The One True God

In a city full of idols, Paul stood up and proclaimed that there is one true God (Acts 17).  And in our world today full of idols, we too must stand up and declare that there is one true God.  And this one true God stands far above the idols of our world.

  • The one true God is the Creator (v24).  The earth and sky, the sun, moon, and stars, every tree, every blade of grass, every animal, every person was made by God.  Compare God to the idols of our day – created things every one.  Wealth, material things, the newest gadget – all created things.  Will you live for, trust in, and seek your significance in the Creator or the created?
  • The one true God is the Lord (v24).  Over heaven and earth.  He reigns over all he has made.  He is the king.  He rules with unlimited power over his creation.  Compare God to our idols with limited power at best.  Wealth, stuff, popularity – all with limited power.  Will you live for, trust in, and seek your significance in the Lord of unlimited power or an idol of limited power?
  • The one true God is self-sufficient (v24-25).  He doesn’t need anything or anyone – to exist, to continue, to act.  Compare God to our idols that are all fading.  Not one will last forever.  Our idols rot, rust, and wear out.  They are lost, stolen, taxed.  Will you live for, trust in, and seek your significance in the self-sufficient God or a fading idol?
  • The one true God is the life-giver (v25).  He is the source of all – your life, your breath, your strength, your abilities, your wealth – all comes from God.  Compare God to our idols which are life-suckers.  They suck away our lives as we chase after them, pursue them, trust in them, only to be let down because they cannot satisfy us like we want them to.  Will you live for, trust in, and seek your significance in the Life-Giver or a life-sucker?
  • The one true God is sovereign (v26).  He is in control.  He determines when you will live and where.  Compare God to our idols which by and large we control, we manipulate.  Perhaps that is why we like them – but they are less than us, and can’t give us lasting significance.  Will you live for, trust in, and seek your significance in the One who is in control or an idol that we control?
  • Finally, the one true God desires a relationship with us (v27).  Ponder that.  This Creator and Lord who is self-sufficient, life-giving, and sovereign actually desires a relationship with us.  He wants us to seek him, to find him, to know him.  Compare this God with your idols which don’t care about you at all.  Your money doesn’t care about you.  Neither do your things, the newest gadget, the latest entertainment.  Will you live for, trust in, and seek your significance in the God who cares about you or an idol that couldn’t care less?

Perhaps Isaiah 46 sums it up best.  You can choose an idol that you must carry, or you can choose the one true God who will carry you.  Your choice.

A World Full of Idols

Athens was full of idols (Acts 17:16).  One writer of the day said there were 30,000 statues of gods and goddesses.  Quite remarkable, when there were only about 10,000 people.  It was a world full of idols.

America too is a world full of idols.  Not statues, but false gods aplenty.  An idol is what we live for, what we trust in.  It is the place where we seek significance and fulfillment.  And our streets are lined with idols like this.  Our media is filled with these kinds of idols.  Wealth, material things, sex, popularity, power, entertainment – all good things in the right context unless we live for them, trust in them, seek significance and fulfillment in them.  And many do.  We live in a world full of idols.

The people of Athens were obsessed with something new (v21).  Sounds like our country.  We are obsessed with the newest technological gadget, the latest movie, game, or book, the next fashion, the spirituality of tomorrow.  Only tomorrow it will be old.  Everything is quickly dated.  The new has become one more idol that we live for, trust in, and seek significance, fulfillment, and satisfaction in.  And like the other idols of our day, it never satisfies.  It leaves us empty, looking for something more.