Sermon text today is in Deuteronomy
22 verses 9 to 14. Topic is adulteration. Please stand for reading of God's
word. Actually, we're reading through
verse. Yeah, we'll read through 14, but the text that we'll speak
on is through verse 12. But this puts it in context.
You shall not sow your vineyard with different kinds of seed,
lest the yield of the seed which you have sown and the fruit of
your vineyard be defiled. You shall not plow with an ox
and a donkey together. You shall not wear a garment
of different sorts, such as wool and linen mixed together. You
shall make castles on the four corners of the clothing with
which you cover yourself. If any man takes a wife and goes
into her and detests her and charges her with shameful conduct
and brings a bad name on her and says, I took this woman and
when I came to her, I found she was not a virgin. And the text
goes on to describe the implications of that. Let's pray. Father,
we thank you, Lord God, for your text. We thank you for tying
these proverbs at the beginning of this section of Moses' sermon
on adultery to then concerns about faithfulness in the marriage
covenant. Bless us now as we consider these
proverbs, help us to understand them, to be transformed by them
and to give you thanks for them. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen. Please be seated. This is the first section of
Moses' sermon on adultery. On your second page of your handout,
there is the entire section of Deuteronomy that I think deals
specifically with the seventh word. And most commentators agree
with this particular delineation. I want to talk about these proverbs. They're kind of different. I
guess we could call them laws or proverbs. They are laws, of
course, given in a particular setting, but they're proverbial,
which we'll talk about in a couple of minutes. I think that what
they're teaching us generally is to avoid adulteration. Adulteration
is mixing something improper or impure to a particular substance
and thus adulterating it. Our coins used to, when you'd
flip them and hit your thumbnail on them, they would ring, many
of them, because they were one metal with one resonance. Now,
there's base metals added in and they don't resonate anymore
when you have these layers, for instance, of our pennies. So,
our currency has been adulterated. Now, that doesn't mean it's bad.
I mean, sometimes we deliberately put two things together. Many
things in this room are created by two things coming together.
It's just an adulteration of the original compound. So the
adulteration could be good or bad. But here, of course, what's
being demonstrated is the improper adulteration. of things in a
particular setting of time. And Moses is using this to then
begin to open up a discussion of the seventh commandment in
a broader sense. So that's what's going on. It
behooves us then to remember what we learned last week from
the commandment itself and the particular stresses and emphases
that I brought to it. I was a little concerned last
week after the sermon. I asked somebody, what's your
takeaway? And, you know, They said they actually wanted to
hear more about a takeaway for the opposite sex. And I was like,
well, that's kind of not the deal. The big takeaway from last
week in talking about adultery, there were a couple of them.
One was to recognize that the deterioration of the family as
a power center with control over property and children, which
is a godly construct of a society, is being deteriorated and the
state is exercising more and more control over property and
children. Property would include economics, et cetera. And one
of the ways this is happening, I mentioned three societal factors.
There are things we can do something about. The first societal factor
is the predominant discussion and visual imagery of sexuality
in various explicit forms. This has an effect of adulterating
Christian marriage. It breaks down people's correct
perspective of sexuality, which is always to be engaged in, intimately
that is, in the context of marriage. And so when sex predominates
in a culture, sexual displays and emphases, then the Family is weakened as a result
of that. And what do we have since the sexual revolution of
the 60s is we have fewer and fewer marriages, more and more
living together, and marriages where things are breaking down.
So that's one major factor. And so we can try to clean that
up in the context of our environment. We can try to do something about
that. The second major factor, societal factor, is law. Adultery
is no longer a criminal action and punished by courts. It isn't
even considered in divorce actions for the most part. We have no-fault
divorce. Again, we can do something about that. We can try to institute
long-term civil penalties for adultery. But we can, in ecclesiastical
court, we can certainly do something about that quite easily. If every
marriage entered into had a marriage covenant that said if the other
spouse committed adultery and divorce ensued, they would lose
all property of the marriage, That would change that around.
And so, at least in the context of our church, we can do that.
And many of us have done that in the last 25 years through
marriage covenants to implement fault divorce, as it were, in
the context of the church, which frequently can be actually, or
at least it can be, held up by the civil courts. And you say,
well, that's pretty bad if a person commits adultery. They lose all
the property of the marriage. But remember, in the Bible, they're
supposed to lose their lives. You know, if we wanted to try
to get as close to that as possible, we'd have the adulterous person
kicked out of the house without even clothes on. Well, you're
buried, or at least the way you die. And that would bring shame
upon adultery as well. And shame is supposed to be supposed
to occur in the context. Shame is not a bad thing. Unbiblical
shame is. But shame for sin is a good thing.
And we can reinstitute that in the context of ecclesiastical
courts and marriage covenants. And then third, the other way
the state becomes more and more dominant as a power culture through
the declension of the family is a change in seeing relationships
from covenantal relationships involving law, not just law,
but covenantal relationships to just emotional relationships.
It's all about personal feelings. And this, of course, means that
no marriage based on personal feelings can last that long,
may last on paper. But if that's what the heart
of the relationship is, that's not good. The Bible says we're
adultery. is the violation of a covenant,
the marriage covenant. And so it's distinguished from
fornication, for instance. And so covenants are to be seen
as the underlying relationship. And here we can do a lot of things
in our homes. We can understand that our relationship
to our spouses are ones of covenant relationship. And if you don't
feel it anymore, well, still do what's right. Obey the context
of the marriage. Review your marriage covenant.
