I'll actually be speaking from
Exodus 24 and looking, not verse by verse or even chapter by chapter,
but at the next, the rest of those chapters in Exodus, Leviticus,
and the first few chapters in Numbers. But what we'll actually
read is Exodus 32, 1-6, having to do with the gold calf. So
please stand and we're going to read Exodus 32. verses 1 to
6, and as we continue our series of sermons on the second word. Exodus 32, 1 to 6. Now when the people saw Moses
delayed coming down from the mountain, the people gathered
together to Aaron and said to him, Come, make us gods that
shall go before us. For as for this Moses, the man
who brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we do not know
what has become of him. And Aaron said to them, Break
off the golden earrings which are in the ears of your wives,
your sons, and your daughters, and bring them to me. So all
the people broke off the golden earrings which were in their
ears and brought them to Aaron. And he received the gold from
their hand and he fashioned it with an engraving tool and made
a molten calf. Then they said, this is your
God, O Israel, that brought you out of the land of Egypt. So
when Aaron saw it, he built an altar before it. And Aaron made
a proclamation and said, tomorrow is a feast to the Lord. Then
they rose early on the next day, offered burnt offerings, and
brought peace offerings. And the people sat down to eat
and drink, and rose up to pray." Let's pray. Father, we thank
you for the wonderful privilege it is to come into your courts
with praise, to come the way that you have called us, to collect
together, to convocate with one another in the formal worship
in which you renewed covenant with us. in which, Lord God,
you give us the wonderful gifts that you offer us, glory, knowledge,
and life, in which we live our lives, we learn to live our lives
in antiphonal response to you, in proper dialogue to your sovereignty,
our response to it, and this pattern going back and forth
in the formal worship of the Church. We thank you, Lord God,
for commanding our performance of the songs and things that
we do today. And it is our delight to do so.
Bless us now, Lord God, as we attend to this portion of the
service by understanding your word. May your spirit teach us
things of Christ. In his name we ask it. Amen. Please be seated. I guess I'm here to begin with
today to speak in praise of no. The no we rejoice in. No is important. Remember years ago, John Lennon
was first attracted to Yoko Ono because he saw this art exhibit
that she had done. There was a ladder and at the
top of the ceiling in little tiny letters was the word, yes.
And you had to climb up the ladder and look at the word, yes. And
that really has sort of characterized a lot of history over the last
30 or 40 years. Our last president was elected
with the theme, yes, we can. Yes is a good thing. There are
good things about yeses, but there are also wonderful things
about no. And in the second word, as in
most of the Ten Commandments, what we have are a series of
no from God who is sovereign, from God who is the creator,
to us his creatures. He tells us what not to do. Now that in and of itself is
exceedingly significant for human existence, and we rejoice in
it. Because in particular, the second
word, but of course in all of God's knows to us, he declares
his sovereignty and authority over us, and he reminds us of
our temptation to desire sovereignty and authority over everyone else
in ourselves, as Tears for Fear is saying, everybody wants to
rule the world. Control is where it's at. God says, you will be
happy. You will be blessed. You will
rejoice if you attend to my no's. It is not all about yes's. It
is about a great deal of no's. And particularly when we consider
the formal worship of the church that's placed such a stress on
in the scriptures, and we'll look at that in just a minute.
Here particularly, the second word tells us no. Now the reading
we did today of the Ten Commandments is the version from Deuteronomy.
You'll notice some changes to what you have traditionally memorized. We used the King James Version
so it would be a little more familiar to you. But parts of
it weren't because the commandments change. And even though we recited
them in unison today, their application to us today is different than
they were in Deuteronomy 5 or in Exodus 20. There is an eternal
character of God that's reflected in the ten words, and they have
great significance, and they are of command to us, but they
are applied differently in different times. And this is certainly
true of, for instance, The fourth commandment addresses worship.
We'll look at the changes that happen there and the change that
happens with what we do now in worship being prefigured in Deuteronomy
5 based on the changes from Exodus 20. When we get there in a month
or two, we'll talk about that more. But it's to be understood
that these commands involve a great deal of no's. There's some positives.
Honor your father and your mother. six days you shall labor, okay,
but then there's no's that are primarily there. And in the second
word, God says in terms of our worship, no, don't do it a particular
way. In our Bible study, Bible study
on Thursday nights, which we hope to do lots of over the next
few years, both in Sunday school class and homes here at the church.
This week we're employing word studies. We spent a week or two
doing literary structural studies, and now we're doing word studies.
And if you've been here, as I've preached on the second word so
far, you'll know that two very important words are given to
us in this first know that God gives us in the second word.
You shall not make for yourself a graven or a carved image. Carved
image, two words in English, it's one word in Hebrew. And
this is the central command, that's why I've laid out the
structure the way I have, in terms of the grammatical structure
of what God is telling us. That's the central commandment
right there. And the idea is that He has used this same word
in the verb form earlier in the book of Exodus. It's not used
very much, this particular word, maybe 30 times or so in all the
Old Testament. Its previous use at Exodus, from
where this particular The verse first occurs in Exodus 20. But
prior to that, it's used to describe the tablets that God would inscribe
His ten words upon. And so if we're here listening
to this, if we've gone through knowing about that word and its
relationship to God's law as it comes forth from Sinai to
us, and we're sitting here on Sinai, and Moses brings back
a thing that says, don't replace this Ten words with pictures
and images will get the connection. It's talking here about things
that we are prone to want to substitute for God's Word. God's Word is what mediates between
us and Him, and ultimately it's His Word, the Lord Jesus Christ.
