In short, is origami more important to you than God?
Before you laugh and run away, I want you to think for a moment. What if, instead of "origami", there was a blank? In that blank, you could put anything: sports, school, popularity, friends, etc. Choose some activity that you find yourself spending a good deal of time on (yes, even instagram). Reread that paragraph, inserting whatever that activity is wherever you see origami (for example, are you always playing on your phone instead of fellowshipping with Christian friends and with God?).
Feel convicted yet? If not, pick another activity. Once you've gone through about ten and answered yes to each question, you've probably got enough evidence to move on.
Here's the thing. We often like to think of idolatry as people bowing down before some creepy carved image. While I'm sure this happens, for the most part, none of us physically bow to anything. And if someone asked whom we worship, we would say, without missing a beat, that we worship God.
But do we understand worship? It means that all the glory and all the focus goes to God. It means that God comes before all else. "You shall have no other gods before me (Exodus 20:3)." The first commandment. That means that nothing, NOTHING, comes before God.
One morning in Sunday School, my small group was discussing idolatry. We were asked to list things that could be classified as idols. Our answers came quickly: sports, grades, looks, friends, relationships, money, job. We kept going easily, ranging from family to serving at church to anything. Finally, I stopped the discussion. I proposed to the group that we could literally define anything as an idol if it came between us and God...even something as simple as origami. The joke stuck, and I hope the point did too.
Yes, it became an inside joke for the group to laugh about the rest of the day. But it really made me think. I'd said it without much thought, but since, I've realized how true it is.
Time is precious. We all understand that. So we make priorities (have to sleep, eat, brush teeth, go to school/work, etc.). Those priorities help us figure out where to spend our time.
But we get so caught up in the "essentials" (and yes, still brush your teeth) that, when we're done, we really just want some "me time", time for us to chill and do whatever we want. And yes, time for relaxation is important. But God is more so. He needs to be high enough on our priority list that we physically cannot proceed with our day unless we have "made time" for the One Who made time. I really like this quote from Martin Luther (and even more I wish I could live it out):

Wow. I mean, wow. Chew on that for a second. Instead of doing origami (or whatever more important thing he had to do), Luther determined that obtaining God's wisdom and blessing and peace for the day was far more important and necessary than whatever he had to do.
Do you find yourself often choosing origami over God? To put anything before God is to commit the sin of idolatry. Does checking Facebook instead of having quiet time with God count as sin? It can. But so can spending more time serving God at church, if you allow it to take higher priority. It's a sin we easily ignore, but it is one we must confront.
So I urge you: Set aside ten minutes a day. Dedicate those minutes to God. Nothing else is on. Not your phone, not YouTube, not your calendar, nothing. I know you have ten minutes floating around somewhere between your instagram checking.
And don't spend another second in the idolatry of origami.
No comments:
Post a Comment