Freedom Can Still Become Idolatry | 1 Corinthians 10:6-7
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Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day.
Our shout-out today goes to Terry Lijewski from Prior Lake, MN. Thanks for your partnership in Project23. We cannot do this without donors like you.
Our text today is 1 Corinthians 10:6-7.
Now these things took place as examples for us, that we might not desire evil as they did. 7 Do not be idolaters as some of them were; as it is written, "The people sat down to eat and drink and rose up to play." — 1 Corinthians 10:6-7
Paul now moves from shared privilege to personal desire.
Israel's problem was not ignorance. It was their non-spiritual appetite.
They had been redeemed, delivered, and sustained by God. Yet their desires drifted toward something else. Not toward outright unbelief—but toward substitutes.
Paul says these events were written down as examples. Not to shame the past. To warn the present.
Notice what triggers the warning: desire. Before Israel broke God's law, they desired what God had not given. Idolatry did not begin with a golden calf. It began with unchecked longing. A life of pragmatism without God.
They did not abandon God completely. They blended him with the culture.
They kept worship language while feeding competing loves. They enjoyed freedom without restraint. And over time, reverence faded.
This is where grace quietly becomes permission.
Instead of asking, "Does this honor God?" the question shifts to, "Is this allowed?" Freedom stops being a means of obedience and starts becoming a justification for indulgence.
Redeemed people can still desire evil things. And when desire goes unexamined, freedom becomes the doorway to idolatry.
On a practical level idolatry is not only bowing to false gods. It is trusting something else to satisfy, direct, or define us. It is letting desire shape decisions God should govern.
Grace was never meant to excuse desire. Grace was meant to transform it.
When grace becomes permission, vigilance disappears. And without vigilance, compromise is never far behind.
Freedom is a gift. But it must be guided.
DO THIS:
Identify one desire, habit, or pattern where freedom may be drifting toward indulgence instead of obedience. Bring it honestly before God.
ASK THIS:
- What desires currently have the strongest influence over my decisions?
- Where might I be using freedom to justify something God is warning me about?
- How can grace shape my desires instead of excusing them?
PRAY THIS:
Lord, search my heart and my desires. Guard me from turning grace into permission. Teach me to use freedom in ways that honor you and lead to obedience. Amen.
PLAY THIS:
"Give Me Clean Hands"