Making an idol of autonomy

I first ran across this video and this song in a post on The Thinklings (which I can’t find now, not remembering the text of the post), and mercifully quickly forgot it. I happened, through a combination of circumstances, to hear it again last week, and now I have it stuck in my head. It’s aggravating, because this song annoys me from about every angle possible. It’s sappy and saccharine, for one thing, lyrically bad and musically sickly. It’s tendentious and presumptuous, in claiming “thus says the Lord” for a disputed theological position (I probably wouldn’t be quite as irritated were some idiot Calvinist to do the same in reverse, but it would be mighty close; that’s just inappropriate no matter who does it). It fails to take human sin seriously, portraying it as something we can simply choose not to do. (To some extent, that could be said to be true of Arminianism more generally, but this sort of naïvete about sin goes beyond Arminianism into the realm of caricature.)

And most significantly, because the author of this thing had the gall to write it as something spoken by God, its sickly-sweet sappiness is more than just an artistic failing, it’s a theological problem. This song abases God, portraying him as a moony lovesick teenager (with all the artistic capabilities and instincts pertaining thereunto), for the sake of feeding our own sense of self-importance. Even if I were an Arminian, this would drive me bats. We must be zealous for the glory and holiness of God; don’t trust anyone who isn’t. A God who is at our beck and call as this song portrays is a God made in our own image, to suit and serve our own desires . . . which is to say, a false god.

Anything that is not the gospel of salvation by grace alone through faith alone in Jesus Christ alone can become an idol.

Posted in Religion and theology, Video.

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