For the ability to sing, to praise
his name in such beautiful ways. Today we'll have our seventh
and concluding sermon on the Eighth Commandment, which is,
and you shall not steal. The sermon text is found in Leviticus
chapter 19. One of our methods that we've
been following in this series on the 10 words is to, in addition
to expositing the word itself found in Deuteronomy 5, We've
also been looked at portions of the balance of the book of
Deuteronomy of Moses sermon as he goes through the ten words.
And we did that last week on the on the seventh word, eighth
word, sorry, eighth word. And we also are looking at Leviticus
19 for another point of triangulation on the meaning of these words.
So today's sermon text is verses 11 and 12 of Leviticus 19. And so please stand for the reading
of God's word. Leviticus 19 verses 11 and 12.
You shall not steal. You shall not deal falsely. You
shall not lie to one another. You shall not swear by my name
falsely and so profane the name of your God. I am the Lord. Let's pray. Lord God, we thank
you for your word. We thank you for the beauty of
your law to us. We thank you for those portions of it that
apply to us today. This side of the coming together
of Jew and Gentile in the person and work of Jesus our Savior.
Bless us now as we consider once more how we're to live as your
people. In Jesus name we ask it. Amen. Please be seated. So the The basic idea of today's
sermon comes from this Johnny Cash song, I fell into a burning
ring of fire. And on the front of your orders
of worship, there's a depiction of a ring of fire, somebody in
the ring of fire. And these verses, I think, will
show us when we look at them in detail, this kind of progression
that can happen, beginning with a desire for something that's
not properly ours. And so this progression and what
we end up doing profaning the name of God and then what that
means for us is what we want to talk about from Leviticus
19. So Leviticus 19 shows us a progression of sins, of falling
into a ring of fire, into the judgment of God. But this is
the eighth and concluding sermon in this series. We began by stressing
the need for biblical property. of the need to actually build
properly and accumulate property that we exercise proper dominion
or stewardship over not normally thought of in terms of the application
of the eighth word, but I think very important to it. We then
talked about a warning against robbing God by not paying. His
tithe. We talked about restitution as
the basic biblical remedy for theft, a multiple restitution. And that shows the whole eschatological
movement of the world. God isn't just restoring things
to what they were. He's always improving things. So he's moving the world forward.
Jesus Christ came to affect the restoration of all things. That
restoration is linked to this idea of restitution. Adam's first
sin was stealing something, and God is now restituting the fallen
world through those who are redeemed through the work of the Lord
Jesus Christ. We then spent two sermons talking about the greatest
threat to these biblical truths in our time today, at least I
think it is, which is the so-called idea of social justice. And while
there's a biblical way of looking at social justice, there's a
secular, socialistic way that is very dominant in our time.
So we spent two weeks on that. And then we talked about last
week Moses sermon portion in later in the book of Deuteronomy,
where we see that this idea of stealing has primary reference,
initial reference to stealing liberty, to stealing men's freedom
and actually stealing men themselves. So those are some of the things
we've talked about. If you look at your handout today,
you'll see that I think on the second page. Do I have a copy
of it? Yeah, here we go. So on page one is the outline.
Page 2 actually is what we'll look at in a couple of minutes,
the context for the sermon text. Page 3 we won't really be speaking
of. It's an outline of Leviticus
19. I've given you this before. But then the next page is the
Westminster Confession of Faith, Questions and Answers on the
Eighth Word. And then there's the coloring
picture at the end. By the way, kids, if you want to know what
that's about, these are the best pictures I could come up with.
The idea is, we're not just to avoid enslaving men, don't steal
freedom, but our job as Christians is to free men from sin. And
today, if we think of this metaphor of falling into a ring of fire,
into increasing levels of sinfulness, the other way to think of it
is we entangle ourselves in a web of sin. And in The Hobbit, not
The Lord of the Rings, but The Hobbit, Bilbo rescues dwarves
who have been attacked by a giant spider and they have a web spun
around them, right? And so these are two pictures
of dwarves entangled. They've lost freedom or liberty.
And the Lord Jesus Christ comes and he uses the sword of the
Spirit to cut away the chains, the spider webs, the the tanglements
of sin that so easily surround us and enslave us. James 1 says
this. Let no man say when he is tempted,
I am tempted of God, for God cannot be tempted with evil,
neither can see any man. But every man is tempted when
he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed. Then when lust hath
conceived, it bringeth forth sin and sin. When it is finished,
Bringeth forth death. Now that is the spirit of our
age. We live in a time when the self
is primary or even the only thing that people really are supposed
to think about is yourself and how to fulfill yourself. Free
to be me. And the idea of the self are
these really starting with Freud onward has become these urges
or desires we have. And what men see today as a good
thing is giving vent to those urges and desires to find out
who the real you is. And so these lusts, desires,
inordinate desires, not for God, but for other things, in the
case of theft of property or even human slaves. This lust,
when we give in to it, the way our culture is training people
to do, becomes sin and sin's end is death. And so James also
shows us this kind of Falling into the burning ring of fire
in the end result of that is God's judgments. Now the next
and the last page are these Westminster Confession questions and take
a look at those for just a couple of minutes and you'll see many
of the things we've talked about here. What are the duties required
of the Eighth Commandment? The duties are truth. So today
we'll talk about deception, faithfulness and justice and contracts and
commerce between man and man. restitution of goods unlawfully
detained from the right owners thereof. And we talked about
restitution, giving and lending freely. We see, and we'll see
it again today, that charity is a big part, the extension
of what God gives us in terms of blessings to others according
to our abilities and the necessities of others. Modification of our
judgments, wills, and affections concerning worldly goods. And
so, we're not supposed to give way to our desires and urges.