And we want other mediators. We want to paint things and carve
things and draw things, and we want to somehow get God's energy
in those things, and we want to worship through those things.
The second word here that's important is likeness. A likeness of anything. And this is a word used even
less, maybe 10, 12 times in the whole Old Testament. And it's
used most often, a number of times, in Deuteronomy 4, where
God's likeness is equated with the proclamation of who he is
to Moses, not his physical appearance. So with a double witness of two
very specific Hebrew terms, we see here that what God is telling
us is don't substitute Your ideas for worship, for my word and
the centrality of my word, the personal work of Jesus Christ
is mediated by the Holy Spirit and his word in worship. That's
the central commandment here. Don't do it the way you think
might be cool and jazzy and interesting, and that's what the purpose of
this commandment is. And the commandment, as we've
said, is very important to recognize. We're going to see it again today.
What God does to people that decide they want to do things
their way, they want to replace God's word with, very specifically,
a golden cap. We'll look at that in a couple
of minutes. God's curse. The liability for their sins
of such people that hate God, that's what he calls it, will
be passed on to their descendants. And we'll look at that in a couple
of minutes. So, the importance of no. It makes us human. It
gives us the ability to be fully human by cutting off our desire
to manipulate God and to replace Him with our own abilities, our
own energies. No is very, very important. And
God tells us in the second word, no. The second word is very important
because the subject is addressing is worship. And, you know, as
I mentioned last week, if we just look at an overview of the
Sinai encampment or what the scriptures tell us, we'll see
the importance of worship on your handouts. I have a couple
of relevant portions here for you. that do a overview of the
Sinai encampment. The first one is an outline by
David Dorsey. We have this Exodus 20. We know
that's where the Ten Commandments are first given. And what we
usually forget is right after the giving of the Ten Commandments
in the first half of Exodus 20, the last half of Exodus 20, beginning
at verse 22, concerns an altar. Then the Lord called to Moses,
thus you shall say to the children of Israel, you have seen that
I have talked with you from heaven. You shall not make anything to
be with me. Gods of silver, gods of gold,
you shall not make for yourselves. Then he describes the kind of
altar he wants. So immediately after the Ten Commandments, God
returns to one of them, the second word, and addresses worship. Now that tells us its importance.
Ten Commandments, they're all important. And God chooses to
focus on the second word in the resulting commentary that is
given to us in the last half of Exodus 20. So we have laws,
worship. And then after this altar stuff
is talked about, the application of the second word, don't do
things your way, do things my way. Then we have the covenant
renewed with God and his people. And then there's a lot more laws.
The rest of chapters 21 to 24 had to do with social justice
sort of issues, criminal statutes we could say. But then the rest
of the book of Exodus, now there's some narrative stuff in there,
but all the rest of Exodus, and it goes on for 40 chapters, All
the rest has a bunch of commandments about what they're to do for
worship. And then all of Leviticus is primarily focused, not all
of it is, the big thrust of Leviticus, what to do with worship, priests,
the tabernacle, the temple rather, and then what's clean and unclean
in terms of worship and what you can do and can't do. So,
we're sort of set up by the very first section after the Ten Commandments
telling us the great importance of worship, and then we have
three chapters, four chapters of case laws, and then a huge
set of chapters about worship again. So twice there, God tells
us that worship and what He wants us to do in worship is of great
importance to us. Look at Dorsey's outline, if
you will, for just a moment. It's page 2 on your handouts,
on your outline. It's a seven-fold structure.
It's important that you recognize this. Your kids should know this,
that from the middle of Exodus to about a third of the way into
Numbers, all of those scriptures are one unit given at Sinai. They all take place at the Sinai
encampment. They've come out of Egypt, they've
gone out there, they've gone to Sinai, and when they arrive,
Exodus 20 begins then their arrival, or what God tells them upon their
arrival, and that whole section continues right on into Numbers
chapter 10. And David Dorsey here has given
us a nice seven-fold outline of what this entire Sinai encampment
is about. So God is setting up His people,
He's redeemed them out of Egypt, He's telling them how to live
as His people in the Promised Land. So this is very instructive
for us, right? He's brought us out of sin and
bondage, and He's taught us how to create Christian culture.
