How many of us are guilty of idol worship? "Never!" you say?
How many of us follow the lives of celebrities. You know, movie stars, sports stars, royalty, etc. How many of us buy their stuff, go to their new movies, go to their games, etc. I know I shouldn't be meddling with this topic. It is not fun to talk about it because we all have our favorites. But I am really put off by the Michael Vick thing. It has shown up as something that doesn't necessarily divide us, but as something that illuminates the size of the already existing chasm between us and the celebrities we worship.
We get a free look at the mental state of Michael Vick. Apparently he would throw two dogs in a pit where they would fight until one was nearly dead. According to Senator Byrd the fight would last for hours. Then Vick would take the dog that was losing and further torture it until it died. Each time, he would use a new unique way of torturing to death the dog that lost.
The ironic thing about what has happened the last few weeks revolves around the scripture, "Do not be deceived, God is not mocked; for whatever a man sows, this he will also reap (Galations 6: 7). I know God put dogs on the earth to be a loyal and faithful companion to us. Michael Vick's hobby and sideline sport was the brutal and grotesque slaying of these loyal animals. When he and his friends were caught, the prosecutors gave the friends plea bargains in exchange for their testimony against Michael Vick. Some people on the other side of this chasm were incensed. "Where was their loyalty?" Some statements were even made that those who ratted Vick out were as good as dead. Loyalty?
Now the NAACP in
Compassion?
Further, today, Stephan Marbury, NBA guard for the New York Knicks told reporters that he didn't see anything wrong with what Vick was doing. "It is a sport! Is it any different from killing a deer?"
I feel like that AFLAC Duck after hearing Yogi Berra talk. My jaw drops open to speak but nothing comes out. I am not sure how Stephan Marbury goes about hunting deer, but, yes, it is very different.
The purpose of this rant isn't to heap condemnation on these wealthy idols of our society. The verse I quoted above isn't simply a Bible verse. It is a law, like gravity. We all get the fruit of what we have sown. But the purpose is for us to take another look at what our society's worship of these people has turned them into. They are not like us. They are more like the gods of Greek mythology who demanded worship but had no identity with the people at all. They have different values. The have different ideas about right and wrong, about justice. Occasionally we can make one of them face reality for brief moments, but rarely do we even want to lower them from the ranks of idol.
I want to do that now. Because of this Michael Vick episode, I am looking at super-stars differently now. They have been handed everything the world has to offer. But it is far from the abundant life that Jesus said he came to bring us.
3 comments:
I commented, don't know where it went.
ok, trying again, it seems a lot of "superstars" squander their blessings, or think they brought about their own good fortune or deserve it... Sowing and reaping is a law they can't get around;eventually that "crop" will show up. But is it naive to think they will change because of this event? The people surrounding these stars are about as clueless as the stars themselves.(just look at Lindsay Lohan and her entourage for another lost group!) And justification of their actions just opens another door whose fruit they don't want either. What a syndrome, and it seems to be spiralling ever bigger all the time. hb
It is the issue of character over gifting once again. Where is the character?
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