What did you promise there in that covenant? And try to understand
that that's the basis of your relationship, not emotions and
feelings. Those things will happen. But
you know, fact, and the fact is God has made you into a one-flesh
relationship, which means one community. That's a fact. And
that fact pulls along emotions. And when we get the emotions
as the primary thing, we get all out of whack. We can do something
about each one of those things in our homes this week. And then
I also said the takeaway last week was response. This was the
big takeaway. Adultery. And this is what I
think today's text is about adulteration. There can be physical adultery,
but there can also be emotional adultery. The text of scripture
tells us that adultery is come forth from the heart. You have
a special covenantal relationship involving friendship, closeness,
intimacy, not just sexually, but in terms of relationship
with your spouse. And when you enter into a like
relationship with that with someone else, a coworker or whatever
it is, this is this is emotional adultery. And when you do that,
you lessen response to your spouse as you give that kind of response
more and more to others. Eventually, that's going to probably
result in physical adultery as well. So when response is given
as a basic right or obligation of marriage in the case laws
of the Old Testament, yes, it means sexual activity, but it
also means response, words spoken back and forth in relationship.
And so we can begin then to say, oh, okay, so it's improper for
me to adulterate that response, that intimate friendship with
my spouse, by having someone else meet those needs. See, that's
what happens in the workplace today, and it's just devastating
to the family, and as a result, leads to statism. Don't blame
Obama. Blame your wandering eyes or your wandering heart or your
wandering relationships outside of the covenant relationship
of the family. So these are the important things
to remember. And one of the things, of course,
of response is sexuality. And I'm telling you, if you have
a family, if you have a relationship with your spouse that doesn't
engage, the Bible says you're supposed to engage in regular
sexual relationships. And if you don't, I believe that's
sin. And I believe it's sin that specifically,
Paul says, opens up an opportunity for the devil for your spouse. Evaluate that. How are you doing?
Talk about it, because that's what this commandment, I think,
drives us to in terms of what we're doing. Today, the sermon
that Moses begins with here, this section of the Sermon on
the Seventh Word, begins with these strange proverbs, strange
laws. And so we ask ourselves, well,
are mules okay? We'll look at the parallel text
to this in Leviticus 19.19, and you're not supposed to not plow
together, which is sexual imagery, but you're not supposed to interbreed
species of animals. You know, so if you take a horse
and a donkey, you end up with a mule. And Leviticus 19 says
you're not supposed to do that. You're not supposed to breed
mules. Now, in the Bible, godly people ride on mules. Mules aren't
bad. There's something else going
on. It's a proverbial relationship. They weren't supposed to breed
mules. That was certainly true, but there's something else going
on. Mules, you know, that's not really the point. Priest garments.
We'll see as we get to the tassels and the discussion of clothing,
that part of these proverbs has to do with Israel being a particular
priestly people. GMOs, genetically manipulated
organisms, are they okay or not? Maybe some people say, well,
these laws are to provide simplicity of the created order, and so
GMOs are an example of how we're violating Leviticus 19.19 or
Deuteronomy 9-12. Well, I don't think so. I don't
think these proverbs teach that. And I don't think we're restricted
from producing mules or genetically manipulated organisms. Now, maybe
it would not be a wise thing to do. That's a whole different
question. Innervation. Some people say, well, if you've
got these garments mixed together of wool and linen, the problem
is studies show you get tired, get more tired than if you just
had one pure garment on yourself. You know, I don't think that's
in this text at all. This text is a text about adultery and
adulteration of things. It's not about those kind of
concerns. So, you know, as we look at these
texts, we have to sort of understand them, see if they're applicable
to us and in what way they're applicable to us. Right. All
the Bible's applicable. How are they applicable to us?
And then we have to sort of figure out what it means to us. You
know, is it OK to have a vineyard where you've got other crops
planted alongside the grapevines? Is that OK today or not? Is that
a good thing to do or not? You have to kind of try to figure
that out. So that's what we're going to try to do. We're going
to try to take something very simple and look at it in a complicated
way. Simple proverbs are things that in a little picture try
to depict something. One of the problems we have is
we're not used to thinking in terms of these pictures and imagery,
and it helps us to then see how the Bible interprets these particular
Proverbs overall. And the first point I want to
make, and this is why we began to read into the next section
of Moses' sermon here on sexuality, is the relationship of these
three proverbs, or three laws, it may be four laws we could
say, the tassel is related to the garment, but these four laws
or proverbs are related directly, they're in the context of sexuality,
here in this section of Deuteronomy. So it clearly goes right on to
talk about sexuality. In fact, some commentators think
that the three basic proverbs are then reflected, chiastically,
in the three sections of the balance of Moses' sermon on the
seventh word. So your second page on your outliner
handout is this arrangement that may cause things to relate one
to the other. So we start by talking about
what's going on in a vineyard. And as you get to the end of
Moses' sermon on this, on the seventh word, we talk about what's
going on in the war camp. So the war camp is kind of like
a vineyard. So God's people, whatever they're doing, they're
like a vineyard, even if they're in a war camp. And so the implications
of that, you know, the inner breeding together or plowing
together of ox and ass is reflected down in certain prohibitions
from the ecclesiastical community of people that are outside or
have sinned in particular ways. They can't be part of the community.