And what does he do? Well, he starts with the Ten
Commandments in the A section, and at the end of that, as I
said, there's some stuff about altars, and then there's judicial
laws in the second section, Exodus 20-24.11. You see that? And then
what happens? Instructions for building the
tabernacle, and dedication of priests. And this goes on for
11 chapters. And then the fourth section, and by the way, in those
11 chapters, that's where the Golden Calf incident is that
we'll talk about in a couple of minutes. And then they're
actually building the tabernacle happens for seven chapters. So
there's all 11 chapters about how to build it and how to consecrate
the priest and all that stuff. What is it? It's person, the
priest, and place, like we talked about last week. How are you
going to get to rejoicing? Well, you're going to want to
focus person and place the way that God has instructed us. And
here, it's all a series of positive commandments. Do this, do this,
do this, do this, do this, do this, do this. And it goes on
for 11 chapters. And then for seven chapters,
they do it. and their obedience to God in terms of worship, creating
the tabernacle and consecrating the priests, then is talked about
in the rest of Exodus through to the end of that book. And
then in the fifth section, the E section on Dorothy's outline,
sacrificial laws and dedication of the priests, Leviticus 1 to
10. So you've got building of the tabernacle and the priests,
then building the tabernacle and the priests, instructions
in the building, then you've got dedication of the offerings
and the priests themselves. So the whole big middle section
of the Sinai encampment is all about worship. And God sets up
his people to go into the land. Yeah, he gives them judicial
laws and we talk a lot about that. But what he primarily gives
them is how to worship. That's what he primarily gives
them. This establishes its priority to us, the significance of it,
the importance of it to us. The sixth section of Purity Laws,
Leviticus 11-18, and then Holy List Laws into Numbers chapter
9. So a brief overview shows you
that the tremendous bulk of material in the Sinai encampment is about
worship, specifically about worship. I've also given you an outline
for Leviticus on the next page if you want to turn to that.
The way this works is, this is according to a liturgical
model that is one way to look at the Lord's Supper. where we
grab a hold of things, we break it apart, we distribute our work,
it's evaluated and tested, and then we go into the future. And
the way to think about it is this, you got these five chapters
up here, five books up here, in Leviticus, the middle one,
you know, if you draw a line from Leviticus out to this next
section, this next A row of material, this is an overview of Leviticus,
which is the center of this structure. The center of Leviticus, you
know, these laws, and that's expanded out to the next level.
And then the last section on this particular handout is an
expansion of the last few chapters of Leviticus. So, it's just something
that, you know, you might want to keep in your Bibles or in
your whatever notebook you might have that keeps you with the
knowledge of the Scriptures. But the important thing here
is that Leviticus is sort of like, if we look at the whole
Torah, the whole five books of Pentateuch, the middle of that
is Leviticus. And Leviticus is, you know, kind
of a beating heart of the center of the Pentateuch. And it's primarily,
again, about worship. It tells us what the offerings
are like in 1 to 9, and it ends in Leviticus 9.22, which is honor
orders of worship every Lord's Day. We think that's the pattern
by which we're supposed to move our New Testament worship in
the same way. It goes on to talk about the
consecration of the priests. And then after the consecration
of the priests, which is sort of like a new creation almost
with Aaron and his sons, we have the fall of Nadab and Abihu. Sons of Aaron. And so you can
see where that goes. Aaron does the golden calf. Aaron's
sons. Bring false worship before God
they bring their own fire to God rather than letting his fire
that came down from heaven Start things up. They make their own
they got their safety matches Whatever it is they use a little
torches and they like their own little incense up and they're
gonna do their own thing They got their own way of approaching
God God kills them They're repeating that they're telling us that
what Exodus what the fourth but second word says in terms of
punishments This is how it works out Aaron was idolatrous, made
the golden calf, and two of his sons then end up offering false
worship and get killed. because of it. So, whether it's
the overall Sinai encampment, or the overall Pentateuch, or
if we just took the number of verses that describe worship,
you know, in the Pentateuch, all these things show us the
tremendous importance and significance of worship. It's really important.
So it's no here, telling us not to do things is really important
in the second word, as well as then, well, how should we do
things as well? What can we do? That's a good
question. What can we do? What do we do
with worship in the New Testament? What do we do this side? Are
all those sections of scripture somewhat irrelevant to how we
format our worship? I don't think so. Just as we
said before, if you want to know what wisdom is about, you look
at the life of Christ. But then you also will study
the book of wisdom, Proverbs. If you want to know what worship
is like, yeah, you've got to read about it in the New Testament.
But you also want to look at the books of worship, the primary
book, Leviticus. The New Testament is filled with
language that equates what we do in the Lord's Passover of
Christ, for instance. He's made peace, sacrifices,
our reasonable liturgy is to present our bodies before Him.
There's all kinds of language in the New Testament that ties
back what we do in New Testament worship to the sacrificial system. There's not a detailed description
of worship in the New Testament though. What is it? Some people
look at 1 Corinthians 14.26. Here's what it says. How is it
then, brethren? Whenever you come together, each
of you has a psalm, has a teaching, has a tongue, has a revelation,
has an interpretation. Let all things be done for edification. And they say, well, there it
is. The only thing we really have in the New Testament about
how we're supposed to worship is Paul's description of New
Testament worship. here in First Corinthians. Well,
the problem with that is a couple of folks. One, you know, we don't
really know if this is actual formal worship or not, but even
if it is, Paul isn't necessarily commending them. If you look
at this opening phrase, how is it then? Throughout the book
of First Corinthians, Paul says, well, what are you doing then?
