Baalism
isn't Dead! 1 Kings
It is important to
understand the culture of the northern kingdom and its apostasy and the depth
of their rebellion against God and how that has worked itself out into every aspect
of their culture. The people of the northern kingdom, especially the
leadership, have rejected God and in His place they have substituted not merely
the idols that Jeroboam had initiated when he had taken power some 50 years
earlier but they have now degenerated to the perversion of the fertility
religion as expressed in the worship of Baal and the Asherah,
the Phoenician religion that was brought into the northern kingdom by Jezebel
whom Ahab married. With here came 450 prophets of Baal whose mission was to go
through the land and spot all of the believers and to arrest them, kill them,
persecute them and to destroy any evidence of biblical truth in the land. It is
in that context that Elijah is going to suddenly appear in the court of Ahab
the king in Samaria and announce, “As the LORD, the God of Israel lives, before whom I stand, surely
there shall be neither dew nor rain these years, except by my word.”
To understand this we have
to understand the whole biblical context. Elijah isn’t just saying this because
it is something God told him to say, he is not saying it because it seemed like
a fitting judgment, but he is saying this because it fits within the judicial
punishments that God outlined in Leviticus chapter twenty-six if they turned
from the one true God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob to worship other gods. That
is the core problem that
1 Kings 16:29-31 NASB
“Now Ahab the son of Omri became king over Israel in
the thirty-eighth year of Asa king of Judah, and Ahab
the son of Omri reigned over Israel in Samaria
twenty-two years.
The assumption of modern
secular man, his religious assumption, is that anyone who believes in the
supernatural or any belief system that is based on the supernatural, i.e.
something that is not empirically known and seen today, is defined as being
irrational, and that you can’t believe in the Bible or in Christianity and
still really be a rational, thoughtful, intelligent person. We see that what
happens in the northern kingdom is that Ahab has totally rejected the history
of
Ahab continues the
rejection of history but he goes a step further. When he marries Jezebel she is
the daughter of Ethbaal—see the name “baal” at the end of his name—and that indicates his loyalty
to the king of Sidon who is loyal to the god Baal. So
Ahab goes and serves Baal and worships him.
What we always see in
Scripture is that there is a contrast that works between the false religious
systems which we generally classify as human viewpoint or paganism and the
truth that we have from Scripture. In the historical situation of that time
they worshipped Baal, and Baal was the storm god, he was also known as Hadad, Molech, and he was the
weather god. When you live in an agricultural environment the weather is very
important. But he is more than the weather god. It is not just the fact that he
controls weather and brings rain, it is that that is at the very core of the
entire life cycle and economic cycle of any of these countries in this part of
the world, the that the worship of Baal becomes central to survival because he
is the one who controls rain, the sun, the weather, and he is going to bring
about productivity of the crops. But whether we are talking about Baal or any
of the other gods and goddesses within the pantheons in the ancient world they
are just one among a group of nature gods that have been generated or invented
and made up by people in order to give them a rationale, a myth, a story to
validate their rejection of God. Once we take God out of the picture we still
have to answer the question: Where did we come from? What is man” What is our
future? What happens when we die? Then there are the issues of right and wrong
and good and evil. We still have to answer these questions and there has to be
some sort of over-arching explanation to human existence and to human society.
There are only two options. One is the biblical story. If the Bible is true
then everything else is just something that has been made up. Then there is the
pagan view in which they ultimately have some sort of infinite, impersonal
universe. They may have personal gods or they may have impersonal gods.