So it's keeping separate certain kinds of people, certain tribes
of people in the immediate context of Israel in the same way you're
supposed to keep ox and ass separate. So the sexual discussion in the
rest of this section of Deuteronomy ties these proverbs and maybe
in some very specific, interesting ways to meditate upon to the
balance of the sermon. I will deal with the balance
of the sermon for the next three or four weeks. But today we want
to talk specifically about the beginning. Moses starts with
an illustration. In fact, he starts with three
or four illustrations before he actually gets into the didactic
teaching of his sermon on this. And so we want to think about
that a little bit. Now, there's a parallel text.
If you could turn to Leviticus 19, and I know we've talked about
Leviticus 19 a lot, but open your Bibles, turn to Leviticus
19 and You know, we've gone to Leviticus
19 because it's a summary statement of 70 commands that reflect the
Ten Commandments as well. And remember, we sort of said
the heart of Leviticus 19 is verse 18. Love your neighbor
as yourself. And remember, we talked about
that in relationship to the sixth commandment. Don't kill. It talks
in that section of Leviticus in the verses leading up to verse
18 that you're not to take a stand against your neighbor's life.
You're to love your neighbor as yourself. And so Leviticus
19 and verse 18 ends that section. Don't take vengeance. Remember,
that's real pertinent to the sixth commandment, cities of
refuge, etc. Love your neighbor as yourself.
I am the Lord. Now, what we've said is in Leviticus 19, the
designations of I am the Lord or I am the Lord, your God. These
are section markers. So we've got a section marker
now at the end of 18. At the beginning of 19, we have
a major section marker. You shall keep my statutes. So
Leviticus 19 is broken up into two halves, 1 to 18, be holy,
and now keep my statutes. And the emphasis in this section,
the second section of Leviticus 19, seems more corporate. The
U is plural. We're talking about statutes
now. You don't know if somebody's loving their neighbor or not
in their heart, right? You can't see that. But you can see what
happens in the next section. Verse 19 goes on to say, don't
let your livestock breed with another kind. You can see that's
going on in your neighbor's house or not, or neighbor's barn or
not. The produce of his livestock
will be known. So Leviticus 19 is a new section,
and this is parallel, this particular verse, to our text today. You
shall not let your livestock breed with another kind. So in
Deuteronomy, it specifies ox and ass. We'll talk about why.
Here, all interbreeding of animals is prohibited. Now, you know,
we think about this as prohibiting something that's odd. Why would
you interbreed livestock? But in actuality, if you've got,
you know, horses and donkeys, unless you take pains, they're
going to interbreed. You're going to end up with some
mules. If you've got crops that you mix together, there may be
cross-pollinization that happens. So the requirements of Deuteronomy
9 through 22, 9 to 12, make the people of God in this particular
time in history take special pains to avoid what would be
natural. So don't think about it as trying
to maintain a natural state, because actually, these commandments
are contra-natural. In nature, things do tend to
end up interbreeding within species, for instance. So there's energy
required to build fences, make sure you have sections between
your crops so you don't get them cross-pollinating, etc. But in
any event, so don't let your livestock breed with another
kind. And so breeding here is with
the animals as opposed to plowing together. But as I said, I think
that's sexual imagery, although it means you shouldn't plow together
as well. And we'll look at that in a couple of minutes. You shall
not sow your field with mixed seed. So in Leviticus or Deuteronomy
22, if you've got a vineyard, don't add more seeds to that
of a different type. So vineyard. But here it's more general. Livestock
is general. Don't sow your field with mixed
seeds. Nor shall a garment of mixed
linen and wool come upon you. So this is also parallel, right?
The three things that are talked about in Deuteronomy 22 are mentioned
here as well in a little different order. But it's a parallel text,
quite obviously. Now, I point this out because
if you go on to look at verse 20, what does it talk about?
Whoever lies carnally with a woman who is betrothed to a man as
a concubine. And it goes on and describes
the situation. So immediately after the discussion
of the parallel text, we have a series of laws about sexuality. It would have to do with the
seventh word or seventh commandment. Don't commit adultery. And it's
interesting because then if you look down at verse twenty three. Well, first look at verse twenty
five, it ends with I am the Lord your God. Remember, that's a
marker. So nineteen to twenty five are
a unit. They're marked off as a unit
by the statement, I am the Lord, your God. And 19 to 25 begins
with the discussion of intermixtures, adulteration, and it ends with
verse 22 about planting all kinds of trees for food. You shall
count the fruit as uncircumcised, very odd term. And so for a while
that fruit is seen as uncircumcised. Again, that has reference to
circumcision, which affects the organs of reproduction. And in
the middle of that, it's talking about sexual sin. So both in
Deuteronomy, it goes on to talk about sexual sin. In Leviticus,
it absolutely is tied by the marker at the end to the sexual
sin commandments found at the middle of that section in Leviticus. So what I'm pointing out here
is that these are illustrations commandments, laws, proverbs
in Deuteronomy 22, 9 to 12, that are definitely linked to sexual
sin, sexual purity, both in Deuteronomy, but also in the parallel text
of Leviticus. That's a strong testimony that I hope puts you
at ease with dealing with these things as somehow metaphors and
analogies of how to apply the seventh commandment. Now, one
other thing I want to talk about, and this is mostly review, but
this is important for us. How do we decide if these commandments
are for us or not? How do we know if it doesn't
prohibit GMOs? How do we know? What shirt do
you have on today? Does anybody here have a shirt
where you've got both linen and wool mixed together in the fabric,
or two kinds of fabric? Any two kinds? It's kind of difficult
for us today because a lot of us have wool and man-made fabrics
mixed together. Well, is that okay or not okay?
