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1 Corinthians 10:14 - What Idols Do You Need To Flee From?

1 Corinthians 10:14 (NKJV) Therefore, my 
beloved, flee from idolatry.  

1 Corinthians 10:14 (NIV) Therefore, my dear 
friends, flee from idolatry.  

1 Corinthians 10:14 (AMP) Therefore, my 
dearly beloved, shun (keep clear away from, avoid 
by flight if need be) any sort of idolatry (of 
loving or venerating anything more than God).  

INTRODUCTION

Idol worship was the major expression of 
religion in Corinth. There were several pagan temples 
in the city, and they were very popular. The 
statues of wood or stone were not evil in 
themselves, but people gave them credit for what only 
God could do, such as provide good weather, 
crops, and children. Idolatry is still a serious 
problem today, but it takes a different form. We 
don't put our trust in statues of wood and stone 
but in paper money and plastic cards. Putting 
our trust in anything but God is idolatry. Our 
modern idols are those symbols of power, pleasure, 
or prestige that we so highly regard. When we 
understand contemporary parallels to idolatry, Paul's 
words to "flee from the worship of idols" become 
much more meaningful. [Life Application SB] 

COMMENTARY PEARL

   I used to think the Old Testament Bible 
prohibition against idols in the Ten Commandments 
(Exodus 20:4) was all about actual statuary. Carved 
icons, totem poles, golden calves - no problem. I 
wasn't bowing down to any statue hewn from human 
hands. 
   Or was I?
   Turns out, idols are sometimes disguised 
as good things: a significant other, children, 
jobs, money, friends, parents, church, a 
particular lifestyle   and yes, sports figures and 
other celebrities. Potentially less-friendly idols 
include items that can turn into addictions, such as 
food, alcohol, sex, or gambling. Bowing to them 
means submitting, or as Merriam-Webster bracingly 
puts it, "agreeing to the demands of" this or 
that, him or her. Ouch. 
   Unfortunately, I've had a lifetime of 
idols to which I freely gave precedence over 
seeking Jesus, bowing deeply to their demands. What 
I've learned is that idols break, tarnish, 
disappoint, and sometimes destroy. They fail to deliver 
the promised satisfaction in the long run. The 
persistent expectation that they were enough left me 
feeling bitter, depressed, disillusioned, and 
longing for something more substantial to make me 
feel whole. Meanwhile, Jesus waited patiently for 
me to figure out that what I was really after 
was Him. 
   The idol prohibition isn't about Jesus's 
vanity or denying me any good things. It's about 
reorienting my priorities to what guarantees fulfillment 
over the long haul when the things I've made into 
idols fail. Isabella Campolattaro 
   Faith Step: Draw or use magazines to 
collage a totem pole of the different things you've 
made into idols. Ask Jesus to help you regain 
perspective and priorities. Then burn the page. 
[Mornings With Jesus 2024 Devotional by Guideposts and 
Zondervan] 

COMMENTARY

Gods people have so long been led by the 
inventions and fashions of the world that they are 
unwilling to move out independent of them. When I 
study the Scriptures, I am alarmed for the Israel 
of God in these last days. They are exhorted to 
flee from idolatry. I fear that they are asleep 
and so conformed to the world that it would be 
difficult to discern between him that serveth God and 
him that serveth Him not. The distance is 
widening between Christ and His people, and lessening 
between them and the world. The marks of distinction 
between Christs professed people and the world 
have almost disappeared. Like ancient Israel, 
they follow after the abominations of the nations 
around them. 1T277 

ILLUSTRATION

DEET
   Study the label on most insect and tick 
repellents these days and you are sure to find DEET 
listed as an active ingredient. In use now for more 
than 60 years, DEET is a light-yellow oil 
developed by the United States Army to protect troops 
who have to spend time in mosquito-infested 
tropical jungles. DEET (N, N-diethyl-meta-toluamide) 
appears at various percentages in most commercial 
repellents because it works. You put it on your skin or 
your clothes to keep mosquitoes and ticks from 
biting and passing on one or more of the numerous 
serious diseases that they transmit, such as 
malaria, yellow fever, encephalitis, dengue fever, 
and West Nile virus. But how does DEET work? 
Finding the answer to that question has been 
difficult.  
   Some studies suggested that DEET inhibits 
the mosquito's ability to smell us. Other 
results seemed to show that mosquitoes simply don't 
like the smell of DEET. Research indicates that 
the plume of carbon dioxide emanating from an 
animal's body attracts the insects. If you are 
outside in a mosquito-infested environment, you can 
watch mosquitoes pick up the scent downwind of 
where you are standing, and they simply follow the 
growing concentration of CO2 till they get dose 
enough to land. The first studies suggested that 
DEET blocked the ability of mosquitoes to detect 
CO2, but that doesn't seem to be the case now.  
   In addition to CO2, several other 
volatile body-odor chemicals boil off of our skin. 
They include 1-octen-3-ol, lactic acid, and other 
compounds produced by sweat and skin bacteria. 
Mosquitoes have lots of specialized chemical detectors 
on their antennae tuned to these chemicals so 
that they can home in and get their next blood 
meal.  
   The latest research by entomologists at 
the University of California and University of 
Arizona working together have discovered another 
chemical receptor, a short hairlike structure on 
mosquitoes' antennae, that is extremely sensitive to 
DEET at very low levels and signals more rapidly 
as DEET levels increase. Results from these 
careful studies have ruled out the masking effect 
that DEET was thought to have had. The report 
makes a good case that mosquitoes have the 
neurological equipment to smell DEED and simply avoid it 
if possible.  
   Wouldn't it be nice to have an ample 
supply of sin DEET? With that, sin would be both 
detectable and detestable. The good news is that it 
exists. It is called the mind of Christ.  
   Lord Jesus, give me, I pray, a sharply 
tuned sin detector (conscience). [God of Wonders 
by David Steen] 

LINKS FOR FURTHER STUDY

1 John 5:21 - KEEP YOURSELVES FROM IDOLS.

https://www.abible.com/devotions/2022/20220605-1052.html 

2 Timothy 2:22 - Flee Temptation to Jesus!

https://www.abible.com/devotions/2020/20200527-0849.html 

1 Corinthians 6:18 - Flee Sexual Sin.

https://www.abible.com/devotions/2016/20160518-0838.html 

1 Corinthians 10:13 - Temptation Comes with 
Limits and a Way of Escape. 

https://www.abible.com/devotions/2023/20230615-0856.html 

LINKS WORTH CHECKING OUT

https://abible.com/links/