Where Did You Park Your God?

Group of robed people holding torches worshipping a large golden calf statue outdoors at night

An Editorial on the Golden Calf of Convenience

There is a question every believer must eventually face, though most spend their entire lives avoiding it: Where did you park your God this week? Did you leave Him in the pew last Sunday, waiting for you like a forgotten coat? Did you leave Him in the car until next weekend, tucked between the fast‑food wrappers and the worship playlist? Do you wear Him around your neck like jewelry, a symbol of faith that never reaches the heart? Or did you leave Him at the altar because He asked too much of you?

The uncomfortable truth is that many believers do not worship the God of Scripture. They worship a manageable version of Him—one they can carry, control, schedule, and silence. A God who stays where they put Him. A God who never disrupts their plans. A God who fits neatly into their routine. A God who never calls them higher. A God who never confronts their idols. A God who never demands ascent.

The God of Scripture Does Not Fit in Your Pocket

The God of Scripture is not manageable. He is not containable. He is not portable. He is not a charm, a token, or a Sunday accessory. He is the God who calls His people upward, not downward. He is the God who says, “Come up to Me on the mountain and stay there.” [Exodus 24:12] He is the God who descends in fire and thunder, whose presence makes the earth tremble and the people tremble with it. He is the God who cannot be shaped, reduced, or domesticated.

And that is precisely why Israel built a golden calf.

Why Israel Built a Golden Calf

They did not build it because they wanted a new god. They built it because they refused to ascend to the real One. Scripture says, “When the people saw that Moses delayed to come down from the mountain, the people gathered themselves together to Aaron and said to him, ‘Up, make us gods who shall go before us.’” [Exodus 32:1] They did not want the mountain. They did not want the fire. They did not want the voice. They did not want the holiness. They did not want the transformation.

They wanted a god who stayed at ground level, a god who did not call them higher, a god who did not demand surrender.

So they dragged God down to their level and shaped Him into something familiar.

The Modern Golden Calf

Modern believers do the same every weekend. They do not ascend to God; they reshape Him into something they can manage. They fashion a god who fits their preferences, their comfort, their tradition, their schedule. They worship a god who never confronts them, never convicts them, never calls them to repentance, never demands holiness, never interrupts their service order, and never asks them to bow in total surrender. They worship a god who fits in their pocket, not a God who fills the heavens.

This is why modern worship feels hollow. This is why the atmosphere is thin. This is why the posture of the people reveals the absence of the presence.

The Posture That Reveals the Presence

When God truly appears, people do not stand casually with their hands in their pockets. They do not scroll their phones. They do not sip coffee. They do not whisper to their neighbor. They fall. They tremble. They bow. They collapse under the weight of glory.

Scripture says, “The priests could not stand to minister because of the cloud, for the glory of the Lord filled the house of the Lord.” [1 Kings 8:11] When Isaiah saw the Lord, he cried, “Woe is me! For I am undone.” [Isaiah 6:5] When Ezekiel saw Him, he said, “I fell on my face.” [Ezekiel 1:28] When John saw Him, he wrote, “I fell at His feet as though dead.” [Revelation 1:17]

The posture tells the truth. If the people never bow, the presence never came.

The Tragedy of a Manageable God

The tragedy is that many believers think they are worshiping God when they are actually worshiping a golden calf—polished, emotional, musical, familiar, and entirely manageable. They sing Scripture songs and hymns, but they do not expect an encounter. They raise their hands, but they do not surrender their hearts. They attend services, but they do not ascend the mountain. They honor Him with their lips, but their hearts remain far from Him. Jesus Himself said, “This people honors Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me.” [Matthew 15:8]

And like Israel, they keep looking back. They look back to tradition, not necessarily because it is holy, but because it is familiar. They look back to the “way we’ve always done it,” even when the way they’ve always done it has never produced transformation. They look back to predictable worship, predictable sermons, predictable routines. They look back to Egypt, not because Egypt was good, but because Egypt was known. Scripture says, “They said to one another, ‘Let us choose a leader and go back to Egypt.’” [Numbers 14:4]

Once You Cross the Jordan, You Cannot Go Back

The Promised Land is for those who move forward, not for those who cling to the past. The wilderness is full of people who never crossed because they never stopped looking back. Scripture says, “All the men who had seen My glory and My signs… yet have tested Me these ten times… shall not see the land that I swore to give to their fathers.” [Numbers 14:22–23] They died with manna on their breath and Egypt in their hearts. They lived on survival when God offered inheritance.