You know, if you have linen and wool together, is that a sin
that you came to church in that kind of shirt? We need to know
how to figure out if these are for us or not. You can't just
say, well, I don't like them, so let's not make them relevant.
That's one problem. The other problem would be, well,
if it doesn't say in the New Testament that we can wear these
things now, we've got to still be prohibited from wearing them.
That also, I think, is another simplistic but wrong way to deal
with continuity and discontinuity issues. One way to deal with
continuity and discontinuity, is it applicable or not, has
to do with creation mandates, right? So we said that one of
the reasons why the Sabbath, the Christian Sabbath, the Lord's
Day is in our church covenant is because that is a creation
ordinance. It predates mosaic legislation. So if things are tied to the
creation itself, right, then that is important for us. But this isn't this doesn't on
the face of it. These commandments are not tied
to a creation mandate of some sort. Another thing you want
to investigate here is the Mosaic Covenant and separation. These are laws, clearly, that
deal with separation of things, wool and linen and garments,
ox and ass in terms of plowing, the ox with ox and the ass with
ass, separation of vineyard and other seed crops. So it has to
do with separation. And the Mosaic Code was set up
to enforce separation in several directions. First of all, it
enforced segregation of tribes. Should tribes always be separate?
Well, no. The tribes were kept separate
under the Mosaic legislation involving property for the specific
purpose of maintaining a tribal lineage until the coming of Messiah. When Judah is blessed at the
end of Genesis, it says that a ruler, Judah, will rule until
Shiloh comes. Shiloh will come from the line
and tribe of Judah, the Lion of Judah. At that point, the
line of Judah is now irrelevant. The tribes are kept separate
until Shiloh comes to rule all people. Shiloh is Jesus. And so the separation laws in
Mosaic legislation have to be seen in terms of separation of
tribes relative to seed. And specifically in our text
today, this has to do with seed. It says that explicitly in the
very first proverb about not sowing different sorts of seeds
together. In Galatians 3.16 we read, Now
to Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He does not
say unto seeds as of many, but as one, and to your seed who
is Christ. So the separation of lines of
seed, we could say, was enforced artificially, we could say, in
the Mosaic legislation to prepare us for the coming of the one
who would get rid of those distinctions, who would break down the separation.
Additionally, Jew and Gentile are kept separate in Mosaic legislation. And again, this is to affect
this until the coming of the one who would, in the words of
Paul to Ephesians, break down the middle wall of separation
between Jew and Gentile. There is no more Jew or Gentile,
Paul writes to the Galatians, the text we just quoted about
the seed. So when the seed comes, when Jesus comes, The tribal
separation stuff is out of joint now. And the separation of Jew
and Gentiles that's maintained gets out of joint as well. So
to whatever degree, for instance, the clothing and the tassels
have to do with a priestly nation kept separate from the Gentile
nations, and I believe that was exactly one of the main points
of it. To that effect, these laws are now out of joint for
us. Or better, they're fulfilled at the coming of Christ. And
so Christ comes to affect the removal of separation and unity
now between the different tribes, but beyond that, between Jew
and Gentile. And so when statutes are read
that are explicitly given in Mosaic legislation to the children
of Israel only. Then those statutes are put out
of joint. They're fulfilled in different
ways now that Jesus has come. There's a truth to them, right?
All law reflects the character of God. And the truth, I think,
is avoid adulteration. That truth maintains. But the
specific way that truth is ministered to and acted out in our lives
changes because we're not a separate priestly nation as the Israelites
were that had God-fearing Gentiles in their context. There's one
body now. And so because of that coming
together of one body, the laws dealing with separation of priests
from non-priests, priestly nation from non-priestly nation, this
tribe from that tribe, all of those things are changed and
fulfilled, rather, in the coming of Shiloh, who will unite the
tribes, ultimately, and who will unite Jew and Gentile as well
in him coming on. You know, as an example of this,
we read of special clothing in our text today. And we know that
the priests had special clothing. We'll say in a couple of minutes
that the tassels represented Israel as a priestly nation.
They were a special clothing. Priests looked different than
other people. And but in the New Testament, what's our clothing?
What's the clothing that we're told about in the New Testament
after the coming of Jesus? How are we supposed to dress?
Well, it says in Galatians, as many of you as were baptized
into Christ have put on Christ, there's neither Jew nor Greek.
So the clothing separation of Jew and Greek established by
the very text we're looking at today and others. is put out
of sync, and now there is no longer that separation. We're
all clothed in Christ. So that's an example of how to
look at some of these laws and decide, well, are we not supposed
to be having... where are our tassels? How come
Pastor Triggin didn't tell us to wear tassels today? Well,
that's why. It wasn't a creation mandate. It had to do with laws
of separation until the coming of Shiloh. The seed came and
it has to do with the artificial separation, we could say, or
the keeping Jew and Gentile separate, reminding the world that true
unity will only happen through Messiah. When Jesus comes, the
great rupture in humanity, which really was Adam and Eve, right?
that great rupture will be brought back together. And in fact, in
Galatians, it says there's neither Jew nor Greek, nor male or female.
