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We return to the law of God today
to the ninth word. There we go again. It's just
like last week. OK, ninth word. And we're going
to use the reading from Deuteronomy 24, verse eight through twenty
five, verse three. And this will sound familiar.
We actually talked about the same section of scripture. when
we dealt with the eighth word in social justice, but this is
actually the portion of Moses' sermon that deals specifically
with the ninth word. I mentioned that when we talked
on this a month or two ago, but that is the sermon section from
the book of Deuteronomy that deals with this ninth word and
helps us to understand it. You have on the handouts today
the printed version of this, or read along in your scriptures,
or just listen. Please stand for the reading
of God's word. Deuteronomy 24 verse 8 through 25 verse 3, and
you'll see that the brackets of this are dealing with judgment.
Take heed in an outbreak of leprosy that you carefully observe and
do according to all that the priests, the Levites, shall teach
you, just as I commanded them, so you shall be careful to do.
Remember what the Lord your God did to Miriam on the way when
you came out of Egypt. When you lend your brother anything,
you shall not go into the house to get his pledge. You shall
stand outside, and the man to whom you lend shall bring the
pledge out to you. And if the man is poor, you shall
not keep the pledge overnight. You shall in any case return
the pledge to him again when the sun goes down, that he may
sleep in his own garment and bless you. And it shall be righteousness
to you before the Lord your God. You shall not oppress a hired
servant who is poor and needy, whether one of your own brethren
or one of the aliens who is in your land within your gates.
Each day you shall give him his wages and not let the sun go
down on it, for he is poor and has set his heart on it, lest
he cry out against you to the Lord and it be sin to you. Fathers shall not be put to death
for their children, nor shall children be put to death for
their fathers. A person shall be put to death
for his own sin. You shall not pervert justice,
do the stranger or the fatherless, nor take a widow's garment as
a pledge. But you shall remember that you
were a slave in Egypt and the Lord your God redeemed you from
there. Therefore, I command you to do
this thing. When you reap your harvest in
your field and forget a sheaf in the field, you shall not go
back to get it. It shall be for the stranger,
the fatherless, and the widow, that the Lord your God may bless
you in all the work of your hands. When you beat your olive trees,
you shall not go over the boughs again. It shall be for the stranger,
the fatherless, and the widow. When you gather the grapes of
your vineyard, you shall not glean it afterwards. It shall
be for the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow. And you shall
remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, therefore
I command you to do this thing. If there is a dispute between
men and they come to court, that the judges may judge them, and
they justify the righteous and condemn the wicked, then it shall
be if the wicked man deserves to be beaten, that the judge
will cause him to lie down and be beaten in his presence, according
to his guilt, with a certain number of blows. 40 blows he
may give him, and no more, lest he should exceed this, and beat
him with many blows above these, and your brother be humiliated
in your sight. Let's pray. Lord God, we thank
you for your word. We thank you for your scriptures. We thank
you, Father, that your law governs reality and the entire universe. One word under your word. Bless
us, Lord God, as we attempt to understand this word, to give
you thanks and praise for it, and to apply it in our lives.
In Jesus' name we ask it. Amen. Please be seated. About a week ago, I heard the
geese. I like to, Saturday evening,
sit on my porch or outside and meditate on the sermon. I think
what particular things in it I'd like to stress for this particular
congregation. And about a week ago, and again
last night, I heard geese. flying overhead and it's a comforting
sound. We happen to live in Canby where
there's a, apparently it's on the geese's route, the goose
geese, their route to fly south for the winter. And so it's the
harbinger of winter of course and then when they return it's
the harbinger of summer coming back. And these seasonalities
that we live in the context of and things like geese flying
every year They bring us great comfort in the midst of times
that are turbulent and filled with, as we said last week, we
now have a warfare state more and more, and problems exist,
and tremendous problems happen every week. And I know that in
some of your homes, you live in a warfare state more often
than not, or at least sometimes. Times are hard and difficult,
and it's important in the midst of those times to remember the
regularity of God's blessings, His seasonality, to hear those
geese, and to remember that great is the faithfulness of God. I've
decided to preach on the book of Lamentations for Lent, and
I don't know if most of you know or not, but that wonderful song,
Great is Thy Faithfulness, that's taken from The book of Lamentations,
which is strange because Lamentations is probably the saddest book
of the whole scriptures, describing the destruction of Jerusalem
and ultimately the death of the Lord Jesus Christ. I was fascinated
this last week with some literary talks I'd heard on it and the
beauty at the beginning and the decay of beauty at the end of
that book and the structure of the book itself. It'll be fun.
to talk about that. I'm also writing curriculum for
this coming school year on the book of Jeremiah and Lamentations.
