A Study of the Life of Moses
Sermon #15
The Ten Commandments Part III
Exodus 20: 12-17
The next six commandments tell us how to love people. They define what it means to love your neighbor as yourself. This morning I want to share six things that are important for a successful and joyful life.
Honor your father and your mother, that your days may be long upon the land which the LORD your God is giving you.
The family is Gods idea. It is the foundation block for any civilization. Any civilization that has let this foundation crumble has not been able to stand. Strong families, make strong communities, strong communities and make strong countries. If the family is destroyed the nation will fall.
The command says that we are to honor our Father and Mother. The word honor comes from a Hebrew verb that means to be heavy or weighty. It means we are to give great weight or importance to our parents by respecting them. What this honor looks like changes as time goes on in our lives. In the early years, honoring your parents is expressed mainly through being obedient to their rules. As one becomes a teenager this need for obedience continues but is augmented by learning to show respect to your parent in your attitude. Even as adults we are to continue to show respect by listening to our parents advice and by caring for their welfare.
This morning I want to share with you two fundamental reasons why the family is so important.
First, because it here that we find acceptance and love. The family is the place that God created to shelter us from the stresses and demands of daily life, one place where we its safe. Its a place where we can get close to someone else, be loved and accepted for simply being a part of a family, not because of what we look like, what we do or how smart we are.
Secondly, the family is important because it is here that we learn to relate
to Others! Joy Davidman, C.S.
Lewiss wife, recounting one of Grimms fairy tales, illustrates this point in
her book on the Ten Commandments saying, Once upon a Time there was a little
old man. His eyes blinked and his hand trembled; when he ate he clattered the silverware
distressing, missed his mouth with his spoon as often as not, and dribbled a bit of his
food on the tablecloth. Now he lived with his married son, having nowhere else to live and
his sons wife was modern young woman who knew that in-laws should not be tolerated
in a womans home.
I cant have this, she said. It interferes with a womans right to happiness. So she and her husband took the little one man gently but firmly by the arm and led him the corner of the kitchen. There they set him on a stool and gave him his food, what there was of it, in an earthenware bowl. From then on he always ate in the corner, blinking at the table with wistful eyes. One day his hand trembled rather more than usual, and the earthenware bowl fell and broke.
If
you are a pig, said the daughter in law, you must eat out of a trough.
So they made him a little wooden trough, and he got his meals in that.
These
people had a four-year-old son of whom they were very fond. One suppertime the young man
noticed his boy playing intently with some bits of wood and asked what he was
doing.Im making a trough, he said, smiling up for approval, to
feed you and Mama out of when I get big.
The man and wife looked at each other for a while and didnt say anything. Then they cried a little. Then they went to the corner and took the little old man back to the table. They sat him in a comfortable chair and gave him his food on a plate, and from then one nobody every scolded when he clattered or spilled or broke things. [Joy Davidman. Smoke on the Mountain: An Interpretation of the Ten Commandments. (Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1954.) pp. 60-61]
Children learn how to treat others, how to relate as husbands and wives, even how to honor father and mother at home. Since the family is the primary source of revelation being passed from one generation to the next, and since parents are the key transmitters, dishonoring parents has a double impact. When children of whatever age dishonor their parents, not only was that act sinful itself, but they cut themselves off from prime source of truth and Gods will. [Bill and Kathy Peel. Where is Moses When We Need Him? (Nashville: Broadman Press, 1995) p. 130.]
There is an enduring principle that is carried over into the New Testament. In
Ephesians Paul writes, Children, obey your parents in the
Lord, for this is right. (2) Honor
your father and mother, which is the first
commandment with promise: (3) that
it may be well with you and you may live long on the earth.
Volumes could and have been written to explain the dangers of disobedience,
disrespect and dishonor directed toward ones parents. But Paul has already told us that we
should do it because it is right and in his
letter to the Colossians (3:20) we are told that we should Children,
obey your parents in all things, for this is well pleasing to the Lord.
You shall not murder.
In the King James translation this reads,
Thou shalt not kill. But it is better to
understand the word kill means, You
shall not murder. It is clear that
this did not forbid, capital punishment (Gen 9:6), war (Deut 20) or self-defense (Ex
22:2).
You have heard that it was said to those of old, "You shall not murder, and whoever murders will be in danger of the judgment.' 22But I say to you that whoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall be in danger of the judgment. And whoever says to his brother, "Raca!' shall be in danger of the council. But whoever says, "You fool!' shall be in danger of hell fire. Jesus says that murder begins with the arrogant and egotistic attitude that causes someone to call his brother raca for instance. Raca means emptyhead or good for nothing.
You shall not commit adultery.
When you got married you made a lifetime commitment before God to remain faithful to that one partner no matter what. Yes, there are some marriages that seem more like jail than joy. Some think they have made a horrible mistake because your marriage characterized by dryness and frustration. But these do not justify you betraying the vows you took.
Moral failure rarely happens overnight. It almost always begins in our minds. We put into action what we have already contemplated in our minds. Jesus said in Matthew 5:27-28), You have heard that it was said to those of old, You shall not commit adultery. (28) But I say to you that whoever looks at a woman to lust for her has already committed adultery with her in his heart. Moral failure begins in our minds.