And this is the indictment of the modern church: Most believers never cross the Jordan because they never stop looking back. They cling to tradition, routine, predictability, and familiarity. They cling to a god they can manage. They cling to a worship they can control. They cling to a faith that never demands ascent. They cling to a golden calf because the mountain terrifies them.

The God Who Calls Us Higher

But the God of Scripture is not a god you can park. He is not a god you can schedule. He is not a god you can carry. He is the God who carries you. He is the God who calls you upward. He is the God who says, “Consecrate yourselves, for tomorrow the Lord will do wonders among you.” [Joshua 3:5] He is the God who says, “You shall have no other gods before Me.” [Exodus 20:3] He is the God who says, “Be holy, for I am holy.” [1 Peter 1:16] He is the God who says, “Draw near to God, and He will draw near to you.” [James 4:8]

A God you can carry is not a God who can carry you. A God who fits in your schedule is not the God who parted the sea. A God who stays where you left Him is not the God of Scripture.

And if your God never calls you higher, you are not worshiping Him. You are worshiping a golden calf.

The Status Quo Has Got to Go

Introduction

There comes a moment in every generation when polite silence becomes a form of rebellion against God, and when maintaining the familiar becomes more dangerous than confronting the truth. Scripture shows us that this moment arrives whenever God sends help, correction, or reform – and the people who need it most refuse to receive it. As John writes, “He came unto his own, and his own received him not.” (John 1:11, KJV)

Light Exposes What Darkness Protects

Jesus explained the deeper reason for this resistance: “Light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil.” (John 3:19-20, KJV) People do not reject truth because it is unclear; they reject it because it is inconvenient. Light reveals what darkness has been protecting, and the status quo prefers the safety of shadows to the discomfort of exposure.

The Diagnosis: A People Who Will Not Turn

Long before Christ walked the earth, Isaiah diagnosed the spiritual disease that afflicts every generation that refuses correction. God declared, “Make the heart of this people fat, and make their ears heavy, and shut their eyes; lest they see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their heart, and convert, and be healed.” (Isaiah 6:10, KJV) The tragedy is not that healing is unavailable, but that the people will not turn to receive it.

Jesus repeated this same diagnosis in His own ministry, saying, “For this people’s heart is waxed gross, and their ears are dull of hearing, and their eyes they have closed; lest at any time they should see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and should understand with their heart, and should be converted, and I should heal them.” (Matthew 13:15, KJV) The disease is spiritual stubbornness – a refusal to hear, to see, to understand, and therefore a refusal to be healed.

Moses: Resisted by His Own People

Before Moses ever confronted Pharaoh, he confronted the unbelief of his own people. When he attempted to intervene between two Israelites, one of them retorted, “Who made thee a prince and a judge over us?” (Exodus 2:14, KJV) The very people crying out for deliverance resisted the deliverer God sent.

Jeremiah: Punished for Telling the Truth

Jeremiah warned Judah of coming judgment, but instead of repentance, he received hostility. The leaders declared, “This man is worthy to die: for he hath prophesied against this city.” (Jeremiah 26:11, KJV) Later, they cast him into a dungeon (Jeremiah 38:6) for daring to speak what God commanded.

Amos: Told to Take His Message Elsewhere

When Amos confronted Israel’s corruption, Amaziah the priest told him, “O thou seer, go, flee thee away into the land of Judah… but prophesy not again any more at Bethel.” (Amos 7:12-13, KJV) The status quo always tries to export the voice that confronts it.

Isaiah: A People Who Prefer Smooth Things

Isaiah described a people who begged their prophets to stop telling the truth: “Speak unto us smooth things, prophesy deceits.” (Isaiah 30:10, KJV) They preferred comforting lies to uncomfortable truth.

