“Take heed to yourselves, that your heart be not deceived, and ye turn aside, and serve other gods, and worship them;” (De 11:16 AV)
Other gods were future. When the LORD warned Israel, He was making the obvious statement that temptation is future. The false gods they knew were destroyed by ten plagues. They knew no other God but Jehovah. That wouldn’t last very long. Once the land of promise was invaded and settled, there would be a fresh batch of false gods with which to contend. Just because God had given victory against the greatest of all false gods of the ancient world did not mean He preemptively gave victory over all. If one is a bit pragmatic, why give victory over gods they may never know of? There is no victory needed where a threat does not exist. What struck me is the reality that temptations come no matter what. Often, we know nothing of them until they arrive. The LORD if giving Israel a heads up. There will be temptation. The specifics may not be known. But it is coming. Beware of it. Be not deceived by it. Turn away from it.
Grocery stores of the same franchise tend to be laid out the same way. If you enter a Walmart that you’ve never been in before, generally speaking, it is laid out the same as your regular store. We shop at Pick N Save, Aldi's, and Meijer's. They are similar in many ways. This means if there are certain foods the shopper is supposed to avoid, he or she knows ahead of time which way to go. I avoid the baked goods section, the highly processed sections, and the liquor section. Not a hard thing to do. Yet, there is a tradition here in Milwaukee. Because there is a high concentration of Polish, there is a baked good that is common during the Easter season. These are laid out on a specialty aisle that is usually in one spot every year. However, sometimes it moves. Sometimes it is in a space that one would not normally find such a thing. Not fair at all! Stores know this. End-caps and checkout lines are filled with impulse items. One store we shop at has chocolate or other candies at one end of the check-out area. It is that dark chocolate that gets me every time. Temptation can be predicted. But sometimes it cannot. It is the discipline to turn aside that determines our holiness or depravity.
I hate the battle. There isn’t a day that goes by that I ask the LORD for deliverance. I hate having to live as though there could be a stumbling block around every corner. But how else can I be motivated to retain God in my knowledge at all times? It is temptation that drives me to God. It is the fear of falling that stretches out my arms of prayer to a Father who will hold me up. It is the gods that I don’t know about that cause me to seek the face of my God because I just don’t know if I can fight them all. The LORD kept some enemies of Israel in the land. Why? Why not give them complete and total victory all at once so that they could enjoy the land free from paganism? Because if He did, they would have forgotten God a lot quicker. Perhaps we dislike the spiritual battle required of us. We wish it would end. And for good reason. But if God took it all away, unless we resided in glory, we would forget about Him. Remember, temptation is future. It is coming. The gods are hastening our way. It is best to turn aside. Lest we forget God, we need to flee every appearance of evil.