;

Why 11.25 Is a Scary Number When It Comes to Faith

Description

Even the slightest deviation from course can result in a plane arriving at the wrong destination. The same is true for our spiritual lives.

Last week I wrote this post about one of the worst verses in the Bible. One generation enters the Promised Land. The very next generation doesn’t acknowledge the Lord, or even remember the amazing things He has done.

At this point in my 4-Month Bible Read Thru, I find myself deeply embedded in the Old Testament. Judges, Kings, Samuel, Saul, David, Ruth, and a whole lot of people worshipping God on one page…and a vast array of other gods on the next.

Makes my head spin, to be honest.

The change might take place from one paragraph to the next. But the time that passes is often a decade, or even a full generation. Watching this happen again and again (and again and again) has given me two “Aha Moments.”

Aha #1: Subtle distraction over time is one of Satan’s favorite weapons.

This concept was reinforced over the last couple weeks of reading, but it first hit home with me many years ago.

I was talking with a friend who is a pilot for a major airline. Most of his trips are “long haul” trips, going from one continent to another. He shared these words:

It’s not the big deviations you need to look out for. It’s the little ones. Big ones are obvious and they always get caught. If you turn 180 degrees and head in the opposite direction, you will notice within seconds.

However, if you take half of half of half of half of that 180 degrees, you are left with 11.25 degrees. That might not sound like a big error. However, if you leave Seattle with a goal of getting to Paris – and you’re off by 11.25 degrees – you will end up in Africa!

On Day One in the Promised Land, if someone had told the Israelites to deny God and worship Baal, they would have scoffed at the idea as ridiculous – even obscene! But over time, little by little, they wandered.

And so do we.

Aha #2: We end up worshipping whatever surrounds us.

This one is brutal.

The Israelites were told to go in and wipe out entire cities. Everything. Check out Deut. 20:16-18. They were told not to intermarry (Deut. 7:3-4). They were told to “break down their altars, smash their sacred stones, cut down their Asherah poles and burn their idols in the fire.” (Deut. 7:5)

Why? Because God knew all along what has recently become an Aha Moment for me. We end up worshipping whatever surrounds us.

They didn’t destroy what they were told to destroy. They did intermarry. They didn’t get rid of all the altars, sacred stones, Asherah poles and idols. They just went about their business, probably thinking they would never be lured by the gods of others.

It could never happen to me. Right?

Before we all get several tons of canned goods and move to the hills, let’s pause for a second. We are called to go and make disciples. We are called to let our light shine. We are called to be in the world, but not be conformed to it.

If we are going to be in the world, and yet remain focused on God, then we have to surround ourselves with that which is of Him. Time in His Word. Prayer. Worshipping together. Serving together. Studying, sharing, and being together with other followers of Jesus.

If we aren’t intentional about surrounding ourselves with the Word of God, people of God, and ways of God, we will eventually find ourselves off by 11.25 degrees. And over time, that’s bad, really bad.

Question: What is one thing you need to “get rid of” and one thing you can replace it with?

Related
Money Matters
Dr. Stephen Davey
Communion with Christ
e3 Prayers
Daily Victory in Battles
Daily Disciples
911 Faith
Shana Schutte
Speaking Through Finances
Dr. Charles Stanley
Follow Us

Want to access more exclusive iDisciple content?

Upgrade to a Giving Membership today!

Already a member? Login to iDisciple