Our unconscious need to remake God into own image might be the most important form of modern idolatry. This need underlines the importance of the repeated biblical principle: "The fear (reverence, awe, and yes, fear, too) of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom." The advocated fear implies a recognition that the real God is wholly other and does not jump just because I crack my whip. This recognition means that our comfortable mental constructs of God must be understood in terms of our need to manipulate God, so that God supports our agendas. It is precisely to prevent such undisciplined mental constructs that the OT God thrice evades requests for His name and. after Moses' request for His name, substitutes the evasive but illuminating phrase, "I am who am", more clearly translated as "I will be whatever I will be." To prevent such idolatrous theology, God reminds us in Isaiah, "My ways are not your ways, nor my thoughts your thoughts."
So how can this danger be best avoided? By stressing an experiential/ contemplative approach to God rather than a merely doctrinal and ritualistic approach. Mystical experience often produces a dread and fear, as one realizes that, though the real God wants an intimate connection with us, He connects with us in a way that reminds us that we are only scratching the surface of a hidden, elusive, mysterious, yet somehow still loving ultimate reality. But a more mystical connection with God also transforms life into a more exciting and adventurous faith quest.