What? What about this? How about this? He asks these
questions, and when he does this, apart from this particular text,
that this is the exception, the rest of them, he's going to criticize
them for something. He's saying what they're doing
isn't good. He's not commending them for something. So what we
have here is a description of how a church that's goofed up,
that wasn't worshiping correctly, was doing it. And we don't have
any kind of confirmation from Paul that this is any kind of
structure for New Testament worship. So we have an absence. Some people
say, well, that's it. Some people say there's no relationship
between the Sabbath and Lord's Day activities of the New Testament.
Completely different. It's Old Covenant stuff. And
some people say, well, all that Old Covenant worship? Irrelevant.
It has no significance. And what we're given in the New
Testament is complete freedom to do whatever we want to do.
Well, we think differently. We think that all the sacrificial
language in the New Testament are pointers back to what Leviticus
showed us would be the coming of the sacrifice of Christ, and
as I mentioned before, kind of prisms out for us the implication
of who Jesus was. We believe there's one word from
God, and the reason we don't have detailed instructions about
New Testament worship is because it's the fulfillment of Old Testament
worship, and finds its basic pattern and component elements
within that form of worship. That's what we do here. Now,
other people, you know, say, no, we can do whatever we want
in worship. But it seems like, if that's true, then we're being
led into doing just what Nadab and Abihu weren't supposed to
do just what the second word says we're not supposed to do.
And pretty soon you end up with no relationship between the second
word and our formal worship at all. And eventually you got rid
of the second word, you get rid of the fourth word, and pretty
soon the whole Ten Commandments is out the window. So, you know,
we believe here at Reformation Covenant Church that our New
Testament worship is informed by this tremendous set of materials
in the Old Testament on what worship is. So worship is important.
1 Corinthians 11 doesn't give us any kind of formalized pattern
of New Testament worship. Paul doesn't commend it that
way. What we have to do is look at worship from the beginning
of the Bible through to the end of the Bible, and we see continuity
in terms of basic patterns what Christ will accomplish what he's
intended to accomplish by sacrifice what we commemorate on the fourth
day as we get into the fourth commandment rather on the Lord's
Day all the Bible has to inform what we do so we have to be careful
students of the Word of God in terms of how we build worship
it's important And remember, no one is important. We don't
just do whatever we think is a cool idea because the second
word tells us explicitly that's not what we're to do. What do
we see in the Old Testament? We see lots of things. We see
an exodus that the covenant is renewed in the context of the
giving of the law and worship. Moses takes blood, he splatters
the people, the covenant's renewed. Psalms says that God renews His
covenant by the sacrificial meal, a meal with Him. That's what
we engage in. The New Testament verifies that same truth. So,
worship is covenant renewal. Worship is also command performance,
right? God says, this is the way I want
you to do it. And it's a command performance where we come before
Him and we recognize we're in the presence of God and He delights
in our praise and we give it to Him. And we give it to Him
in an antiphonal manner. In other words, He calls you,
you respond by singing His praises. He tells you you need to confess
your sins, you respond by confessing your sins. He says you're forgiven
and you say, great, praise God for that gift of forgiveness
and new glory and respect of life. The whole worship service
is a dialogue back and forth. That's a pattern. Earlier we
heard the first few verses of Psalm 149 read. I'm going to
read it as the commissioning scripture at the end of the service
as well. And we're going to sing a version of it at the conclusion
of our worship service together. And it's very interesting what
it says about worship, as an example of many texts that tell
us about worship. In verse 5, let the saints be
joyful in glory, let them sing aloud on their beds. And it's
been talking here about worship as well. And then it says, let
the holy praises of God be in their mouth. and a two-edged
sword in their hand to execute vengeance on the nations and
punishments on the peoples, to bind their kings with chains
and their nobles with fetters of iron, to execute on them the
written judgment. This honor have all his saints. Praise the Lord. So worship there
is warfare, spiritual warfare. And what God's people do in worship
is characterized in Psalm 149 as exercising the two-edged sword.
Now, none of this stuff isn't magical. I was asked a question
last week after the sermon, if somebody worships but then looks
at pornography all six days a week, will they be transformed by that
worship increasingly into a mature Christian? No. That's the whole
point of the second word. There's nothing magical about
what we do. We can follow all the right steps.
We can do everything correctly. And then if we walk away, not
remembering what God just taught us for two hours, we're like
that foolish man in the book of James, and we walk away and
do what we want. It's not magic. Now if you worship
improperly, and yet have a good attitude during the week and
try to obey God, you'll do better than somebody worshiping improperly,
and who the rest of the week just blows God off. So, I'm saying
worship is important, but don't take from that that we can somehow
come up with the right formula. and the process, and as a result,
automatically mature the people who attend such worship. Israel
had all the right formulas. They generally followed them.