But this verse is found there. I'm going to read a couple of
verses. This is sort of, I mean, not exactly, but it's sort of
the heart. It's at the middle of the book of Lamentations,
in the midst of lamentations and weeping over the destruction
or the movement away, the decay of beauty that is a Christian
culture. And we have some degree of that. Now, we hope that's
going to roll back the other way. But in the midst of that,
We read these words, through the Lord's mercies we are not
consumed because his compassions fail not. They are new every
morning. Great is thy faithfulness. The
Lord is my portion, says my soul, therefore I hope in him. The Lord is good to those who
wait for him, to the soul who seeks him. It's so important
to remember in the midst of our times, great is the faithfulness
of God. God is faithful to his covenant,
to his law, word. When we are faithless yet, he
is faithful. And he so works things in the
context of judgments in the world to bring us back to a ready acceptance
of his law because in the law of the Lord is liberty. And as
we move away from the law of the Lord, we expect and we actually,
it's a good thing to see the loss of liberty because that's
what happens. We wouldn't want blessing to
happen as we walk away from the source of blessing, who is God
Himself. Jesus said, the Spirit of the
Lord is upon me because He has anointed me to preach the gospel
to the poor. He has sent me to heal the brokenhearted,
to proclaim liberty to the captives, and recovery of sight to the
blind, to set at liberty those who are oppressed, to proclaim
the acceptable year of the Lord. In our response to our times,
our individual times, our national times, we can get angry and upset
and get all out of sorts about things, or we can be passive.
That's not right either. But we can set ourselves on a
determined course to restore liberty in our own lives through
an adherence to the law of God wherein liberty is found. Our
Savior's purpose in the covenantal faithfulness of the Father in
sending Him to come and to put the world to right shall not
be thwarted. It shall proceed. And the Lord
God says this is a day of good news. The proclamation that Jesus
has come to declare liberty and to heal the broken hearted and
those that are difficulty in difficult trials and conditions
and to help the poor. And we saw that again in our
text today as we saw last week that in a section on a matter
of justice in court laws, court witnesses, yet we have this emphasis
upon the purpose of God to restore people and to have the good news
proclaimed, bringing liberty and well-being once more to his
people. May we have a fixed determination
as a congregation and as individuals to apply ourselves to an understanding
of the law of God. We don't know it very well. And
we're like Josiah's generation when they found the book of the
law and we begin to realize the implications of that law. And
we tear our clothes and we weep before God. Give us an understanding
of this law. Give us hearts to believe it
and to apply it. Give us understanding by your
Holy Spirit of what it means to us. Now we've talked about
the ninth commandment a couple of weeks ago. This is the third
and probably last sermon. When I get back next week, Reverend
Pastor Hayes will be preaching. Flynn and Chris and I will be
coming back from Minneapolis, Lord willing, on Saturday. Please
pray for those denominational meetings. I'm going to mention
something else. about them in a few minutes. And then after
that, I think I'll move on to the tenth word. So we're going
to try today to kind of pick up some loose ends and remind
ourselves of some important emphases in the ninth word. And hopefully,
feathers will be a reminder to you of one of the implications.
In the first two sermons, we looked at the application of
the ninth word and its most basic application, which is to not
a perjure yourselves in a court of law against your brother.
But then this has implications for our everyday speech. And
last week, the illustration of feathers. I don't know how you
were this week. You should have a feather index.
Did you spread feathers around? Did you gossip and slander about
people? Did you violate the essential
application of the ninth word in your speech? This is a word
that talks about speech. It's similar to another one of
the commandments. On your outlines, I've given
you a couple of ways to look and meditate about the ten words.
There are different ways to go about understanding them. We've
talked before about how there's a relationship between the first
three laws and then the fourth Sabbath law and the next three
and the next three kind of repeat the emphases of the first three,
Father, Son and Holy Spirit. And that kind of moves on then
into five through seven and then eight through ten. So that's
one way to look at them. And another way is that next
two weeks we start the commandment that talks about the internal
hard attitude that drives a lot of the other violations of the
ten words. We kill and commit adultery and
steal and lie in court about each other because we covet.
And so it's kind of the root things that seems to drive all
kinds of other things. That's another legitimate way
to look at it. And yet another legitimate way
is listed on your outlines. I think this came from John Unger.
He mentioned this to me in passing a week or two ago. And then I
actually found this in my computer without attribution. So I think,
and it's on your handouts today, I think this is John's, the thing
that he sent me. And if we combine the first and
second words, first and second commandments, or if we look at
the first commandment as a header, an introduction to the rest of
them, the rest of them then kind of line up topically with each
other in a chiastic structure that's on your handouts. No idolatry at the beginning
matches up with covetousness at the end. And Paul said that
covetousness is idolatry. And so those two are linked.
And a meditation on the flow of the ten words gives us that
as well. We're not to take God's name
in vain and emptiness. And remember I've said that this
thing about bearing false witness, the word false is the same as
vain in the In the third commandment is the same as this word in the
ninth, and they kind of match up then there. Although the third
commandment emphasizes all of life and the ninth commandment
emphasizes speech, there is this commonality in terms of vanity
of witness, either with our lives or in our speech. We're to rest
on the Sabbath day and work on the other six days, and we're
not supposed to steal, we're supposed to labor with our hands.