Stephen: Exposing the Pattern

Stephen summarized the entire history of resistance in one devastating sentence: “Ye do always resist the Holy Ghost: as your fathers did, so do ye.” (Acts 7:51, KJV) The problem was not new; it was inherited.

Jesus: Without Honor Among His Own

Even the Son of God experienced the sting of familiarity: “A prophet is not without honour, but in his own country, and among his own kin, and in his own house.” (Mark 6:4, KJV) The people who watched Him grow up could not imagine God using someone they thought they already understood.

Samuel: The Rejection Behind the Rejection

When Israel demanded a king, God told Samuel, “They have not rejected thee, but they have rejected me.” (1 Samuel 8:7, KJV) Every rejection of God’s messenger is ultimately a rejection of God’s correction.

The Danger of a Hardened Heart

Hebrews warns repeatedly, “To day if ye will hear his voice, harden not your hearts.” (Hebrews 3:7-8, 15, KJV) A hardened heart is the final defense of a dying system. Proverbs adds the sobering consequence: “He, that being often reproved hardeneth his neck, shall suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy.” (Proverbs 29:1, KJV)

A Loving Rebuke

This is not rebellion, arrogance, or a call to chaos. It is a call to truth, courage, and spiritual clarity. Real love does not protect dysfunction, preserve decay, or defend a system God is trying to dismantle. Real love says, “Enough. This is not working. The status quo has got to go.”

Final Call to Return

God has never left His people without a path home. Even in the midst of judgment, He speaks mercy. He says, “And I will give them an heart to know me, that I am the Lord: and they shall be my people, and I will be their God: for they shall return unto me with their whole heart.” (Jeremiah 24:7, KJV)

This is not a political strategy. This is not a cultural campaign. This is the mercy of God extended to a people who have lost their way.

“If my people, which are called by my name, shall humble themselves, and pray, and seek my face, and turn from their wicked ways; then will I hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin, and will heal their land.” (2 Chronicles 7:14, KJV)

As Jesus said to the churches, “He that hath an ear, let him hear.”

THE DIGITAL GARDEN: A MODERN PARABLE OF BLAME, BOUNDARIES, AND THE ANCIENT SERPENT

The Story in the News

This week, a story appeared in the news. It is the kind that slips past most people. This happens because it feels ordinary now. A child wandered through the digital wilderness for long hours. When the consequences finally surfaced, the courtroom lights turned toward the platforms that hosted her wandering. The verdict was loud. The headlines were louder. The chorus was familiar: someone else is responsible for what happened in my garden. It is an old song, older than lawsuits and algorithms, older than screens and social feeds. It is the first melody humanity ever sang after tasting forbidden fruit.

The Original Garden and Its Boundary

In the beginning, the garden was simple. God planted it with beauty and purpose, and He placed the man within it to tend and keep it. And God, in His wisdom, established a safeguard. Scripture says, “And the Lord God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die” (Genesis 2:16-17). The boundary was clear. The command was simple. The safeguard was unmistakable. It was not a fence or a wall. It was a word, a divine line drawn for the protection of innocence.

The Temptation’s Allure

The tree itself was not poisonous. It was not ugly. It was not repulsive. Scripture says, “And when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the fruit thereof, and did eat” (Genesis 3:6). The temptation was not wrapped in darkness but in beauty. It was lovely to look at. It promised wisdom. It offered insight. It held the allure of knowledge. This was the knowledge of good and evil. It was the entire spectrum of human experience condensed into a single bite.

The Digital Parallel

Tell me that does not resemble the glowing rectangles we place into the hands of children today. Tell me that does not mirror the endless feeds of social media. Good and evil swirl together in a single stream. Beauty and corruption sit side by side. Wisdom and foolishness are offered without restraint. The serpent has not changed his strategy. He has simply updated the interface.