God is personal. That
means He is a thoughtful, thinking, rational being. Therefore because He is
rational His thoughts are logical. Though we may not know them exhaustively but
what he reveals to us we can understand, and He can reveal it to us in a way
that is understandable. Therefore, based on His revelation we can understand
the flow of history, the character of God, and in studying the Scripture we
understand that the God of the Bible is a God who is faithful and dependable
and because He is righteous and immutable He is going to do what he says He
will do. In the gods of the Phoenicians, the Greeks, etc. there was a personal
god but because he was not rational, was not omniscient, he doesn’t know
everything, he is also not a rational god; therefore he is irrational, not
dependable. If he is not rational and not dependable that means that the
actions of such a god are completely arbitrary. That means that today he may be
one thing and tomorrow he may be something else, and the next day he may decide
to do something else. He is whimsical and not controlled by a standard such as
the God of the Bible who is righteous—which means that He has a standard, a
character; and He is immutable and absolute truth, so He is controlled by the
laws of His own character. That is not true about the limited, finite personal
gods of the various polytheistic systems. So those gods are ultimately
whimsical in what they do. They are not controlled by anything other than their
own capricious will. Such a god would not provide the basis for any kind of
certainty in life. However things function today would not help us understand
how things would function tomorrow. Some religions have tried to explain that
with a doctrine of fatalism: “It is just Allah’s will.” Allah can do something
different tomorrow because he is this heavenly despot who does whatever he
wants to do; he is completely whimsical. If we have a god who is capricious and
arbitrary then he cannot provide the basis for any kind of certainty in life.
If there is no certainty in life then we can’t predict anything.
That is why science only
developed in western nations. The difference between technology and science is
that science seeks to answer the question why in order to provide a rational,
logical explanation on the basis of which we can make predictions about how
things will be tomorrow, the next year and the next year. Only Christianity
provided a framework within which science could be born. There was technology.
The Chinese developed paper, gunpowder and fire crackers, but they never
developed the rifle or artillery. They couldn’t make the leap because that
means they would have to bring in a philosophical system that is predicated
upon dependability and predictability in the world system, and that could only
come by presupposing a God who is I control and is immutable and is rational so
that He can communicate to man. Science is technology plus rational explanation
and the ability to predict future events. That is what happens in the
scientific model. You develop a theory and test it, validate it, make
predictions; you go into the laboratory evaluate it and then go on. You don’t
have the development of medicine or of science per se and all of the advances we
associate with western civilisation in the east or in Islam, it just can’t
happen. That is why you can’t export democracy to these cultures either because
the idea of a constitutional democracy is predicated again on the idea of an
external unchanging values system. You only get that if you are presupposing
Christianity the God of Christianity and the God of the Bible. So there is this
contrast being set up between the rational finite god systems of the polytheism
of Baal versus God. Everything that Elijah is doing is a direct attack and a
reputation against the claims of the polytheists and the Baalists.
All of the pagan systems
have a closed universe. You can’t know anything that is outside the circle,
there is no empirical knowledge of what is outside of it and what is outside
can’t pierce the circle to speak to what is inside the circle. That is opposed
to what is in Scripture where there is the God who is personal and infinite but
He can break through that barrier but man can only have a direct perception of
God if God so chooses. On the other hand, the gods and energy, matter, man and
nature are all within that circle. The gods are not outside the circle. That is
the creator-creature distinction which is unique to Christianity. There is a
line between God and the finite universe; they are totally separate, totally
distinct. God is completely other. But in all of the philosophical systems that
aren’t Christian, in all of the pagan religions, the god is part of the system,
as man is. So if man is inside this linked system and the gods are part of the
linked system then what man has to learn how to do is manipulate the god to get
what he wants. That is true in every one of these
systems. We usually talk it about in simple terms such as “works” but it is
much more sophisticated than that. Man is trying to manipulate the gods through
his obedience, through his religious activity, through his sacrifices, whatever
it is, and he comes up with just a plethora of different ways in which man can
manipulate the god to do what man wants him to do. After all, the god is just a
blown-up version of the man. The pagan model of a god is a god who is within
this closed system, he is not distinct from man, and so he is just as trapped
within the universe as man is; and he is just as subject to fate as man is. But
the Bible in contrast presents a God who is separate and distinct from nature,
from creation, who controls nature, who interferes with nature, who actually
changes and transforms things because He is the creator who is over everything.
So man is entrapped within this closed circle; he has access to God who is
outside of that circle.
