And He said: “Behold, I make a covenant.… Take heed to yourself, lest you make a covenant with the inhabitants of the land where you are going, lest it be a snare in your midst” (Ex. 34:10a, 12).
Having reconciled His people to Himself, God graciously renewed His covenant with them. Israel had broken the previous covenant, but it was God who renewed it, promising to bless them by driving away their enemies and giving them the land He had prepared for them. God’s part in the covenant was that He would do great marvels that had never been seen before in the world. He would dry up the Jordan, make the sun stand still, knock down the walls of Jericho, drive out the Amorites. God promised to pluck up His enemies in order to plant the choice vine He brought out of Egypt. Nothing would stand in the way of establishing His kingdom.
Israel’s part in the covenant required the keeping of two precepts. First, they were to worship no other gods. They were not to give divine honor to any creature because—and this is the reason given by God—they would put themselves in peril of judgment by the hand of a jealous God. Just as a husband is jealous for his wife, so the Lord is jealous for His people. Jealousy is called the “rage of a man” (Prov. 6:34), but it is also God’s holy and just displeasure. If Israel were going to be God’s people, they would have to worship Him alone.
Second, they were to make no graven image or molten god. They were not to presume to worship the Lord by images. They had already fallen into this sin and were prone to it. So God warned them not to tempt themselves by following after the ways of the surrounding cultures. To protect them from this sin, God erected “fences” around these two precepts. The Israelites were to take heed of themselves, they were to be aware of their weaknesses and guard their hearts against this sin that entangled them. The best way to do this was to remove temptation from their midst. When they entered the land God provided them, they were to make no covenant with the inhabitants of the land, nor were they to marry or to work with them. They were to remove all their idols, or high places, and they were not to eat their sacrifices. So prone were they to the sin of idolatry that even the slightest temptation had to be removed. Any time we have a tendency toward a particular sin, we should take steps to remove temptation from us. Otherwise, we open ourselves up to falling into that sin again and violating the stipulations of the covenant of God.
How do you take heed concerning those sins to which you are most prone? Make a list of those sins with which you have repeatedly failed. Beside each one, write down things in your life that tempt you toward this sin. Take steps to rid yourself of those temptations. Repent of the rebellion at the root of your repetitive sins.