But their hearts weren't with Yahweh, and He brought judgments
upon them. So I'm not saying that, but I
am saying that worship is exceedingly significant. In the Reformed
world, this has been understood. There's a thing called the regulated
principle of worship. And they look at things like
the second word that warn us, no, don't worship the way you
want to worship. They look at Nadab and Abihu
deciding they wanted to worship in a particular way and God judging
them. We look at Jeroboam which we'll look at in a couple of
minutes. And we see that he tries to jazz up the worship of Israel
and as a result God judges him and kills his son and yada yada
yada. And so, the Reformed people look at this and they say, well
look, God doesn't just leave it up to our imaginations, and
in fact, He explicitly tells us, don't let your imagination
determine how you are going to worship. So reformed people in
the last century in America have come up with this phrase, the
regulated principle of worship. And what it means is that you
can do whatever you want to do in a lot of things in life. What
kind of house you build is up to you. But what kind of worship
you create is not up to you. So there's something different
about worship. In worship, we're supposed to
do what God has told us. He wouldn't have spent, you know,
dozens of chapters describing in Leviticus and Exodus and in
1 Kings. He wouldn't describe all this
detail about how worship happened in that particular place and
time without it having a significance for us in what we do today. So
we have to have our worship informed by that worship. It's not different. I mean, it's different, but it's
not completely discontinuous. Jesus has come as the fulfillment
of all those offerings, right? He's purified us. He's caused
the ascension and transformation of who we are. He accepts our
tribute. He makes it so that man can bring
stuff into worship that's pleasing to God. He has a meal with us. We have the Lord's Supper. All
that stuff. So, the Regulatory Principle of Worship says we
can only do what God wants us to do in worship. Now, how do
you apply that? It's all over the map how people
apply it. And we don't want to say that only what God has commanded
can we do. Example, next week we'll have
a baptism in the worship service. Where are there baptisms in the
worship service? Where are there circumcisions
in the worship service? They're not. Now you can by implication
say, well we think it's okay to do it there. We don't have
to do it there. And so we think it's legitimate
to have it in the context of worship. But even people that
are strict, regulated, principled people, stricter than us, that
says you can't use instruments, for instance, because in the
New Testament there's no instruments, even though there were. Even
those people would go ahead and have baptisms in worship. Even the sermon. You can make
a stronger case in the New Testament. that Lord's Day worship included
communion than you can that it always included a sermon. And
yet, Reformed people who claim to have their worship regulated
by the Word of God are more insistent on having a sermon than they
are about having the Lord's Supper. So it's generally absent more
often than not. So the way you apply it is different,
but our church believes that it's basically correct. that
our worship has to be informed positively by what God says.
And so we look at the importance of worship and then we try to
structure that worship on the basis of what God says. Westminster Shorter Catechism,
Longer Catechism and its questions and answers on commandment number
two state this very thing, that we can only do in worship what
God commands or gives us examples or precepts to do. And so that's
what we do. We think that worship is important
and that we don't want to approach worship with what seems cool
and good to us. We want to approach God in worship
with what He says we should do. The next statement on the outline
is missional churches. So as we go about considering,
praying about, and making plans to start churches, including
missional churches, what does it mean? What it means is that
those churches cannot biblically, properly, beneficially decide
that we want to have a church service that will be jazzed up
and fun so that we can get more people to come in and be missional
in that way. We're saying no. In worship,
the point is not to say what we'd like to do. The point is
to ask, what would God want us to do? And our response to that
will be that we will learn to like it. God says no to us, and
it's important. We can't just decide what we
want to do. I can get a lot of people here next week for Lord's
Day worship. I could have, you know, Dolly
Parton come and sing. Very missional, get a lot of
people in, then I can give the gospel message afterwards. That's
not biblical worship. Biblical worship says there's
a particular pattern of what worship involves. There's particular
people involved in the worship to represent God. You can't just
do it any way you want. And now let's talk about the
golden calf. And this is the example of this
from this large section of scripture, the golden calf. What was this
golden calf? some people think that the golden
calf is a return to Egypt so the golden calf is like there
was an apis bull and this was like a bull cow that was like
honored as deity and so they say well what this cow was was
an apis bull statue and so what they really were doing was rejecting
Yahweh and going back to Egyptian gods But it seems like the text
doesn't really tell us that necessarily. First of all, the Apis bull was
a living bull. You know, Egypt, they actually
had a live bull. When that bull would die, they'd
have to go find the next Apis bull and then he'd be worshipped
as God. It's kind of like the Tibetan monk right I mean or
the Dalai Lama rather you know when one Dalai Lama dies the
spirit goes into another person So you got to find that person
the old Dalai Lama isn't important anymore So the Apis bull was
a living thing not a statue which is what they did here What does
the text tell us about what they were doing with this golden calf
now? It's kind of important As I mentioned, Aaron's involved
in this, and then later, God splits Israel into north and
south, right? Into Israel in the north and
Judah in the south. After Solomon's reign, his son
Rehoboam is foolish. God splits the kingdom and he
gives the northern tribes to Jeroboam. Jeroboam was God's
guy. The text tells us very explicitly
that God chose Jeroboam. to be king over Israel. We forget
this. But he was God's guy. He had
spent, by the way, a number of years in Egypt, like Aaron had