I think we just read that verse. And so the Sabbath and labor
are connected up in terms of the violation of labor by being
theft instead of working with our hands. And then honoring
parents kind of lines up with adultery, you know. Parents are
where children come from and they represent authority and
adultery is a violation of the family as well. So those kind
of match up in a natural kind of way if we think about it.
And if you look at it that way, the center of the whole thing
is don't murder. And remember, we said that in
the Deuteronomy version, these last five commandments are all
linked. Don't kill and don't commit adultery
and don't steal. and don't bear false witness.
There are ways to kill people, these other violations. And so there's different ways
of doing it. There's different ways. And the reason for that
is, is because God wants us meditating on his word. If his law is the
law of liberty, and if Jesus came to establish that law and
the order and the liberty and the healing of the poor that
is affected by it, then it behooves us to know that law and to think
about it and to make applications of it. And so meditation on the
structure of it will assist us in that endeavor. So I hope you
do that. Let's move on now. And what I've
done on your handout is to actually list the various sections of
the Scriptures that are focal points in the Old Testament of
the ninth word. We just read one, right? We read this text
from Deuteronomy 24.8 and 25.3. Now, we'll return to that in
just a minute, but the structure I gave you there is not so much
based on words. This is another text where you
can sort of try to line up the fatherless, widows, and orphans,
and try to make a section out of that, or line up the pledges. There's different ways to think
and meditate on the text of Scripture. Scripture is like a diamond,
right? It's got lots of facets, and there's lots of ways to look
at that thing, at the beauty internal to it through these
various facets. And now the one I've given you,
I think, has kind of a natural flow to it. And it begins and
ends, and this is the evidence that it's the ninth word in addition
to the eighth word and the tenth word being around it, dealing
with punishments. God punished Miriam for leprosy
because what did she do? You know, she essentially attacked
Moses. Miriam and Aaron attacked Moses
with their speech. testimony that the Lord heard
that was really kind of selfish and racially biased. Actually,
they were upset that Moses had married a Kushnite woman. And
so they said, well, you know, you're not the only spokesman
around here. So they attacked God's authority with their speech.
And because of that, we have the judgment of God leprosy.
And that matches up at the end with man's judgments in court.
We're supposed to mirror. Courts are a vision of God's
justice put into effect in the world through human agency. And
so at the end of this section of scripture, that's what we
have. They match up, divine and human justice, and how they're
supposed to match up. And then it has to do with courts,
and then it has to do with the ninth word. Interior to that is a bunch
of stuff about helping people. That should remind us of last
week. Remember last week? We had stuff about, you know,
our speech in common life and stuff about our speech in court.
In the middle, love at the center, right? Helping people is in the
middle of it. Helping your enemy and your person you don't like
or that doesn't like you. And here in the middle is grace. God wants us to see that grace
and justice are combined and that the way we're ultimately
going to help the poor in any particular place is to bring
God's Word, His Law and the power of the Spirit wherein is liberty
and wherein is the vehicle where Jesus Christ said would be effectual
to healing those that are broken and to helping the poor. So justice
and mercy and love are all wrapped up together in these little concentric
structures. Now, elements two and three of
the thing we just read are interesting because they say that the way
you treat the poor, one way to paraphrase it, will be either
righteousness for you or it will be sin for you. And there's a
sense in which the text wants us to see the pervasiveness of
helping the poor as a theme of our lives, because it's essentially
equated to what is the basis for our right standing with God.
I mean, I didn't write this stuff. God did. And that's what it says.
I'm astonished by it. Every time I read it, I'm astonished
by it. That when we exhibit the grace and mercy of God, that's
righteousness to us. And when we withhold the grace
and mercy of God, that's sin to us. Well, actually, now that
I put it that way, I'm not too surprised by it. Because it's
an evidence of our knowledge that we don't get here through
our works. We all get here through the grace of God. And if we don't
show grace, you know, to certain kinds of people, that means we
don't have grace. We're not counting on God's grace
either. So sections two and three do
that. You either have righteousness or sin imputed to you on the
basis of how you treat the poor. And that's in the middle of a
ninth word section. Now the other end, those two
sections ended with the reminding of us that we are graciously
given deliverance by God from Egypt. Those sections 5 and 6
both have at their conclusion, you know, God's grace, He delivered
us from Egypt. So the whole structure is a beautiful
meditation on the necessity in our laws and in our actions with
our hands with our tongues to extend the grace that God has
extended to that. And at the very middle of today's
text on the ninth word is individual responsibility. It's not the
responsibility of the dad when the son sins. And by responsibility,
I mean fault. Now, I know there's a lot of
wiggling around on this responsibility word, but usually responsibility
means fault. It means punishment is given
to you. And dads and sons aren't liable
for each other. And that's a way of saying that,
you know, it's always your fault, my fault, my own fault, my own
most grievous fault. Shall we put God to death for
the circumstances that got you angry this last week? Shall we? No. Because no matter what conditions
in our lives are happening, And I know there's some tough ones.