We're supposed to see the transcendent value of God as expressed in
his word, and that's where our self will find its proper fulfillment
and joy. And so, this comes about through
moderation of our things. A provident care and study, now
listen to this, to get, keep, use and dispose these things
which are necessary and convenient for the sustentation, whatever
that means, of our nature and suitable to our condition. So
the Western divine saw what we started with, that inherent in
the Eighth Commandment is the idea that we're supposed to get
property and things. But because God has given us
this job of exercising dominion over the world and history is
about God taking away stewardship of the unrighteous and giving
those things to the righteous. And so, that's acknowledged in
the Westminster Divines, and that's why we started there,
because it's so common in Christian churches to disdain property. It's kind of a Gnostic idea.
But here, in the Westminster Divines and the Westminster Confession
of Faith, I'm sorry, the Westminster Larger Catechism, this isn't
from the Confession, it's the Larger Catechism, that acknowledges
what we taught in our first sermon on this. A lawful calling. They see that as implicit in
the Eighth Commandment, the lawful calling. The elders of this church
in our Constitution, you know, are supposed to encourage people
of the church to a lawful calling and diligence in it coming right
out of this application of the eighth word. So, you know, God
leaves us here for a reason, and that reason is to have a
holy calling for him and to exercise diligence in it. And then it
toward the end to procure, preserve and further the wealth and outward
estate of others as well as our own. So not just ourselves, but
others. Well, we're supposed to try to
help them attain that as well. Now, if you look down, then what
are the sins prohibited or what are the actions the sins prohibited
in question 142 after the first set of references are theft. Robbery, man-stealing. Man-stealing we talked about
last week, and in today's text, it's going to talk about theft
and robbery. You say, well, isn't that repeating
the same thing? No. Stealing something, and we'll
talk about this more in a minute, it has the idea of secrecy or
deceit to it. Robbing, that particular word,
both in our language and the particular Hebrew words that
are used in our text, robbing means ripping something up, taking
it by violent force. And so, either one of those,
to steal by deceit, deceptively, with lies, etc., or outright
armed robbery, robbing things violently to rip something off
from somebody, are prohibited. And then man stealing. So, you
see, the things that we've talked about in our sermons are really
found if we just knew our, if your family uses the Westminster
Catechism, if you know the Catechism, You have this wonderful summation
of duties and things that are forbidden by the Ten Commandments. And we see that really much of
what we said, if we know this particular catechism, then we
know that this is helpful to us. We know most of what we've
already talked about for the last seven weeks. OK, so. I would add a few other
things that we can make by way of, if we wanted to make lists,
like the Westminster Divines did. And this will be the last
thing I say before we actually look at the text. But there are
some other lists. I want to get your attention.
So this, again, Leviticus 19, it's going to say don't steal
things. And it's easy at that point to
think, wow, we're not those that steal anything. But let me just
help you to think through this. If we don't pay our bills in
a timely fashion, there's a sense in which we're stealing that
money for a period of time from the one we owe the money to.
So we can add to the Westminster divine things that are prohibited,
not paying your bills on time as a practical application. How
about using unemployment money as a vacation? You know, now
the first portion of unemployment is an insurance program paid
into by you and your wages. But most of unemployment is not
paid through taxation of everybody through federal extensions. And
people today, you know, are tempted to use that first part of their
unemployment money as a vacation. But that's not the point. It
specifically requires you to be looking for work. I know it's
hard. But if you use it for vacation, that's stealing. children taking
cookies out of the jar when mom said don't have a cookie. And
if we look at today's text, this progression, you know, kid sneaks
a cookie. Did you have a cookie? No, I
didn't have a cookie. No, I swear, mommy, I really didn't have a
cookie. And when they do that, now I know it's a little bit
of an exaggeration for effect, but when they do that, our text
says to us, This is profaning the name of God. And we'll see
what happens to those that profane the name of God in a couple of
minutes. So taking things, cookies out
of the jar. How about not returning borrowed
things? Borrow something from somebody,
we don't return it, it becomes part of our possessions. Not
returning borrowed things. Not providing gleanable resources. Right? That's what we're supposed
to do. It's part of that requirement.
