TU’APULELULU MA’ASI 19, 2026
FAKAMAAU 3-5; SELEMAIA 2:10-13
Nothing is sadder than when we exchange worship and service of the Lord for one of an endless catalog of God-replacements.
‘Oku ‘ikai mo ha toe me’a fakaloloma ange ka ko ‘etau fakafetongi ‘a e hu mo e tauhi ki he ‘Otua ‘aki ‘a e ngaahi me’a fakamatelie kehekehe.
It is heartbreaking how blind and foolish we can be. It is sad to think of how we are often content to make bad moral bargains. It is hard to think about the times when we are willing to exchange God's good thing for the world's bad thing. It is sad to watch someone grab hold of a temporary pleasure while letting go of eternal gain. It is tough to see someone begin to think of the enemy's lies as trustworthy while doubting God's truth. It is clear that the drama of the human community and of human history is all about one thing: worship.
The most significant function of any human being is his capacity for worship. Every human being is a worshiper. I don't mean this in the formal, religious sense. The most irreligious person is a worshiper, because that's how God designed him. This worship capacity is meant to drive us to the Lord, to offer ourselves to him, and to find our identity, meaning, purpose, and rest in him. Being a worshiper means you will always give over the rule of your heart, the causal core of your personhood, to something. Whatever controls your heart will then shape your thoughts, desires, choices, words, and actions. Nothing is more life-dominating than worship.
The children of Israel were blessed to be chosen to be the people of God. God blessed them with his presence, his grace, and his love. He poured out his almighty power to deliver, provide for, guide, and protect them. He made a way for their sins to be forgiven. He gave them his wise and holy law so that they would know how to live. He exposed them to his glorious glory. Quite apart from what they deserved, he lavished these blessings on them. They were set apart from all the other nations on earth to be his children, his possession. It's hard to overstate the generosity of the blessing that God poured down on them. And in the display of his glory, God made it clear that there is no God like him. You might think that God had done so much for his children that they wouldn't even think of serving other gods. But then we come to one of the saddest verses in the Old Testament: "And their daughters they took to themselves for wives, and their own daughters they gave to their sons, and they served their gods" (Judg. 3:6). Let the sadness of these words grip you: "They served their gods." They turned their backs on the God of glory and grace (who had placed his love on them and led them into Canaan) for gods of wood and stone, completely lacking life, love, or power. This idolatry, the epicenter of sin, is the sad drama of the human condition, and it is the reason for the coming of the Messiah, Jesus. He came to rescue us from us, and to free us from the bondage of the idolatry of our own hearts in order to worship God and God alone.