done. And like Aaron, he ends up creating
gold calves. He's up there in the north. He
says, well, I want to be missional. I want to get a lot of people
coming here. And I'm afraid that they're not going to want to
be part of the north anymore. Their allegiances are going to go down
there to Jerusalem because they always got to go down there to
worship. So I'm going to set up a different kind of worship
up here and not just Yahweh worship. That's good. But I want to jazz
it up a bit. I want to add these golden calves. So he sets up
two sanctuaries, one at Bethel and one at Dan. And the whole
purpose of it is to, you know, create something that's real
cool and jazzed up. And so Jeroboam does this. And
then God, of course, doesn't like it. And God brings judgment
against him. You know who Jeroboam named his
son? His son was Nadab. Aaron's son
is Nadab. Nadab and Abihu are two of Aaron's
four sons, and they're the ones who following after their father's
sin, the golden calf incident, his approach to worship, not
God's, did the same thing when they approached worship with
their own fire as opposed to using God's sacrificial fire
from heaven that had already been there. They approached God
on their own initiative, in their own way, in a way that pleases
them and God destroys them. Jeroboam sets up a system of
a golden calf He spent time in Egypt. In fact, he says the very
same thing to them that Aaron, that the people here tell Aaron,
this is the God that brought us out of Egypt. And then he
has this son, Nadab, who becomes king after him. And he's killed
then too. And it says he does evil. Of the two years that he
reigned. The sins of the fathers, the
iniquity of the fathers is passed on. the third and fourth generation. In this case, directly we can
see it. They're parallel stories. So it's important that we get
them right, number one. And we can interpret this golden
calf incident in relationship to Jeroboam and Jeroboam in relationship
to this. The scriptures have given us
a two-fold witness here to golden calf worship involving a guy
who sets up something he shouldn't set up and who has a son named
Nadab and who spent years in Egypt. It's quite instructive. So let's look carefully at Exodus
32. Turn there please. Exodus 32. Exodus 32 verse 1. Now when the
people saw that Moses delayed coming down from the mountain,
the people gathered together to Aaron and said to him, come
make us gods that shall go before us. Okay, so we're given information
here. Why do they ask Aaron to set
up these powers? The word God's here. It's that
word Elohim again. It doesn't mean there are no
other gods. There should be no God above God. They're not claiming
a God above God necessarily. They're saying the powers that
be is one way to phrase what they're talking about here. Make
us powers that be. and make us this in the construction
of this golden calf. But the people do this, the scriptures
tell us why they do it. It's because they're waiting
for Moses. Moses has delayed coming back
down the mountain. He's up there 40 days and 40
nights. So it's that delay that we're told is their motivation
for what occurs here. And it says here that, OK, so
come make us gods that shall go before us. For as for this
Moses, the man who brought us up out of the land of Egypt,
we do not know what's become of him. So once more, we've got
the request for the idol in the middle. On either side, we've
got references by the people. They don't know where Moses is.
They don't know what's become of him. There's no reason to
assume here that they're turning their backs on Yahweh. What they're
doing is giving up on Moses, right? Aaron says to them, break
off every man's earrings. So they take off the earrings.
All the people broke off their earrings. And he then uses an
engraving tool to make a molten calf. And then they said, there
is your God, O Israel, that brought you out of the land of Egypt.
So what they're looking at, they're not looking at going back to
Egypt. They're declaring that this thing brought them out of
Egypt. They're acknowledging the Passover. They're acknowledging
their exodus from Egypt. And this is the same words that
Jeroboam uses when he sets his golden calves up. He says the
same thing. Here's the God that brought you out of Egypt. They're
not saying let's go back to Egypt. They're not saying let's worship
Egyptian gods. They're saying that the God that
brought us out of Egypt, which is Yahweh, can be worshipped
with this golden calf. Why a calf? Well, they already
knew. Sacrifices had been going on.
They knew there were five sacrificial animals. They knew the biggest
of these, the best, was the cow or the bull. And if a god is
going to lead them forward as a representation of Yahweh, a
man-made representation of Yahweh, is going to lead them into the
Promised Land, Yahweh has led them out of Egypt, what they're
looking for now is a leader who will go before them into the
Promised Land. Why not a bull? Right? That's the best sacrificial
animal. Somehow it represents the coming
of the second person. It's going to be God himself
who pays for our sins. I don't know how much they knew. But the point
is there's no reason to assume here that they're setting up
an Egyptian god. What they're doing is they're
setting up a representation of Yahweh that is forbidden to them
to set up according to the second word. That's what they're doing.
They're going about worship in a way that pleases them. And
what they're doing, of course, ultimately is rejecting Moses,
right? Who's the mediator between them
and God? Moses. He's representing who?
Jesus. What's the other mediator? What
leads them forward? Well, it's the cloud and the
fire, right? The cloud by day and the pillar
of fire by night. It's Yahweh's Shekinah Glory
that represents Him leading His people forward. They don't want
the mediation that God has set up. They want a different way
of mediation to get God to lead them into what they want. So
they're setting up controls over mediation. They're rejecting
the one mediator. And they're setting up another
way to mediate between them and Yahweh. They're doing, they're
worshipping their own wills, as it were, and rejecting the
mediation of God. Now, what are they doing? Well,
they reject the mediation of a man who yells at them, right? Moses yells at them and they
do things wrong. He gets upset. He says, no! And they replace
it with this cow that will never open its mouth. All they're going
to hear from the cow is what they want to hear. Is what they
feed into it with their own thoughts. That's what they'll receive back.
