Isaiah 46: Little Gods
Monday, March 18, 2019
![baal[1]](https://thenoontimes.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/baal1.jpg?w=190&h=244)
Who are these demons who haunt us and how do we recognize the fact that they govern our lives?
They must be borne up on shoulders, carried as burdens by the weary. When we find ourselves enslaved to a custom or habit that exhausts and does not edify us, it is time to call out these little gods.
They stoop and bow down together; unable to save those who bear them, they go into captivity. When we realize that we are drained of energy and that the structure we believed in has abandoned us, it is time to put an end to the demands of the little gods.
Although they cry out it does not answer; it delivers no one from distress. When all that we relied upon has taken our life force and has disappeared into nothingness, it is time to amend our ways and turn our allegiance to the Living God who saves.
Remember this and be firm, bear it well in mind, you rebels; remember the former things, those long ago . . . And so as we continue in our Lenten journey, what do we do to shed our faith in these little idols?
I am God, there is no other; I am God, there is none like me. We turn to God who has loved us despite our folly in abandoning him, and we see that God has always been beside us . . . even when we were blind to him. We hear the voice of God calling to us and we know that this voice has been guiding us . . . even when we could not hear him. We see the works of God in the many little graces and in the enormous saving actions he has granted us, and we realize God has loved us all through our comings and goings . . . even when we have ignored and even reviled him.
I am bringing on my justice, it is not far off, my salvation will not tarry . . .
We have a clear choice before us today. We can muddle along with our little gods or we can choose to follow the Living God. St. Paul writes to the Romans: Our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed; the night is advanced, the day is at hand. Let us then throw off the works of darkness [and] put on the armor of light; let us conduct ourselves properly as in the day. (Romans 13:11-13)
Psalm 27 is one of my favorites and it reminds us simply of this: The Lord is my light and my help; whom shall I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life; before whom shall I shrink?
If we are too afraid of our little gods to turn them out of the temple of our lives, we turn to God for strength. If we fear that the Living God has tired of our constant wandering and will not welcome us home, we need only remember the many promises the Living God has kept, and the savior he has sent to redeem us all.
A re-post from March 19, 2012.
Image from: http://willcookson.wordpress.com/2011/03/23/review-bibles-buried-secrets-did-god-have-a-wife/