The First Human Response: Blame

And when the consequences came in Eden, the ancient instinct awakened. God called to the man and said, “Where art thou?” (Genesis 3:9). Not because He lacked knowledge, but because the man had abandoned his post. And when confronted, Adam did not confess. He deflected. “The woman whom Thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat” (Genesis 3:12). Eve followed the same path. “The serpent beguiled me, and I did eat” (Genesis 3:13). The first human response to sin was not repentance but blame. The man blamed the woman. The woman blamed the serpent. And humanity has been outsourcing responsibility ever since.

Modern-Day Replays

We are watching the same scene replayed in courtrooms today. A child wanders through the digital garden. A parent hands over the device. A platform profits from the wandering. And when the harm surfaces, the finger points outward. The serpent is sued. The tree is examined. The garden is scrutinized. The designer is blamed. Anything but the one who opened the gate.

The Parental Responsibility

It is like a parent purchasing a plane ticket for a child. They pack the bags. They walk the child to the gate. They wave goodbye as the child boards a flight to a city the parent has never visited. The child lands and wanders the streets alone. The child becomes frightened and overwhelmed. Then the parent sues the airline for “transporting a minor.” The airline did not kidnap the child. The parent purchased the ticket. The parent enabled the journey. The parent opened the way. Yet the blame shifts upward, never inward.

The Tree’s Beauty and the Lost Boundary

A lawyer appeared on television this week. He spoke of the platforms’ design as “lovely to look at” and “crafted to draw children in.” He meant it as an indictment of modern technology, but he accidentally quoted Moses. The tree was pleasant to the eyes. The fruit was desirable to make one wise. The temptation was not in its ugliness but in its beauty. And the safeguard was not in the tree but in the command: do not eat.

The garden had a boundary. The home once had boundaries. But in this generation, the boundaries have been erased. We place glowing trees of knowledge into the hands of children and remove every safeguard God once placed around innocence. Then when the consequences come, we seek a payday to ease our guilt and soothe our conscience. We look for settlements instead of repentance. We seek compensation instead of correction. We prefer a judgment that pays rather than a judgment that purifies.

Divine Justice and Accountability

But Scripture says, “Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?” (Genesis 18:25). The Judge of all the earth does not accept excuses. He does not settle cases with hush money. He does not allow blame to be passed like a hot coal from hand to hand. He weighs motives. He examines hearts. He judges actions, not intentions. “For the Lord is a God of knowledge, and by Him actions are weighed” (1 Samuel 2:3).

Children as Divine Heritage

One truth stands firm. It cannot be litigated away, ignored, or outsourced. It is written in the very breath of Scripture. Children do not belong to the state, the school, the platform, the algorithm, or the culture. They belong to the Lord. Scripture declares, “Lo, children are an heritage of the Lord: and the fruit of the womb is His reward” (Psalm 127:3). A heritage is not a hobby. A reward is not a burden. A child is not a digital consumer to be managed by corporations. Nor is a child a social media performer to be applauded by strangers. A child is a trust placed in the hands of parents by God Himself.

The Divine Command to Parents

And with that trust comes a command, not a suggestion. Scripture does not say, “If convenient, guide them.” It does not say, “If culture approves, instruct them.” It does not say, “If you have time, shape them.” It says, “Train up a child in the way he should go” (Proverbs 22:6). The verb is active. The responsibility is direct. The assignment is divine. Parents are not permitted to abdicate this calling, nor to hand it over to screens, systems, or artificial intelligence.

The Parental Role in Nurture and Admonition

The Lord did not give the task of training children to devices. He did not give it to algorithms. He did not give it to platforms. He gave it to fathers and mothers. Scripture says, “And ye fathers, provoke not your children to wrath: but bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord” (Ephesians 6:4). The nurture belongs to the parent. The admonition belongs to the parent. The shaping of the heart belongs to the parent. The guarding of the gate belongs to the parent.

The Reality of Accountability

We cannot sue our way out of the consequences of abdicated stewardship. We cannot litigate our way out of the responsibilities God placed in our hands. We cannot purchase innocence with payouts. We cannot outsource accountability to corporations and courts. The serpent is real. The fruit is tempting. The garden is vulnerable. And the ones entrusted with its care are still accountable before God.

The Judge’s Expectation

The Judge still walks into the garden. He still calls out, “Where art thou?” And He still expects an answer.