Few Questions to See if Your Phone is an Idol
I have been imagining that where I am giving more time is taking most time of my life and Idiscovered that mobile is taking my most of the time.
Suppose everything I do with my phone is about Jesus, but has it become
an idol? Maybe, as I do, we need these 4 questions we can ask ourself to see if
our phone is an idol.
Idolatry is a sin. It’s the second of the ten commandments and one that
God takes four whole verses to explain.
“You shall have no other gods before Me. You shall not make for
yourself a carved image—any likeness of anything that is in
heaven above, or that is in the earth beneath, or
that is in the water under the earth; you shall not bow
down to them nor serve them. For I, the Lord your
God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon
the children to the third and fourth generations of those who hate
Me, but showing mercy to thousands, to those who love Me and keep My
commandments.” Exodus 20:3-6
In the New
Testament:
1 John 5:21 tells us to keep ourselves from idols.
1 Corinthians 10:14 tells us
to flee from idolatry, and
Colossians 3:5 tells us
to put idolatry to death.
In fact, the
254 instances of the word “idols” in the Bible are mentioned, and it was the number one cause for God’s
judgment of His own chosen people (Israel).
Now, when we
think about idols, a lot of us think about those old statues people worshipped
in Bible times. But Christians now are not in
any danger of worshipping Molech, Baal, and Ashtoreth.
No, the danger
for us has more to do with placing our desires, pursuits, and attentions on
things other than our God. It was called Modern
Idolatry. Meeting Needs Without God. In it,
there were four categories of needs that people meet either with or with out God. Those categories form the basis of the questions here.
Question 1: What is the
focus of your life/time?
1.Does your phone occupy a large portion of your time?
2.Do you check it even before you greet the Lord and
thank Him for a brand-new day?
3.When you are not sleeping or working, do you find
yourself scrolling and scrolling, your phone never far from your fingers?
4.When you put it away, do you find yourself stressed
to be apart from it?
5. Is it sometimes difficult to pull your mind away from
your phone to do other things?
6.Are you surprised to find big chunks have time have
passed with nothing really accomplished except looking at your phone?
7.Even if everything you are doing on your phone is
godly and even ABOUT God, are you paying as much attention TO God as you are to
your phone?
(SERIOUS QUESTION SHOULD BE ANSWERED TO SELF TO KNOW OUR CONDITIONS)
Question 2: Where does
your comfort come from?
When you’re sad or upset, do you search for solace in your phone? Does
it provide an escape from the real world, a place to numb your mind from the
physical or mental pain you might be going through? Do you feel better when you
are on your phone than you do without it? Has your phone become an immediate
“quick fix” to anxiety or discomfort when time in prayer and worship might take
a little more time and effort (but be of real help instead of a cheap
substitute)?
Question 3: How do you
feel connected/like you belong?
When you feel lonely or disconnected, do you reach for your phone? Does
time on social media posting, commenting, and liking posts fill your need for
fellowship? Does it make you feel important/loved when others like or share
your posts? Are you seeking to fill a deep void of loneliness and connection
that only God can fill (because that is what we are designed to be filled
with)? Note: This is not to say that you cannot have Christian fellowship
online. This is to point out the times when we use it as a substitute for
connecting with God.
Question 4: Who/what
provides your guidance?
When you have a question about what to do in your life, is “pray and
wait for God to answer” your strategy? Or is your first response to post a
question on social media or message other Christians to give you advice? Are
there other ways you look for guidance online? Do you allow anything other than
God to speak over your life?
The Solution If Your Phone
Has Become an Idol
If you are like me, the answers to more than a few of those questions
brought a ping of conviction. While phones are a great resource to keep us up
to date with what is going on in the world and connected with other Christians,
it can be a problem if we are using it too much or to meet the needs that God
is supposed to be meeting for us.
So, if our phones have become our idols, what should
we do now? Charles Spurgeon had a sermon about idolatry in 1891. It’s
called Three Decisive Steps. In it, he details the three things
we can do to get out from under the sin of idolatry.
Do not make
excuses. Tell God that you have sinned in making your phone an idol and that
you are sorry. Cry out to Him and beg Him to help you not to do it anymore.
Then believe and trust God that He will help you.
Step 2: Prepare Your Heart
Declare your decision and intention not to allow your phone to be your
idol anymore. Settle it not just in the action of refraining from using it as
much but in actively acknowledging that your phone doesn’t actually meet your
needs at all. Think back on all the times you came away from your phone still
feeling sad, still unsure of what to do, and still feeling lonely – but with
hours of time wasted and nothing accomplished.
Step 3: Serve God Alone
It’s not enough to turn away from your phone if you will use other
things to meet those same needs instead. Turn to God with your whole heart!
Spend time with God, allow Him to be your comfort and connection, and seek Him
for His guidance.
Your Phone is an Idol If
It Comes Before God
Idolatry is no small thing to God. It is not something to take lightly
and must be dealt with when God brings it to our attention. Cell phones can be
useful tools, but if we are using them too much or as a substitute for time and
attention to God, we must repent, get our hearts right, and serve God alone.
WHEN JESUS RETURNS TO TAKE HIS PEOPLE AND HE FINSS US PLAYING WITH PHONE
THEN WHAT WOULD HAPPEN?
Let us give more time of 24 hours of our day to God
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