In A Course in Miracles, it says: “Give up all your idols.”

Okay, but wait a minute… does that mean we have to throw away our Mary statues and Jesus crosses? Forget about our favorite gurus? Never again look up to someone who inspires us?

No need to panic. It’s about something much deeper.

An idol, in ACIM, is anything we place outside ourselves as a source of happiness, love, security, or fulfillment. Not just celebrities, but also ideas, situations, objects, and beliefs. In short: anything we think we need to be complete.

Time to take a closer look at some of these ‘idols.’

Human idols.

We put people on pedestals as if they are the ultimate source of wisdom, beauty, or success. Think about:

A pop star who is literally worshiped as if they perform miracles.

A spiritual teacher who seems almost holy—until it turns out they sometimes act in ways that don’t align with their own teachings.

A politician or leader who is supposed to be the ‘savior’—but ends up making a mess of things.

What always happens to these idols? They fall.

Not because they fail, but because we idolized them and forgot that they, just like us, are simply people in a dream.

And if you think you don’t have any idols—ask yourself why you feel so disappointed when your favorite celebrity suddenly does something “too human.”

Material idols

Some people don’t put celebrities on pedestals but things:

“If I have that one car, then I’ll be happy.”

“Without my morning coffee, I’m useless.”

“My phone is my best friend.”

You see it immediately: we attach our happiness to something outside ourselves.

(But as every iPhone user knows: there’s always a newer model.)

An idol is nothing more than a smokescreen—you think you need it, but once you have it, you push it aside and look for the next thing.

The moment you elevate something to the absolute truth and condemn others for seeing it differently, it becomes an idol.

And here’s the funny thing: when you let go of idols, you can enjoy them even more—without attachment or fear of losing them.

So, the next time you think your happiness depends on that one person, that one object, or that one belief… smile.

Because that’s the moment you realize: I don’t need idols. I am already complete.

With love and light,

G.

By Gonny

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