Maybe that's a reference back to the garden and the separation
that happened, the animosity that happens between Adam and
Eve after the fall that unity now comes to humanity. Jesus said in Matthew 21, 43,
I say to you, the kingdom of God will be taken from you, the
Jews, and given to a nation bearing the fruits of it. So there's
this change that happens. The kingdom is taken away from
the Jews as a separate people, given to a new nation. And that's
us. It's the church, the church that no longer has those issues
of separation established properly by God in preparing the world
for Messiah. Third, The Bible says when there's
a change of priesthood, there's a change of law. That's in the
book of Hebrews. It says specifically in Hebrews
7, 12, for the priesthood being changed of necessity, there is
also a change of the law. And in verse 11, it says that
perfection were through the Levitical priesthood. For under it, the
people receive the law. What further need was there that
another priest should rise according to the order of Melchizedek and
not be called according to the order of Aaron? Jesus is not
a Levitical priest. He's a priest of the order of
Melchizedek. He wasn't from the priestly tribe. He was from the
kingly tribe, Judah, we just talked about. And so there's
a change of priesthood. And to the extent that these
laws are linked to the priesthood of the Levitical tribe and the
priesthood of the nation of Israel, now there's a change of priesthood.
And whenever there's a change of priesthood, there's a change
of law. Now, the same thing happened earlier in the other direction.
The patriarchs had worship in a particular way and then God
established a priestly nation, the Levites. And when that priestly
nation was established, new laws were given. So the one unchanging
character of God is reflected in differing kinds of laws for
particular situations. And so the change of priesthood
from Levitical to Mechizedekiel through the coming of Christ
the seed means also that laws that are specifically oriented
to the priesthood aspect of Israel and the Levitical tribe These
laws are fulfilled by Christ and there's a change now in their
application. All right. Well, good enough. Now let's talk about the specifically
the four laws and try to understand what they are. Verse nine, you
shall not sell your vineyard with different kinds. And the
plural form used there is a doubling. It's not many kinds like with
a second sort of seed. Lest the yield of the seed which
you have sown and the fruit of your vineyard be defiled. Actually,
the word literally means holy. Well, what that means is if anything
is holy, it's dedicated to God. Right. And if it's dedicated,
God means you can't use it. It's lost its usability to you.
So that's why the translation says, you know, it's defiled
when actually literally it means holy, but it means you can't
use it. What this says is, is that this adulteration of the
vineyard, produces a crop that is useless for its purposes. Now the vineyard, these are Proverbs
like, right? You read the Proverbs where it
uses agricultural, animal things to teach about life. And I think
these are proverbs like the vineyard in the scriptures. Israel was
the vineyard. And this is given to us over
and over again in the scriptures. I've given you some references
there. But over and over again, Israel is identified as God's
vineyard. And so to take God's vineyard
and adulterate the progression of God's vineyard through sexual
relations outside of the vineyard produces bad results. So this is talking about the
adulteration. of Israel through intermarriage with non-Israel. And there's a story that we can
think of in relationship to this. Judah, right? Jacob's a fruitful
vine. He has 12 kids, at least one
daughter. And one of those kids is Judah. And Judah marries Bathsheba,
the daughter of Sheba, who was a Canaanite. And it's an interesting
story in Genesis 38. I give you one example of how
interesting it is that he does this in Chiziv, and that word
means false. So the very name of the town
where all this is going on identifies Judah as false. He's being false
to God. He's intermarrying. He's taking
the vineyard of Israel and mixing it with a non-Israelite, a Canaanite
woman. And by the way, this girl's dad
is his best friend in Agilomite as well. It doesn't indicate
they're converts. And so it seems like we have
a non-converted Canaanite here that is that Judah blends into
the vineyard of God. And by the way, right after this
story is Genesis 39, which talks about Joseph not falling into
the beginning of Joseph's story, where he doesn't fall into sexual
idolatry with Potiphar's wife. He resists that kind of adulteration. Judah gives in to that kind of
adulteration. What happens? The story of Judah
is then that he gets three kids out of this. Ur, Onan, and Shella. And Ur, he marries to
Tamar. Ur is wicked and God kills him. Onan is supposed to fulfill the
levirate responsibility, which had to do again with his tribal
thing, etc. Onan doesn't do it. God kills
him. So the two fruits of Judah's mixing seed with the vineyard,
the crop of that is killed by God. It's destroyed. You see,
so there's a literal there's a literal happening here, a story
that's reflected proverbially in command structure and what
God commands the people that tells and reminds for the story
of when you mix vineyard. Israel with non vineyard Canaanite,
bad things happen. The crop becomes horrible. So
that's, I think what's being alluded to here is that I mentioned that in Deuteronomy
25, when we get to the 10th word, the law of the level rate will
be described in Deuteronomy. And that kind of is a match the
10th word to the 7th word. Further evidence of this indication
of what I'm mentioning. That's interesting, because two
sets of mixed seed, well, two sets of kids result in this story.
The first is Ur and Onan. And then he refuses, of course,
to give his third son to Tamar, afraid that he's going to die
too. And so Tamar then tricks him. And it's interesting because
Judah is going to get wool and Tamar puts on the prostitutes
linen, no doubt. You got wool and linen getting
together and you've got other kinds of things happening here.
It's a very interesting story in its details. But the end result
of that is is that Tamar becomes pregnant by her father-in-law.