That's all they want to feed back. What do people do? What did Jeroboam do? He wanted
a worship system not using the mediators, the Levites and the
priests and the place, Jerusalem. Remember we saw this in Moses'
sermon. That's exactly how Moses' sermon
in Deuteronomy applies the second word, place and person. And the
end result is what? It was joy at the center. So
the no is intended to bring us to joy at the center, no to our
place in person, yes to God's place in person, no to imaginations
of our minds and the work of our hands being meters, yes to
God's mediatorial presence at His place. And the end result
of that is joy. Jeroboam doesn't want to do it.
He doesn't want his people, he's too politically astute to worry
about his people or to let his people be lured back to allegiances
with Judah through the required worship that transpires there.
So he sets up a worship system that will make them happy to
stay with him. That's the danger. That's the
danger. Worship is important. It is of
primary significance in our lives. It's not the only thing that's
important. It's not magical. That's exactly the reverse of
what actually is going on. This text tells us it's not magical.
That's the whole point. We've got a personal mediator,
the Lord Jesus Christ and His Holy Spirit. And God sets up,
you know, representations of Him to officiate in worship who
talk back. Right? Who talk to you. Who correct
you. And you can correct Him too when
He's on a line, right? That's the sort of thing that
God sets up in the context of worship, not our own mediation. What does it say? Well, we know
they must have been really bad, not really following Yahweh,
because then it says, they rose early on the next day, they offered
burnt offerings and brought peace offerings. Huh. They're doing
the same offerings, ascension and peace offerings. That's one
summation, right? Leviticus 9.22 throws sin or
purification in there too. But, you know, burnt offerings
and peace offerings, that's the gig. That's what God's offerings
are. They're doing the same offerings. They're just using a visible
mediator that their hands have made that won't talk to them
the way Jesus will. And then the people sat down
to eat and drink, then rose up to play. God then says to Moses, go get
down, for your people whom you have brought out of the land
of Egypt have done this thing. So the text immediately reminds
us that they're thinking these gods are going to take them into
the promised land, but God has sent a man, a mediator, a man
representing Christ, Moses, and what the people are doing is
rejecting that kind of mediation through the establishment of
the work of their hands in worship. And so the text tells us in multiple
places that's what they're doing. And what they're doing really
isn't wrong, the rest of it. They're doing the right offerings.
They've not changed the system of offerings. And they sit down
to eat and drink. Well, that's not wrong either.
That's what we do. We come together to worship God
with ascension and peace offering, right? We sit down to eat and
drink. And they rose up to play. Now,
this word play is interesting. It can be negative connotation,
it can have positive connotation. It just means like laughter,
play, have a good time. Well, what did we find at the
center of Moses' sermon on the second word last week? Rejoicing,
playing, having a good time. We're supposed to come together
and when we do things the way God wants us to do them, we're
supposed to have a good time on the Lord's day. We're supposed
to sit down to eat and drink. and rise up to play. Right? This is what Isaiah said. Isaiah 65, 13, Therefore, thus
says the Lord God, Behold, my servants shall eat, but you shall
be hungry. Behold, my servants shall drink,
but you shall be thirsty. Behold, my servants shall rejoice,
but you shall be ashamed. Now their play probably was sinful.
That's probably correct. You've seen the Probably some
visual depictions of that. Yeah, it probably leads to sin
because false worship produces bad ethics as well. But the problem
is not that they're trying to have worship that ends up with
them smiling and laughing. That's the way our day is supposed
to culminate at the Lord's Supper and then in our meal afterwards.
So all of what's given to us in the incident of the golden
calf is stuff that we would want to do. We want to do. We want
some God to lead us forward into the future. We want to have ascension
offerings and peace offerings. We want to sit down to eat and
drink and rise up in joy because of what the Lord God has given
to us. And God says the thing that will destroy you is when
you try to achieve those honorable goals by insisting on your own
mechanism for how you're going to go about worshipping God.
This, as I said, is exactly what Jeroboam did. Jeroboam does the
same thing. He gets to the place where he
wants to set up his own mediation between Yahweh, supposedly, and
his people, and so he sets up his own guides. And as a result
of that, he sins. Let me read you the account.
Turn to 1 Kings 12, verse 25. Let's look at it. And it's parallel. It's parallel.
1 Kings 12 verses 25 So Jeroboam built Shechem in
the mountains of Ephraim and dwelt there. Also he went out
from there and built Penuel. And Jeroboam said in his heart,
Now the kingdom may return to the house of David. If these
people go up to offer sacrifices in the house of the Lord at Jerusalem,
then the heart of this people will turn back to their Lord,
Rehoboam, king of Judah, and they will kill me and go back
to Rehoboam, king of Judah. Now, see, this is so ridiculous
because God has established Jeroboam. And He knew that. God had made
that clear. But when men turn from God, they
go nuts. They get conspiratorial. That's
what we see throughout the world increasingly these days are people
that are imagining conspiracies. And this is what Jeroboam does.
They're going to kill me and go back to Rehoboam, king of
Judah. Therefore, the king asked advice. So he's not like Rehoboam. He got advice. And he made two
calves of gold. and said to the people, it is
too much for you to go up to Jerusalem. Well, that's a long
drive. That's a long hike. Don't do that. Here are your
gods, O Israel, which brought you up from the land of Egypt.