I understand that. God is empathetic and we are
to be too. But no matter what those conditions
are, the Lord God is sovereign. He's most wise. He's most powerful. And he's most loving. And that
means whatever you went through this last week happened to the
divine sovereignty of God. Now, there was a lot of sin involved,
things in your life that might have hurt you. But God uses sin
sinlessly. He's most wise. He's most powerful. He's most loving. And what that
means is, when you sin, it's not His fault. Never His fault. What does it say? It says, no
sin has overtaken you, but such as is common to men. No, your
life isn't any worse than anybody else's. Whatever temptations
you go through are common to men. Corinthians goes on to say
that with the temptation, God will provide the means of escape.
Individual responsibility. When a culture moves away from
the Lord Jesus Christ, it moves away from individual responsibility. It starts to blame the group,
or the state, or the rich, or the poor, or whatever it is,
and we end up with a warfare state, and that's what we've
got. 700 people arrested yesterday. You know, in New York City, a
camp out going on for two weeks is the rich people are to blame.
Other people say the poor people are to blame. As the presidential
election gears up, it's a warfare state. That's what happens when
we move away from individual responsibility, from the law
of God. So Deuteronomy is a text that
articulates, again, a perspective on this ninth word that again
puts justice right at the center of the thing. Let me read a couple
of other verses. I've got on your outline here the section
from the case laws in Exodus chapter 23. We preached on this
last week, but I wanted to put them all in one place. And then
the other thing I've given you here are the laws from Leviticus
19 that best I can tell relate to the ninth word. Remember,
one way to meditate on the word of God and to understand it is
to look at the law, look at Moses' sermon on the law in Deuteronomy,
look at some of those case laws from Exodus, and look at Leviticus
19, which is a summary of the Ten Commandments. Okay, so here
are the verses. And we've dealt with this before.
You shall not steal, nor deal falsely, nor lie to one another,
and you shall not swear by my name falsely. Both kinds of speech.
You know, it would be a good exercise. I don't have time today
to read it, but you read the Westminster a larger catechism
for all the long description of what's required and forbidden
in the ninth word. And a lot of it is about gossip
and slander and carrying a false report, etc. And that's what's
going on here. And this is that ring of fire
I preached on a few weeks ago. When we start to steal, we end
up dealing falsely and lying about it, and then eventually
we lie in court. You shall not swear by my name falsely, nor
shall you profane the name of your God, I am the Lord. Verses
15 and 16, you shall do no injustice in judgment. Now this is the
heart of the ninth word. No injustice in judgment. Don't pervert. This is a word
that's used repeatedly. It was used in our text from
last week. Don't pervert justice. To pervert
means to turn aside after something else, to divert out of the way.
God is working out His justice to human courts And the perversion
of justice is horrible, and injustice in judgment is what the ninth
word is all about. So verse 15, you should do no injustice in
judgment. You shall not be partial to the poor, nor honor the person
of the mighty. Both those things were also in
our text in Exodus 23. It's important for the ninth
word to understand the center of the section of Moses' sermon,
individual responsibility, and not count someone else, you know,
give impartiality in court because it was somebody else's fault.
Or because if you're a commoner, you can identify with the poor
person and you don't like the rich person. Or if you're a rich
person, you can identify with the rich person and you don't
like poor people. That's what we're intended to
do. That's our sinful nature, is to group up. And the Bible,
you know, preaches to our weakness. We have a great weakness in this.
And that means most of the country is going to be partial to the
poor if biblical law doesn't govern. And the elite of the
country are going to be partial to the rich. And when you have
that situation, wow, you've got inevitable warfare, conflict,
problems. Does it sound familiar? Well,
yes, it sounds very familiar because that's exactly, that
is exactly what this country is now dealing with. Our problem
is not each of these indicators. Our problem is a failure to have
God's law at the center of our justice system and no justice
system. will reflect liberty, security, justice, when it moves
away from the God of the Scriptures. We have strange things happening.
Well, I mean, it's not okay to hold people in Guantanamo Bay.
And we want, once we arrest somebody who confesses, and there's corroborating
evidence that he Killed thousands of people? Well, we want to give
them American jurisprudence, Fifth Amendment rights. But an
American citizen, overseas somehow, we can just take out with a drone.
Does that bother you at all? Now, it may be okay that we did
it. But the hypocrisy of our existing structures is, I mean,
it's plain for all to see. These things are like Dorothy
Go Home. They're letters written large
in the sky. And what we need to do is to
call our country to repentance and back to the law of God as
the basis of civil justice. And what we need to do as individuals
is avoid the sorts of sins that this culture is now putting in
front of us in spades. And one of the things it puts
in front of us is partiality to the poor, partiality to the
rich. Choose whose side you're on on this. The Bible says no.
