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  <title>What You Trust Most Is Controlling You | Hosea 10:5-6</title>
  <description>Welcome to&amp;amp;nbsp;The Daily. Today, I want to give a shoutout to&amp;amp;nbsp;Brian Long&amp;amp;nbsp;from&amp;amp;nbsp;Tullahome, TN. Thank you so much for your partnership with us in&amp;amp;nbsp;Project23. Grab your&amp;amp;nbsp;Hosea Scripture Journal. Our text today is&amp;amp;nbsp;Hosea 10:5-6:  The inhabitants of Samaria tremble for the calf of Beth-aven. Its people mourn for it, and so do its idolatrous priests— those who rejoiced over it and over its glory— for it has departed from them. The thing itself shall be carried to Assyria as tribute to the great king. Ephraim shall be put to shame, and Israel shall be ashamed of his idol. —&amp;amp;nbsp;Hosea 10:5-6 It’s amazing how attached we become to the things replacing God. Israel had built an idol, a golden calf, at&amp;amp;nbsp;Beth-aven, and over time, it became more than an object. It became security. Identity. National pride. A source of comfort and confidence. Then suddenly, it would be gone.&amp;amp;nbsp;&amp;quot;Carried to Assyria.” The idol they trusted could not even save itself or Israel from Assyria. Think about all that wasted time and money. All the wasted worship—false worship at that. That’s the irony of every idol. We spend our lives protecting things that were never capable of protecting us. And modern idols are no different. They are our careers, platforms, political identities, relationships, money, influence, entertainment, appearance, comfort, and control. They are the things we quietly attach our worth, hope, and security to. At first, idols feel powerful because they appear to deliver. They give temporary comfort, temporary success, and temporary affirmation. But eventually every idol reveals the same truth: What we choose to replace God cannot sustain us like God. That’s why people panic when idols collapse. When the market drops. When the platform shrinks. When the relationship ends. When the career changes. When health declines. When public approval disappears. Suddenly, people feel lost because the thing that carries their identity is being taken away. That is Hosea’s object lesson today. Israel mourned the loss of their idol because their hearts had become emotionally dependent on it. And yet we do the same. Whatever controls your peace often reveals what controls your worship. Pay attention to what devastates you most. Sometimes the deepest emotional reactions expose the deepest spiritual attachments. God often removes idols not to destroy us—but to rescue us. Because losing a false god may be the very thing that leads you back to the real one. So hold everything in your life with open hands. You cannot afford to lose the God who never leaves. He is the source of all things—worship and bow to Him today. DO THIS:  Identify one thing that most controls your sense of peace, security, or identity, and honestly ask whether it has taken God’s place in your heart. ASK THIS:  What would shake me most if I lost it? What has become too important to me? Am I trusting God—or what He has given?  PRAY THIS: God, expose every idol competing for my heart. Teach me to trust you above everything else and hold all other things loosely before you. Amen. PLAY THIS: &amp;quot;Christ Be All Around Me&amp;quot; </description>
  <author_name>The Daily + Weekly by Vince Miller</author_name>
  <author_url>https://beresolute.org/vincemillerspeaker</author_url>
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