Interestingly, the prohibitions of the Law were inadequate to keep people from worshipping the creature rather than Creator. When the people were judged by the LORD for their murmuring against God and Moses with deadly, venomous serpents that bit them, God directed Moses to make a bronze serpent and set it on a pole so that anyone who looked upon it would be healed (Numbers 21). This bronze serpent was kept for centuries as a relic of God's deliverance, and 2 Kings 18:4 tells us it among other things became an object of worship in Israel: "He
removed the high places and broke the sacred pillars, cut down the wooden
image and broke in pieces the bronze serpent that Moses had made; for until
those days the children of Israel burned incense to it, and called it Nehushtan." King Hezekiah broke the bronze serpent in pieces so it would no longer be reverenced, and his action was a call to return to the worship of the almighty God only.
In Israel today, objects as well as "holy sites" are reverenced by pilgrims who kiss and weep over stones because the feet of Jesus may have graced them. I have travelled to Israel many times, and every time has been a spiritually enriching experience. Yet we do not have to go to the Holy Land to draw near to the Holy God, for He is with us wherever we go. We ought to make a distinction between remembrance and reverence. Seeing a cross ought to remind us of Christ's sacrifice and His love for lost sinners, but the wood or shape is not worthy of worship. There are worship songs Christians sing that in my mind toe the line of moving from remembrance to reverence, to glorify the "wonderful cross" or to "love that old cross" when we ought to look with wonder upon our Saviour Jesus who first loved us with love and devotion. There is no intrinsic spiritual power in the wood fibres of the cross itself, for it is merely the implement God employed where the life of Christ was poured out to atone for sinners. The physical blood of Jesus that stained the cross and dripped on the ground had no cleansing or life-giving power in itself, for Christ accomplished miraculous spiritual labour through His sacrifice.
I have heard Christians say there is power in prayer, but it is more accurate to say all power is in the living God who hears and answers prayer. People pray to saints or deceased relatives without effect, yet Jesus Christ is our mediator who intercedes on our behalf with the Father by His Spirit. To worship saints, Christ's blood or the cross is to fall short of veneration and adoration of our Saviour Jesus Christ, to whom belongs all glory and honour. It is no sin to sing of the cross in hymns or to wear a cross that identifies us with Jesus Christ our LORD (who is wonderful), but let it be a symbolic reminder and reflection of our spiritual and personal reality than an object we reverence and worship. It may be a good thing we do not possess the cross or nails used to crucify Christ, for people would travel the world to see those relics and not realise that is the sort of devotion we ought to give Jesus Christ right where we are today with grateful worship and humble obedience.
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