Leviticus 19 says, no, do no injustice and judgment. Do not
be partial to the poor or honor the person of the mighty. In
righteousness, you shall judge your neighbor. You shall not
go about as a tailbearer among your people, nor shall you take
a stand against the life of your neighbor. I am the Lord, your
God. I am the Lord, brother. And so common speech once more
in the section Leviticus tied to judicial action. judicial
action. So the ninth word has both of
those applications to it. And I know I just I talk about
that a lot. I've talked on those verses from
Leviticus a lot in this series because they're important and
because they're one of the things you can do something about immediately.
You can't do a whole lot about yet about what's going on in
the civil courts or who runs things and all that stuff, but
you can sure do something about your speech and you can quit
spreading feathers. I preach to you, and I preach
to myself. We can stop doing that part at
least. And the text again links those two together. Verse 32
speaks to respect the elderly and fear of God, commandment
5. Then it goes on to verses 33. And if a stranger dwells
with you in your land, you shall not mistreat him. The stranger
who dwells among you shall be to you as one born among you,
and you shall love him as yourself, for you were strangers in the
land of Egypt. I am the Lord your God." Now
that's very similar language, although here the emphasis is
on love. Leviticus, the heart of the Pentateuch is about love,
and the heart of Leviticus is chapter 19, and it's about love,
and the heart of Leviticus 19 is love your neighbor as yourself,
and here, as we move to the end of Leviticus 19, it says love
the alien like yourself. OK, so again, there's a relationship
here that is drawn in Deuteronomy 23 and in Leviticus 19 that makes
us think this is 9th witness, 9th commandment stuff. And then
verse 35, you shall do no injustice in judgment. There it is again.
And now it applies it to measurement of length, weight or volume.
You shall have honest scales, honest weights, honest ethon
and honest hymn. I am the Lord, your God, who
brought you out of the land of Egypt. And then the very next
verse, this is the conclusion, this is the end of it, and verse
37, the end of 19 says, guard all my statutes. Don't just do
them, guard them, protect them, advance them in your culture.
And so the very conclusion of Leviticus 19 and the 70 commandments
have to do with the ninth word, bearing true witness even in
the measurements, weight, volume, etc. that you have in your culture. And so Leviticus 19 is this other
section that repeats these things we've looked at already from
other texts. Now, what I want to do now is
go to ten quick observations on the ninth word. Ten quick observations on the
ninth word, and this is on your handout as well, on the third
page. Oh, what's that fourth page?
What's that coloring sheet? That's Ruth, right? You know,
Ruth's a picture of somebody gleaning, and then the great
blessings that come to the line of the Savior, his forebearers
coming through, a converted Gentile, a Moabite, really bad class of
people, fortunately. Boaz was an upright guy who didn't
show that kind of partiality, loved the stranger as well as
the home-born, and let Ruth glean and ended up marrying her, and
then ended up having, eventually, Jesus. Okay. So, notes. We'll talk about this in a minute,
but she's on her knees there. It's interesting. Okay. One.
Confidentiality and corroboration. Two to three witnesses and the
requirement of witness. This is an example of elements
of our judicial system that we just don't get anymore. In the
laws of witness, that's what 9th Word is about, you can't
put somebody to death or convict somebody on the testimony of
one person. You need two or three people.
Now, that is a requirement. You know, some of the laws that
God gives us, they're the same in other cultures, a lot of them,
because they make sense. This one is not the same. This
is unique as far as I understand it, at least from my studies.
This is unique from other law codes of the ancient world. And the reason for this, or what
this implies to us, is that you can't testify against yourself
and then be put to death. So I can't go to a court, somebody's
dead, and tell them I'm the one that killed them, and they can
then convict me just on that testimony. The Bible says you
can't do that. Now why? It seems like we ought
to be able to do it. But the Bible says no. And if
that was the case, if that was the case, then what does the
civil state need to do to take out anybody? They just need to
get a hold of you and compel your testimony against yourself.
If all they need is you testifying against yourself, then they can
grab one person, torture him, and bring him to testify against
himself. And in the scriptures and in
our own constitution, the scriptures implicitly say, you know, there's
no evidences of forced confessions in the Old Testament. Achan confessed
that it was voluntary and there was corroborating evidence for
his confession. Now, that's why we have the Fifth
Amendment, because corroboration is an essential aspect of God's
judicial system, and it is an aspect of God's law word that
yields liberty and freedom from tyranny. And we don't understand
this anymore. We don't get this anymore. And
regularly now, you know, things are happening against what these
things speak about. I got one and two together because
the other side of it is you're required to testify, just like
you are here. If the state knows you're a material
witness, they can compel you to testify. That's good and godly
because the Bible says if you know something about a matter,
you should testify. But the Bible also says that
through the law of corroboration, no one can be compelled to testify
against themselves. And you can't convict a person,
even if he did voluntarily or involuntarily, you can't convict
them. on the basis of a single testimony. So this is something,
you know, that is essential to biblical liberty. And as a culture
moves away from that, and as people can be compelled to testify,
then we move toward torture. And we move toward a civil state
that compels testimony. Last week, the executives of
Solyndra testified before Congress. It was another dog and pony show.