The gods of the Old
Testament cultures are all nature deities and whom these people were learning
to manipulate. That manipulation was often related to the lust patterns of the
sin nature. The primary lust patterns that were appealed to were sexual lust,
material lust and power lust. Materialism lust is very evident in Baalism because it is a fertility religion. Why do you want
to have fertility? Do you want the crops to be productive? Do you want people
to be productive? Do you want to make money? If you are planting you put that
seed in the ground and several months later it starts putting forth grain, and we can’t explain it rationally because we have
rejected a rational God, and ultimately a rational explanation for everything,
so we have to explain it through some sort of superstition or some sort of
made-up myth. Today the made-up myths have become much more sophisticated. Now
we have Darwinism, modern science and it modern origin myths, but those origin
myths have changed the way man operates in terms of society and in terms of
culture. But religions in the world really haven’t changed, they still appeal
to man’s lust patterns so that man can get what he wants.
Sexual lust was a strong
element in the fertility religions and the level of sexual perversion was just
incredible. What is going on is that man is down that chain of being under God
but he has to manipulate the gods somehow to make his crops fertile. So the
only thing that he can do to produce fertility is sex, so he is going to engage
in massive sex orgies in order to manipulate the gods to bring rain and to make
the crops fertile. There are the same kinds of examples in modern religions.
There are strong elements of sexual perversion in Mormonism. Mormonism was
built by one of the most sexually perverted, degenerate people in all of American
history by the name of Joseph Smith. There was no counterpart to him until the
20th century. If a comparison is done between Islam and Mormonism it
is amazing how closely they follow one another.
How one views
the gods, the ultimate reality in their system, affects everything. It also
affects one’s view of human life. If man is just a product of time plus chance
and you are just a cosmic accident then there is no real meaning or value. In
paganism human life is all part of its chain of being and so a human being is
basically no different from an oak tree or an amoeba or a bug or a slug, etc.
So if you are going to treat them a certain way you have to treat man the same
way. In the Bible, in contrast to this, all human beings have equal value
because they are all created in the image of God. Man doesn’t manipulate God by
his works and rituals or his actions, in contrast to what we see in the pagan
religions. In Baalism man has to manipulate the god
to produce fertility. There is no certainty of stability so you have to do this
all the time in order to keep the god motivated to bring rain and to produce
the crops. Furthermore, children’s lives had little value. In some of the
extreme cases the children were sacrificed and burned alive in the arms of
these idols. The ritual sex that they engaged in was bi-sexual, homosexual,
heterosexual, however, with whomever in order to stimulate the god. It was as
perverse as it could possibly be and ultimately it makes man responsible for everything
in the environment. The modern counterpart to that is all of the environmentalist
actions in global warming and man’s attempt to change the environment—change from
gasoline-powered automobiles to electric-powered automobiles, solar-powered,
etc. It is just going to be a great fiasco. This is a fiasco and a farce that
is built upon a certain understanding of the universe and that is a pagan
understanding of the universe and not a God-created understanding of the
universe. This fits and works only in a pagan view of reality. So when we study
what is going on in the paganism of northern
Elijah is going to come on
the scene and say there is only one hope, one certainty, and that he was going
to show that this is the God who controls everything and we don’t control Him.
He controls the environment; He said what He would do at the time of the exodus
and at the time of the conquest, and now He is going to do it. He is not going
to let it rain again until he (Elijah) says so. And this is going to domino
through the entire system. There is going to be economic collapse, livestock is
going to die, any means of assistance is going to collapse and the nation in
three and a half years is going to be in a depression. What produced it? What
produced it was the rejection of God. But the hope that we have in Scripture is
that God doesn’t walk off and leave us. He is still in control; He provides for
the believer, just as He did for Elijah. Elijah wasn’t responsible and didn’t
believe the way they did but he still had to live through that discipline from
God and in the process God was glorified by his consistent obedience. He demonstrates
the faith-rest drill. He grows spiritually in the midst of that adversity and
in the midst of all of that trial, and when we come out at the other end God is
going to be glorified in a magnificent way. Does that means
that the northern kingdom turned around and changed their ways? Some did. Some
became believers. Many believers came out of hiding and their faith was
strengthened. But even though the events on