
Israel is the rod of His inheritance: the Eternal of Hosts is His name"!
(Jeremiah 10:7-16).
Again, what is wrong with
this beautiful Second Commandment? What is so burdensome, so harsh and
"legalistic" about the Eternal God who designed our very bodies,
gives us every breath and every beat of our hearts, saying we should worship
Him and Him alone, instead of forming an ugly image with
our own hands, turning around and prostrating ourselves before it and
saying "that is god"?
Perhaps most churchgoing professing
Christians would say they are not guilty of worshipping "graven images,"
and, hopefully, this is so. However, remember how the two commandments
overlap - and remember that worshipping the things which our
hands manufacture, meaning materialism, can come very close
to worshipping "graven images."
It is not "difficult,"
or in any way rigorous or harsh, to KEEP the Second Commandment of God!
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of God, International All rights reserved
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