Congress knew that they were going to take the Fifth Amendment.
Now you bring them up there, you do it once, and that's the
end of it. But so often in these sort of cases, Congress is trying
to, I believe, whether intentionally or not, incite a mob to violence
by bringing people up and implying their guilt through asking them
a long series of questions to which they know the person. It's
going to exercise their Fifth Amendment, non-incrimination,
biblical rights. Now, what's the end result of
that? How do you feel after watching
that? You feel like, to heck with the Fifth Amendment. This
is ridiculous. Why are we doing this? And if
you don't understand what the scriptures say about corroboration
and an implication of the ninth word, then you don't know why
we don't do it. But what's happening is, more
and more people are being compelled to testify, and there's a buzz
being built over the last two or three decades, you know, to
try to get rid of the protection from self-incrimination. This
extends to confidentiality laws as well. This is why a pastor,
and this is where it relates to the CREC. The CREC, one thing
we're going to consider this week, is a confidentiality policy. What does it mean, pastoral confidentiality? When you come and talk to me,
who can I tell? Who can I tell? And you need
to know that. We should have a policy statement here. So I'm
glad the CREC is working on it. But do we understand the basic
idea? Do you? You come to me and confess
a crime. And, you know, let's say this
is not in common conversation. This is now you say, I want to
confess my sin. I want to hear you. Tell me what God says about
this. I want to be like that lady with
the feathers and the pillow and the gossip. And the Bible says
you can't be compelled to testify against yourself. And when you're
talking to me, confessing, you're essentially talking to God. It's
a conversation between you and God. I represent God in that
conversation. And I talk back to you. I say,
well, you know, if you did that, you need to repent. You need
to make restitution. You need to let people know that
you did this. I encourage you to voluntarily
go to the authorities. I can do all that stuff. But
I can't tell the state, well, so-and-so told me this and this.
Because that's violating this idea of confidentiality, no compelling
of a person's testimony against himself. There's a special relationship. Now, we don't know anything about
that anymore. We just think, well, it's another guy. Church
is another one, like the Elks. You tell your Elk master. No. In the Scriptures, doctors are
the same way. Why doctors? Because salvation in the Bible
is not As fire insurance policy, it's not, you know, guaranteed
entrance to heaven. It's wholeness. It means health.
And doctors were always seen in the same status as pastors
because they're both ministers of God for salvation. This is
the basis for medical confidentiality with your doctor. Most hospitals,
almost all of them, were always religious hospitals in the past
because people understood the relationship of spiritual and
physical health. And we broke those apart. We
think we can manipulate things over here on the health side
and ignore the spiritual side, that we can minister on the spiritual
side and ignore the material side. It's kind of a Gnostic
dualistic universe we've created. But in biblical law, You know,
health is salvation, and doctors are the same basically as priests,
and so a doctor can't be compelled. Now today, all your privacy policies,
these are all based on some kind of right to privacy that has
nothing to do with what I'm talking about here. It's some kind of
attempt to cover up for the sin of abortion primarily. But biblically,
that was the idea. Now why your attorney? Attorney-client
privilege? Because your attorney, again,
is in a special relationship to you. They used to call him
a mouthpiece. I don't know if they still do
or not. Who's your mouthpiece? Who's your lawyer, in other words?
In other words, the attorney, that's all he does, is he speaks
for you. He's your voice. He's not an
independent person, really. And once more, then, what you
tell your attorney can't be compelled, he can't be compelled, to tell
the court what you told him in confidentiality. So all these
things are kind of tied up together and they're a result of an understanding
of the implication of God's word as it relates to judicial process
and the fact of corroboration of two or three witnesses. And when we move away from God's
law, we move away from corroboration, we end up with very strange times
in which those confidentiality requirements are being broken
down more and more, or extended in directions that make us upset,
and we want to get rid of them all together. But that's an implication.
of the ninth word that talks about the importance of court
procedures and establishing justice. It is a perversion of justice
to compel people to testify against themselves or to convict someone
just on the basis of their own confession. And confidentiality
in its various forms, husband, wife or one body. Same basic
truth is with these other groups we've talked about. So that's
that's an important deal. And it's and it's it's very it's
very applicable to us right now because of what has just happened
with Cylinder as an example. We could talk as well, R.G. Rushdune
in his book Institutes of Biblical Law talks about lie detectors
and how evil they are. But I haven't thought it through.