I'm not taking you back to Egypt. God brought us up. Here are the
gods, here's the representations of Yahweh, these two calves.
Yahweh's like a bull, he's got the powerful horns. The bull
was an offering that they knew by this time, by the time of
Jeroboam, represented whole nations. There were 70 bulls slaughtered
for the 70 nations. The bull's a representation of
all the earth, and Yahweh's a control. Yahweh is a great bull, so to
speak. So he's just using, he's disobeying
the second word, But other than that, he's trying to do everything
right. He's trying to mediate God's presence to the people
through something that his hen put together that he thought
would be cool and neat, maybe not as good as down there in
Jerusalem, but at least cool enough and neat enough, and with
the added benefit of not having to travel very far, they would
stay with their hearts to him. He set them up in Bethel, and
the other he put in camp. Pretty smart guy, Bethel, old
established place. He's conservative. He's added
one innovation, one innovation only, although actually, of course,
he's changing the place, but he's changing it to a place,
Bethel, that has long history with God's people. Now this thing
became a sin for the people went to worship before the one as
far as Dan. He made shrines on the high places
and made priests from every class of people who were not of the
sons of Levi. Jeroboam ordained a feast on
the 15th day of the 8th month like the feast that was in Judah,
and offered sacrifices on the altar. So he did at Bethel, sacrificing
to the calves that he had made. And at Bethel he installed the
priests of the high places which he had made. So he made offerings
on the altar which he had made at Bethel on the fifteenth day
of the eighth month, in the month which he had devised in his own
heart. And he ordained a feast for the
children of Israel and offered sacrifices on his altar and burned
incense. So that's the description of
Jeroboam's sin. And it says there, he changes
the method of mediation. He uses a calf. He changes the
place. Remember, Moses said that place
is central. He changes the persons, the representatives
of Yahweh from Levites to people of his own choosing. And then
he changes the times. He changes the date on which
the High Holy Feast would happen. And the culmination of this is
this verse that says, which he has devised in his own heart.
What happens? Well, he's got a son. He names
his son Nadab. Just like Aaron, his son ends
up dead. And his son ends up doing just
what dad did. I know quite a few people who
for a long time weren't faithful in any particular church, moved
about here and there, and then they finally get steady in their
older years, and then they wonder why their kids don't have much
commitment to the idea of worship and church. The sins of the fathers
in this particular area, they're visited upon their kids. Kids
watch parents in the relationship to worship. And if you try to
make it whatever you devised in your own heart, your kid's
going to see that and he's going to do the same thing in spades.
And if you think it's generally unimportant, you're going to
have a hard time with your kid's bed ever getting them to see
that regular attendance at Lord's Day worship is important, and
more than that, is the source of eternal joy to them. They're
not going to see it. Jeroboam, Aaron, Golden Calf. As we look forward, planting
more churches, to maturing in this church. May the Lord God
keep us from looking at worship in a way that we can jazz it
up according to our hearts, the devisings of our own intellects,
the way we want it to be. Now we can be way wrong in what
we're doing here. I'm not making a case for conservatism in worship.
We're a reformed church, always reforming. I want to see a lot
more instruments of a lot different sorts. For instance, But I'm
saying that as we go about doing that stuff, we have to understand
how important the worship, the formal worship of the church
is, according to these texts we've looked at. And we have
to see the great danger that would lie to us, that would be
ours, that we would pass on to multiple generations, if we decide
to initiate worship services using other styles, other forms,
just because they're cool and resonate with people. That is
not the idea of worship. So, two ditches in the road.
One, we found the right way to do it and we're never going to
change. That's ridiculous. It's baloney. It's horrible. We've done whatever we can. It's
like a little crude painting a little three-year-old would
make for his parents or his dad, what he looks like. The dad loves
it. God loves our worship. It's crude. It can go through a lot of transformation.
We don't believe that the only kind of music that can ever be
sung in worship came out of Geneva. No, we don't believe that. But
on the other hand, you know, so that's one ditch to take our
traditions and make them laws. But the other hand is to then
say, well, all that stuff's unimportant. We're going to do whatever we
want to do in worship that will attract people and really get
them jazzed up. And we're not going to pay much
attention to how God says we should worship. God says. We
are most human when we listen to His know about certain aspects
of how we would like to approach Him in worship. And as we listen
and say yes to His yeses, to His patterns, to what He says
worship should look like, then we're going to say yes to the
very thing that at the heart of it gives us the most joy.
Let's pray. Father, we desire to worship
you in beauty and truth and in spirit. We thank you, Lord God,
for Jesus Christ fulfilling all these things we've talked about
today. We thank you for the worship this side of the cross. Help
us to mature here at Reformation Covenant. Help us to set up other
churches, Lord God, that would worship you in ways that are
different and yet also that are determined, regulated as it were,
ordered. by the truths of your scriptures.
Help us to avoid here at RCC, in the plants that we're associated
with, and in the people whose lives we affect, worship that
would somehow be oriented toward our own imagination, the devising
of our hearts. Bless us, Father, as we seek
to bless your holy name and honor you in our worship. In Jesus'
name we ask it. Amen.