Summary
We are often tempted to treat idolatry as an abstract category, yet Scripture regularly portrays it with relational intensity. This study traces the Bible’s theme of spiritual adultery, showing how covenant unfaithfulness is not merely rule breaking but personal betrayal of the Lord who loves His people. The tone is serious and searching, and the argument aims to bring both clarity and conviction.
The book moves across the major biblical landmarks, especially the prophetic material, to show how God exposes false lovers and calls His people back. The subject is not handled with sensationalism. Instead, the author seeks to let the biblical imagery do its work, bringing us to see the ugliness of sin and the surprising persistence of divine mercy.
Strengths
The greatest strength is the moral and theological clarity. We are helped to connect the language of the prophets to the wider storyline of covenant, exile, and restoration. The material is also presented in a way that pastors can readily translate into preaching and pastoral care, particularly when addressing compromise, syncretism, and drifting affection.
The book keeps the Lord’s faithfulness in view. The theme is not left in condemnation. We are repeatedly brought to the hope of cleansing and renewed covenant love.
Limitations
At times the sweep can feel broad. Readers may wish for more sustained work in a smaller number of texts. The topic is emotive, and some will want more careful guidance on applying the imagery in sensitive pastoral situations.
The academic engagement is not the main feature, so those wanting extensive scholarly debate may look elsewhere.
How We Would Use It
We would use this alongside sermon preparation in prophetic books, and also for teaching on idolatry in a way that reaches the heart. It is particularly helpful when a church needs to recover a biblical sense of covenant loyalty.
To test the book quickly, read the opening chapter and then one chapter on the prophets. You will see at once whether the handling of imagery and application fits your setting.
Closing Recommendation
We recommend this as a useful thematic study that can sharpen preaching on idolatry and repentance. It is best used as a supplement alongside careful exegesis.
Raymond C. Ortlund Jr.
Raymond C. Ortlund Jr. is an American pastor and theologian of the contemporary era, writing from a Reformed evangelical tradition with a clear gospel centre.
He has served the church through preaching and writing that aims at renewal, calling believers to confidence in Christ and to congregational life shaped by grace and truth.
He remains valued for vivid communication, doctrinal steadiness, and a hopeful tone that refuses both cynicism and triumphalism. Recommended titles include Isaiah: God Saves Sinners, The Gospel, and his contribution to the ESV Expository Commentary.
Theological Perspective: Reformed