She's simply trying to fulfill the obligations that God said
Judah had for his sons to have children. He's being a wicked,
no good person. His marriage with the Canaanite
woman is reflected in how he's a guy that goes and has sex with
prostitutes as well. Well, she's not a prostitute.
And when it's told Judah that Tamar, his daughter-in-law, is
pregnant, he says she should be burned to death. And so then
she sends back the proof that, no, it was him. And he repents. It says she's more righteous
than I. He repents. And then the text
was on specifically to say that he doesn't enter into sexual
relationships with her anymore. He does really repent in his
statement, in his realization what happened and in his actions.
And then Tamar has these twins, Perez and Zara. And it's interesting
because, again, it's too long a story and I've already taken
too much time on it. But but Perez, of course, becomes
his line, is the line in which David is found and which Messiah
comes. So Judah to Messiah involves
Perez, and you can see these twins there, Perez and Zerah,
perhaps as replacements to Ur and Onan after repentance has
occurred, and so blessing in the context even of sexual sin. I would use that to remind you
today That if these sermons on sexual sin and failure of proper
response and emotional adultery cause conviction in your life,
hey, look what Judah did. Look how bad his sexual sin was. And yet when repentance happens,
there's great blessing. There's Perez and there's the
line that will ultimately culminate in David and our Savior himself.
So, you know, take hope. Don't respond to conviction of
the Holy Spirit in terms of these matters, you know, with self-sorrow
and self-pity and, you know, unreasonable fear. Repent. Make
your repentance sure. Speak words like Judah did. Take
actions like Judah did. And the Lord God says great blessings
can come forth in the context of that. OK, so that's the first
law. Our Savior alludes to this, I
think, in Matthew 13, verse 24, says another parable. He put
forth them saying the kingdom of heaven is like a man who sowed
good seed in his field. But while men slept, his enemy
came and sowed tears among the wheat and went his way. So our
Savior says there's this application between good seed and bad seed.
So while it's really not bad seed in Deuteronomy 22, 9, that's
what's being talked about. The vineyard is Israel. It's
a warning against intermarriage and it's a warning against adulteration
of the seed, specifically the tribal distinctions in the time
in which it was given. So it's a warning against adulteration.
And what it says is that adulteration produces a seed, a crop that's
no good. And so if you're engaged in literal
adultery, you know, repent, because there's no good that's going
to come out of that. If you're engaged in emotional adultery
by having a relationship, you're not, you know, when God messes
up your relationship with your spouse in his province, using
your sin frequently, sinlessly, you know, what you're tempted
to do is go and get somebody else to fulfill that need. That's
no different than sexually having problems with your wife and going
and having sex with somebody else. It's the same thing when
you have problems with your wife in terms of relationship or your
husband, and you go to somebody else for that kind of emotional
satisfaction that really should be coming from your husband.
The end result of that is no good. The end result of that
is a bad thing. The end result of that will be
stuff that will blow up in your face. So be warned by that. Our Savior says it's the enemy,
the evil one. It's a tear, that kind of thing. It's the anti-wheat going on
in your life. And our Savior says to be careful,
be wary, be warned about that. OK, next one. Verse 10, you shall
not plow with an ox and a donkey together. Again, the Bible in
Deuteronomy 33, Numbers 22 and other places refers to Israel
as an ox. And an ass, so remember that
in Leviticus, it's any two kinds of animals, you can't mix them
together. Here it says ox and ass, why? Well, an ox is a symbol
of Israel, and the Canaanites, their god was an ass. And so
I think that behind the imagery here, again, is this unequally
yoked between Israel and a Canaanite. So again, we get reminded of
Judah and his marrying an ass woman. I mean, not that she was
a bad person, but she was outside of Israel. Right. But there's
another story, and that's Genesis 34. What happens? Right. Dinah
goes out and visits with the men of the place they're in,
the Shechemites. has sex with Hamor, and Hamor
wants to marry her. Hamor means ass. Literally, that's
his name. It means he's an ass. And it
doesn't mean he's stupid. It means he's a Canaanite. Their
god was an ass god. So we've got this threatened
thing going on, and oxen and ass have now had sex together,
and there's a desire for marriage to bring this threat to the vineyard,
to the ox, to full bore. Now, in the providence of God,
you know, two of Jacob's sons sin by killing, telling him he's
got to be circumcised. They circumcise themselves. They
kill all the Shechemites. We know the story. What's interesting
about this story is in Genesis 49, 6, we read, let not my soul
enter into their counsel. Talking about these two sons.
Let not my honor be united to their assembly. In their anger,
they slew a man, actually more than a man, Hamor and a bunch
of Shechemites. And in their self-will, they hamstrung an
ox. See, they hamstrung Israel by
their conduct. They damaged Israel's reputation
by the kind of ungodly thing they did using this covenant
sign of circumcision to murder men. OK, so that hamstrings the
church. Emotional fornication or adultery
and literal adultery has a devastating effect upon the church, upon
Christians in general. Christians' reputation suffers
when Christian legislators go back to Washington, D.C. and
have affairs with their interns. It hamstrings the ox. So what's
being talked about here is not entering into relationships outside
of the one God has given you in the context of Christian marriage,
and certainly not by being unequally yoked. Of course, Paul picks
up this imagery in 2 Corinthians 6, verses 14 to 18. Do not be unequally yoked together.
Well, that's a direct reference back to what we just talked about.