But we can, you know, there's interesting implications about
this. And rather than being pragmatic and wanting to throw people that
we know are bad in jail or kill them from a drone missile or
something, the Bible says these processes are important. They're
important for us. Okay, third, the law of equivalence. Reduction of false matters. We
read last week, keep yourself far away from a false matter
and in Leviticus that's directed to judges. How? Well, once more
our culture is moving us away from how? The way you keep yourself
away from false matters, from having a court system that has
all kinds of false charges brought and false lawsuits, etc., is
the law of equivalence. And we've talked about this over
the last few months, but in the Bible, if a witness, and the
ninth word talks about witnesses, if I go to court against you
and I testify, and I'm trying to get you killed as a result
of my testimony, and it's found out that I'm lying deliberately
about it to get you killed, I'm supposed to be put to death.
Now that goes right on down. If I'm trying to get you to lose
money somehow, I should lose money. It's called the law of
equivalence. And a false witness is responsible for what he says. And there should be, in the judicial
system, equivalence. Now, when you have that kind
of a system, if I know that I bring a false charge or a false civil
suit or whatever it is, that I'm going to end up potentially
owing a lot of money, or being thrown in jail myself, or being
executed myself, that tends to put a damper, it's a deterrent,
on false matters in court. We're commanded in God's law,
as an application of the ninth word, to keep judges away from
false matters. And one way to accomplish that
is this law of equivalence. Now once more, in our culture,
That isn't true. And in point of fact, it's just
the opposite. Our culture encourages false matters in court because
everybody's trying to hit the jackpot on the civil suit. And
so our culture is actively discouraging the law of equivalence. And as
a result of that, our courts are clogged and have become less
and less competent. Fourth, bribes, crowds, and our
imperfect weaknesses. I've already talked about this.
But this is who we are. We like people like ourselves.
We don't like people that are different than us. What is our
culture doing about the requirement of the Ninth Commandment to not
follow a mob, to not follow a crowd is what it means to do violence.
You know, not join in the common perception that this or that
thing should be done away with as opposed to truth. We're all
prone to that, right? You know this is true. You know,
if a group of us are talking about something, we all tend
to want to be part of the group, we want to be part of the in crowd,
whatever it is. And we tend to be part of that.
And democracy in its raw form is exactly that. It's just following
a crowd. And if the crowd does evil by
instituting laws to put to death Christian converts, you know,
you followed a mob to do violence then. And related to this is
the idea of On the other side, requiring
ourselves to exhibit kindness to strangers. That word stranger
is a strange one. We don't really know what it
means. There are a lot of visitors going through Israel on trade
routes. A lot of people would come there because of the beautiful
laws they had. The purpose of this is to just
remind ourselves, we can at least that this is an application of
these kind of words. We can say whoever seems strange
to us, be kind to them. Go out of your way to help them.
Love them. And again, we're tempted not
to do that. Now, what's the contemporary situation on this one? Well,
it screams from the headlines all the time. It's knocked one
of the leading, the leading Republican candidate down from the top,
Rick Perry, because of his statements on immigration policy. It's what
do you do with people whose skin are brown? And what is our culture
doing? It's setting up laws and not
enforcing them. It's creating the kind of you
know, stress and pressure that leads every state or municipality
to try to do its own thing. And then generally the population
who believe in law, the Christian population, gets madder and madder
about the whole thing. And our tremendous temptation
is to, you know, talk about Mexicans. That's what we're tempted to
do in our flesh. And that flesh, that natural
temptation we have, if you're white, to do that, or if you're
Mexican, to make fun of the Anglos. I mean, racism is a fact of every
race throughout history. But if that's our natural tendency,
how much more so in a country that makes laws and then lets
people break those laws with impunity? Well, it's just setting
us up. It feeds that incipient weakness
that we have. toward discrimination, ungodly
discrimination. It feeds it. That's what it does.
So in each of these matters, as our country moves away from
the law of liberty, And from the means by which Jesus is proclaiming
the good news and affecting and putting the world to rights,
the world is put to wrongs by the civil state, by our culture,
any culture that moves away from Jesus, it begins to be put to
wrong. It divides people, it produces
warfare states, and it produces A violation of our liberty and
an increasing ability for the civil state to compel testimony,
whether it's lie detectors, blood tests, whatever it is. Making
fun of the Fifth Amendment and trying to get rid of it more
and more. Whatever it is, our particular structure right now
is causing us to be tempted to violate the ninth word, and so
we need to, again, have a fixed determination not to give in
to these societal pressures that play on our own sinfulness. The ninth word and the fourth
word, Exodus 23. I didn't talk about this last
week, but right after that section on the ninth word, it talks about
the Sabbath. And the Sabbath is related to
giving rest to sojourners, and to widows, and to fatherless,
assisting the worthy poor, verse 6. And this is at the heart of
the text from Deuteronomy today. Now, I say worthy poor, and I
say Ruth. Because we live in a warfare
state, and a state of rights that are not derived from the
Scriptures, There's increasingly, well there's less and less, the
kind of people that the Bible would consider to allow to glean
in a field. What we have are people demanding
this and demanding that and feeling entitled to this or that. And
as a result of that, what's our temptation? Here's another area.