Two things you can do!
You shall not steal.
Paul reiterates this in the New Testament in his letter to the Ephesians (4:28) Let him who stole steal no longer, but rather let him labor,
working with his hands what is good, that he may have something to give him who has
need.
Interestingly, neither the Ten Commandments nor Pauls directives are written to a pack of thieving outlaws. They were written to those who in reality where probably the most honest people around, especially when compared to their pagan neighbors.
God is saying to his people, do not steal choose a path of honesty . Get off the take. Stop sponging. Do something to contribute to others.
Anytime we take something that we owe to others time, money, affection, courtesy, appreciation, we steal from them. Anytime we withhold something that God requires us to give we steal from Him.
We steal from an employer not only by take that which does not belong to us, but by half-hearted work. (Do your work as unto the LORD). Employers can steal fro their employees, not only by cheating them out of their wages, but by treating them unfairly.
Simply stated, the ninth commandment, You shall not
bear false witness against your neighbor, forbids the lie and condemns the
liar. When the apostle Paul lists the old
ways of life that Christians are to put aside in Ephesians (4:25), lying heads the list. Therefore, putting
away lying, Let each one of you speak
truth with his neighbor, for we are members of one
another.
The Christian
then is not to lie. Let me give you a
top-ten list of lies, that you hear most every day!. 10. Dont worry Dear we will
only stay five minutes. 9. This will be a
short meeting. 8. Ill respect you in the morning. 7. The check is in the mail. 6.
Im from the government and I am here to help you. 5. This hurts me more than it
hurts you. () 4. Your money will be cheerfully refunded. 3. When the physician says,
This will sting a little bit. 2. Your car will be ready tomorrow. 1. Ill start exercising, (dieting, forgiving
) tomorrow!
There are a number of ways that people lie. There is of course the direct lie. Then there is gossip and slander.
There is flattery. The flatterer will not say to your back what he will say to your face. The hypocrite will not say to your face what he will say to your back. This is not to say that there is not a place for compliments and encouragement. But flattery is an unmerited and insincere compliment meant to influence someone.
We must also understand that sometimes dishonesty does not occur because of what we have said, sometimes it happens as result of what we have left unsaid.
The importance of honesty, other than it is
abhorrent to God, is that dishonesty will almost always come back to haunt you. The
story is told of a peevish old fellow who boarded a train, occupied the best seat, and
then tried to reserve still another for himself by placing his luggage upon it. Just
before the crowded vehicle started, a teenage boy came running up and jumped aboard.
This car is full, said the man irritably, that seat next to me is
reserved for a friend of mine who has put his bag there. The your paid no attention
but sat down saying, All right, Ill stay here until he comes. He placed
the suitcase upon his lap while the elderly man glared at him in vain. Of course, the
friend didnt appear, and soon the train began to move. As it glided past
the platform, the young man tossed the bag through the open window remarking,
Apparently you friend has missed the train. We cant let him lose his luggage
too. With a horrified expression on his face the old gentleman began to fume and
sputter. His lie had cost him his possessions
. [Chuck Jones.
Truth or Consequences. Sermon on Exodus 20:16, Sermon Central]
We must learn to tell the truth graciously but also plainly. There is a great story told about an elderly countess who was very happy with her chauffer. He was courteous, prompt and efficient. The only compliant she had concerned his personal appearance. One day in an attempt to be gracious she said to him, Godrey, how frequently do you think one should shave in order to look neat and proper? Well Madam, Godrey replied also trying to be gracious, with a light beard like your, Id say every three or four days would be enough. When you speak the truth do it graciously, but plainly so that there is no misunderstanding.
You shall not covet your neighbors house; you shall not
covet your neighbors wife, nor his male servant, nor his female servant, nor his ox,
nor his donkey, nor anything that is your neighbors.
The tenth commandment, in a certain sense sums up all the others. Yet, in fact, it is different from all the others. The other commandments are concerned with visible acts. The tenth commandment is concerned with inward desires. Coveting is the secret sin and often the cause of breaking the other five commandments concerning our relationship with other people.
Coveting is the sin, that you can be sit in church this morning and be guilty of and no one will be the wiser.
Coveting will always lead to sin.
Contentment will always lead us to obedience. Contentment is the key to fulfillment and
security. Paul gives a picture of contentment
in his letter to the Philippians, (4:11-12) Not that I speak
in regard to need, for I have learned in whatever state I am, to be content: 12I
know how to be abased, and I know how to abound. Everywhere and in all things I have
learned both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need.
If after hearing the teachings of the Ten Commandments you are convict by how far you are from the standards of a holy God, good! That is exactly what God desires. The Ten Commandments were to show man how far he was from Gods standards and how much he need a Savior.
The Old Testament saint was saved by faith in a future sacrifice for his sin and the New Testament saint is saved by faith in a past sacrifice for sin. Salvation in the Old Testament and in the New Testament is by faith through grace. No one ever was saved because they earned it, because they kept the law.
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