This particular law, Paul picks up the imagery from it, and he
tells us exactly how to apply it. We don't apply it by not
actually hooking up an ox and a mast to plow. Apparently that's
still done in the Middle East. It's routine. It's not unusual.
I thought it must be, but apparently not. No, that's not the application. The application is the kind of
relationships, tight covenantal relationships we have. He says,
don't be unequally yoked with unbelievers. What fellowship
has righteousness with lawlessness? What communion has light with
darkness? What accord has Christ with Belial? Of what part has
a believer with an unbeliever? And what agreement has the temple
of God with idols? Now, this is important. This
is why, children in this church, we stress so hard not marrying
unbelievers. It's not just because we like
believers and don't like unbelievers. But we're saying this is this
is what the law of God tells us how we apply this. It's an
adulteration of Christianity when a Christian young person
marries a non-Christian. Now, it isn't just referring
to marriage, though. I believe that when people enter into partnerships
and to tight arrangements, remember, it was Judah's friendship. with
the Canaanite that led to his marriage with the Canaanite's
daughter. Whenever we enter into tight relationships with unbelievers,
it's a danger to us. Now, we ought to have friends
that are unbelievers and be witnessing to them and praying for them,
etc. But I'm talking about unequally yoked, really tying yourself
together by covenant with an unbeliever. Paul tells us why
it's bad. He talks about righteousness and lawlessness. OK, so I mean,
how are you going to structure a covenant with unbelievers who
really don't have a perception of law. Christianity has a sense
of righteousness, keeping covenant oaths. And outside of Christianity,
people violate oaths all the time. Don't think that if you
marry an unbeliever, they're going to obey the marriage covenant.
They will not. Don't think if you have a partnership
with an unbeliever, they're going to think twice about breaking
the covenant. Typically, they won't. That's what the text tells
us. light with darkness, our knowledge of what we have, right? Our knowledge of marriage, our
knowledge of how to raise kids, our knowledge of how to run a
business. It's informed by the light of God. But for the unbeliever,
he's in darkness. He can't understand things correctly,
his mind. He doesn't have the mind of Christ.
He's not using the Scriptures and the Holy Spirit to interpret
his world. Now, that's who he is, and it's
our job to try to bring him into the light. But the point is,
in terms of being yoked together in covenant with such people,
you see, in marriage or in tight other covenants, business partnerships,
whatever it is, there's real danger there because the way
you look at your business or your marriage is going to be
completely different from somebody who's in darkness rather than
light. Your consecration and law keeping of the business or
the marriage or whatever it is will be different because you're
a Christian, or at least it should be. And so there's danger there
to being unequally yoked. Christ with Belial. Christ is
the Lord. Belial is the Lord of useless
men. Your sense of, you know, who is Lord and who's ultimately
going to govern us in our marriage or our business is completely
different than an unbeliever. And when you do these kind of
things, you're unequally yoked and you're adulterating marriage,
the business, whatever it is. And the first proverb tells us
when you adulterate things, the produce won't be good. It'll
be bad. Remember those two kids being
killed by God? That's the sort of produce from
adulteration of our full commitment to Jesus Christ. OK, so unequally
young is that proverb. The third proverb. You shall
not wear a garment of different sorts, such as a garment of different
sorts, such as wool and linen mixed together. Garment here
is really an Egyptian, probably borrowed word into Hebrew. It's
only used here in Leviticus here and in Leviticus 19, 19. So it
doesn't really mean garment. It's probably more a particular
kind of fabric of mixed sorts together. And as it turns out,
Ezekiel says that the priests, When they went into the holy
place, had to take off the wool part of their garments or the
garments that they wore that might be partly wool. And they
had to worship only in linen in the context of the holy of
holies. The implication of that is, is that priestly garments
actually did have a combination of wool and linen. And in fact,
the next commandment to wear a tassel is almost in reverse
of what this proverb says, because the tassels were made with one
part of it being wool. So I think what's going on here
again is priestly clothing. But ultimately, this again has
marriage imagery to it. In the Bible, when somebody marries
somebody else, in the book of Ruth, for instance, Boaz puts
his wing, the edge of his garment, over Ruth, and that's an imagery
of marriage. It's the same imagery that God
uses in Ezekiel 16. He finds Israel, he makes her
beautiful and he lays his garment over her. It's an imagery of
marriage. And so to lay a garment over
someone, both a man lays his garment over the woman and a
woman symbolically lays her garment over the man. They cover each
other. And so this garment idea is related
to marriage. And so that's why Moses puts
it in here on this part of the sermon on adulteration and adultery. And so there's these garments
here and these garments, again, is a reminder to us that marriage
should be in the context of the faith. And so Additionally, there's
these implications that what's being talked about here is the
priestly nation. And you can't put on the garment
of a high priest if you're only a normal priest. Now, the fact
that you're a normal priest is demonstrated in the next law
where you put on the tassel. So. In verse 12 we read, you shall
make tassels on the four corners of the clothing with which you
cover yourself. So tassels, the law of the tassels
is given in Numbers 15, verses 37 to 41. And what we read there
is that to speak to the children of Israel, directed to Israel,
not to the God-fearers with them. And some of these commands are
given to both. But here it's the children of Israel, the priestly
nation, make tassels on their garments, put a blue thread on
the tassels on the corners. And you shall have the tassel
that you may look upon it, remember all the commandments of the Lord
and do them, and that you may not follow the harlotry to which
your own heart and your own eyes are inclined, that you may remember
and do all my commandments. So the last thing, the last little
proverb that Moses gives us here by way of command, before he
talks about specific cases of sexual sin, the last thing he
does is tell us, he tells Israel, you're a priestly nation, that
priestly castle has a reason. The reason is remembering all
the commandments of God. And, and specifically, he says
to remember them to avoid harlotry is what Numbers 15 told the children
of Israel. So what is it for? The tassel
is a reminder of generally keeping God's commands and not being
idolatrous. But it's also a specific reminder
of avoiding adulteration in sexual matters, that you don't play
the harlot. So I think the tassel here is a reminder of the dangers
of adulteration, the blessings of not having adulterated relationships. And God says this tassel does
that comprehensively for God's people. Now, there's an interesting
story in Jewish commentaries on the law, the Gemara. It says
that a guy, a Jew, is going to have sex with a prostitute. And
this tassel on the edge of his garment miraculously flies up
and slaps him in the face. And he says, whoa. Sorry, I can't
have sex with you. He tells the girl. And the girl
is so impressed by this, that he's so consistent to his fate,
that she converts then. And I think the story says they
go on to marry. Now, it's an interesting story.