When the government and the culture subsidizes sloth, redefines poverty
in a way that would never be feasible. I mean, it would be
ridiculous to call the kind of people that are poor in our culture,
poor in other cultures and poor historically. When the culture
today does that, what's the result? Our tendency, where does our
sinfulness lie? Our sinfulness will lie in this
church, I think, and in conservative Christian circles. To dislike
the poor. To dislike people that are the
very ones we're supposed to try to help. Right? It's a warfare
state. And you're supposed to choose
up sides. And some people are choosing up with the poor people.
There's a lot more of them. And some people are choosing
up with the rich people. And you end up defending the
kind of corporate violation of God's Word that you really don't
want to be defending. God says the way to remember
How to get through this tangle as we live in a pagan, increasingly
a Christless culture, is to focus on His law. And His law says
that court, impartiality in court, the protection of liberty in
court, our speech is all tied up with the eternal purpose of
God in sending the Lord Jesus Christ to help the poor and to
heal up those that are broken and to set at liberty the captive. Now, setting the captive at liberty
is difficult work. God had a hard time with it.
I hope you don't mind me saying that. But when he brought his
people out of Egypt, their heart was still in Egypt. They still
acted like captives. You know, you don't wave a magic
wand or say the right word and take somebody who is captive
and willingly so to assist them by which they've learned to survive,
and turn them into a free, liberty-loving, reliant, responsible individual. It doesn't happen that way. It
can. God can do miraculous things, but He usually doesn't do it
that way. And those people in the wilderness grumbled and complained
and disputed, and yes, He killed off most of them. But He also
led them in the way. And their descendants were then
a free people, ready for the freedom to go in and to govern
and to conquer. Now, that's what we have to put
up with. And we have to be okay with that. We have to be okay
with imperfect, baby-step results as we try to help various people
in our culture that are poor, impoverished, needy, broken,
and captive. But that is the heart. of what
God says the ninth word is about. We protect ourselves through
court procedures to the end that we advance the kingdom of God,
the good news that Jesus has come to do these wonderful things. To do anything other than this,
to fail to try to provide gleanable resources for people like Ruth,
that are kind of on their knees a little bit, right? They know
their need. They're asking for help. They're
willing to step up and work, right? That's the kind of poor
it's talking about here. People that are willing to do
at least some steps toward moving toward freedom and responsibility. But once we have those people,
to fail to make gleanable resources available to them is sin. And
it is a perversion, a turning aside. That's what the word means,
pervert. of the justice of God, which is his means to putting
the world to rights. Remember the judge. It's what
God says in Leviticus. I'll judge you one way or the
other. Remember him. Do what's right. Trust in him.
Apply these simple concepts in our own land, in our own culture,
in our own families and community. and apply these gleanable resources. Last week, Love Inc., they handed
out a resource sheet. Please make sure you get one
of those surveys if you haven't got it. Fill it out. It's a way
to directly apply obedience to the ninth word. Our tongues and
our actions are powerful. The way to create peace is not
through changing our hearts. Sounds weird. I mean, it doesn't
start with your heart. If you hate your neighbor, you're
still supposed to help him. And if you don't like somebody,
that doesn't end it. You help them anyway. And you
know what happens? As people give and as people are open to
receiving, and both actions are required, right? As we do that,
we move away from the emotional hatred and we move toward the
love of God, which is the center. of the Pentateuch, the center
of his law. Jesus is the faithful and true
witness. He will indeed accomplish what he proclaimed in that synagogue
sermons 2,000 years ago. That's what the Lord Jesus Christ
is doing. Jesus says we are a participant
in that as we apply the equity of the ninth word in helping
people. and in seeing the responsibility to work for systems of courts
and justice systems that keep us away from warfare. And as
we go about in our lives, as we enter into this next year,
which I'm telling you it's going to be the worst political year
I think in a long time in terms of urging people to warfare,
class warfare, one side or the other. As we go about doing that,
let's keep in mind the ninth word and let's help that stay
in our minds by extending grace to people who have needs, and
believing that Jesus Christ really is in the process of proclaiming
liberty to the captive. Let's pray. Lord God, we thank
you for your word. We thank you for the ninth word,
the ninth commandment, Lord God, and its equity. Help us to continue
to put a guard on our tongues and to open up our hands to help
people, Lord God. Help us, Father, to see the great
gospel that our Savior proclaimed 2,000 years ago being proclaimed
again today, and help us to be part of that work. In Jesus'
name, we ask it. Amen.
Social Justice Redux
Series 10 Words - Commandments
| Sermon ID | 105111931149 |
| Duration | 54:50 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Deuteronomy 24:9 |
| Language | English |
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