Now, the application is we want things around us. We want to
have a mindset. that were slapped into place
by reminders of God's laws and warnings against adulteration
specifically and marriage relationships specifically, in all things of
course, but that reminds us not to enter into sin. And when we
do that, God's blessings accrue to the world. That's what the
point of the proverb or the example of the Jewish commentary is.
Now, there were four tassels on the four corners of the garment,
and the garment represents all the world. The four corners you
see on the altar, on the garments, the world has four corners. My
hat, it has four corners. God's world has four corners.
And I think long-term the implication of this is that all the world
will be consecrated to the obedience to God's word and law When Jesus
Christ comes, he'll do away with priestly regulations on clothing,
but to the end of all the world will see itself as tassel-bound,
as it were, tassel-reminded. You know, we may want to consider
things in our lives, right? Some people do this. They'll
put up plaques on their walls, scripture versus whatever it
is. A lot of young women, you know, their dad gave them a promise
ring, right? And they look at the promise
ring and remember, OK, I'm going to go through dad and mom. I'm
not going to engage in sexual relationships outside of Christian
marriage. And it's the same kind of thing.
That's what this tassel was. And so the application is, is
that if we understand the dangers of adulteration, of mixing things
together and the end result, which is so bad and horrific,
we're going to want to remember that and ask God by his Holy
Spirit now that the tassels really are a picture of the spirits
to bring God's word to us, that the indwelling Holy Spirit would
remind us of the need for commitment to purity and commitment to God. So Calvin says these laws, they
look complicated, they look kind of simple, minute in their application,
but the big picture is they're intended to make us pure. They're
intended to avoid adulteration. certainly in the context of sexuality,
but in general, in our lives, they're intended to inspire us
to a commitment to the vineyard, the Church of Jesus Christ, right?
To a commitment to honor Him in all that we do. So the application
here is certainly renewed commitments to not having adulteration going
on in our marriages. But beyond that, it's a commitment
to not have adulteration going on in our walk. Remember, we
said last week that adultery and idolatry are connected. Jesus
said you can't serve God and mammon. You can't mix up the
ox and the ass. And sometimes we think that when
we're going after mammon, that's different than our religious
life. That's that's being warned against in these texts, even
commanded against. Mammon has a way of weakening
our loyalty, a commitment to material prosperity, has a way
of weakening our loyalty and commitment to God, and God it
is, who actually gives us all these wonderful blessings of
physical prosperity. So, you know, this is the kind
of idolatry and adultery that goes on, that these texts are
warning us against. Stateism is a huge thing that
we enter into. More and more Christians are
having mixed loyalties to God and to the state. They're serving
not God and financial prosperity, but God and the idea of a centralized
state who commands all kinds of things outside of the will
of God and enslaves men to do particular things. That's adulteration
of our Christian walk. And so these texts remind us,
warn us against adulteration, against mixing the purity of
our faith in the Lord Jesus Christ with a commitment to follow other
gods. Jesus said to beware of the leaven
of the Pharisees and Sadducees. To mix Christian doctrine with
non-Christian doctrine is what he was warning us against. Hebrews 13.4, marriage is honorable
among all and the bed undefiled, but fornicators and adulterers
God will destroy. Let your conduct be without covetousness,
content with such things as you have. This is really a restatement
of the commitment to purity in the context of our marriages
and in the context of our lives as Christians. God would have
us respond to his word by a renewed commitment today to be pure,
committed to him, Do not have the leaven of whether it's money,
sex, statism, whatever it might be that we argue against our
complete loyalty to the Lord Jesus Christ. God says, don't
adulterate what you have. What you have is the power of
God for the salvation of the whole world. Let's pray. Father,
we thank you for today. We thank you for your love for
us. We thank you for the way you communicate in these interesting
proverbial laws that you give to us. Help us, Father, this
week to remember them, to chew upon them, to be reminded by
them. Help us to find ourselves committed to not adulterating
our marriages through improper sexuality, sexual imagery. Help the young people here not
to adulterate their coming marriages through improper participation
and viewing of sexual things that will enter into that marriage
bed that's be kept undefiled. Help us, Lord God, in all that
we do and say not to be idolatrous or to mix service and worship
of the Lord Jesus Christ with other motivations. In his name
we ask it. Amen.