As we looked in Deuteronomy, Moses' sermon, the extension
of help to others, teaching our children from their earliest
age what this is about. We had one of our kids in the
supermarket, took a pack of gum, went out with us, went out the
door. They'd stolen the gum. And so
what do we do now? You take it back. And we, you
know, have always, said that people should pay restitution,
multiple restitution. So we wanted our daughter to
pay double restitution for this pack of gum. Well, the store
clerks, they want nothing of that. Oh, just forget it. Oh, what's the big deal, you
know? Because really, it's not their possession, number one.
The store clerks are just working for a wage. But you know, to
not pay restitution, double restitution when you, well actually we'll
see in a couple of minutes, maybe it shouldn't have been quite
double, but not to pay restitution, even on the part of our children
when they're young, is teaching them really violation of the
eighth word. It's not teaching them the full
intent of the eighth commandment. Kids borrowing stuff from other
members of the family without asking them. Everything has a
steward assigned to it. And even in the family, you know,
if it's your brother's socks, it's your brother's socks. And
if you take, you know, he doesn't have ultimate ownership. But
if you take those away from that steward who has gotten those
socks from wherever he got them without his asking for his permission
to borrow them, that's, I think, a violation of the eighth word.
And you say, geez, Terry, you're being so nitpicky. Well, it's
a big deal. And we live in a culture now
that doesn't teach these things anymore, where everything is
just sort of common goods and nobody's really much concerned
over who's taking care of anything. And as a result, nothing's taken
care of very well. Things are important. God has
given us stewardship over things to advance his kingdom. And when
we just sort of muck it all up and say, who cares? in our families
and we're raising kids to be socialists. That's sort of what
we're doing when we let that go on in the home. Being late
to work. I mean, unless you're salaried.
Early employee and you're not there when they want you to be
there, stealing. Longer lunch breaks than you're
really allowed to take. You know, theft at the place
of business. The Lord's Day. I believe that if you don't set
aside this day, you're stealing this day from God. This is a
special day that's set apart to correct our culture's idea
that we just give in to whatever we want to do whenever we want
to do it. God gives us a discipline. And what a discipline. We get
to stop. We get to get together. We get
to sing. We get to have food together.
We get to relax in the afternoons and evenings. I know some people
have to work, but that's the sort of discipline. It's hard
to imagine it as a discipline, but it's the sort of discipline
that God says will help us avoid the inordinate desires and giving
into them whenever we want to. And we steal this day from God. We profane the day by profaning
the day. We can profane God. Stealing
respect. from the agent or from your equals. And I know this is going to be
a little controversial, but and I know I'm turning into an old
curmudgeon, but when I'm having a conversation with a young person.
And they have their phone and they're doing this. Yeah. Oh, yeah, I like that. Maybe it's just me. But you know,
I think that people should think of the young people should think
about, and I guess older people can do it too. You should think
about are you stealing the due respect you have for Pearson
you're talking to? And young people, particularly
when you're around older people, older people are supposed to
be seen at the degree of respect. I've been saying this, by the
way, before I was old. So this isn't a self-serving statement.
It's what the Bible says. We're supposed to admire and
respect the white headed ones. How about this one? If our job is
not to enslave people and actually to free them, then in some ways
it can be said to be a violation of the eighth word when we don't
give people the key to the chains that are around them and to the
lock of it, which is the gospel of Jesus Christ. When we leave
them in the spider web, Instead of being in union with Christ,
the ones that use the sword of the Spirit to free them from
those webs were violating a lot of things were violating the
eighth word, relieving them in enslavement. And this also is
true of people that are already Christians, we know that sins
have enslaved them and are ruining their effectiveness. It's our
obligation in terms of the Eighth Commandment to bring the sword
of the Spirit into that and to free people. How about this one? We're a great dominion church.
People like to work and exercise. That's good. But, you know, when
you do that, you run the risk of stealing time from your family
and children. You have an obligation to nourish
the family, to oversee it. You have an obligation to spend
time with your family. And I know men don't like doing
it because we don't know what we're doing and we feel a lot
more confident at work. And when you come home, the problems you
face in the context of raising kids, believe me, I understand
this, are much more complicated, difficult, frustrating than what
you go through at work typically. But it doesn't make any difference.
God says you owe them leadership. You owe them presence. And when
you don't do that, you are stealing from God. And when you make excuses
for stealing from God in that way, then you move toward this
ring of fire, the profanation. of God's very name and purpose. Let's now look at those texts. And first of all, I want to look
at the context for these two verses we read. Now, again, here
on your outline, I've got printed out the context for these verses
in the verse themselves. This is on page two of your handout. This page here. And you'll see
that in the middle are the actual text we want to talk about. But
there's some context for it beforehand. And the context, first of all,
is verses 5 to 10, and they have to do with charity again, right?
Verses 5 to 10 talk about the peace offerings. God gives us
grace. And how we're supposed to partake
of the peace offerings. And then right after that, remember
that in Leviticus 19, these markers to sections are these phrases. I am the Lord, your God, or I
am the Lord. And you see, in bold there in verse 10 is I am
the Lord your God. This whole section is a section,
so it moves immediately from the right way to eat the holy
meal. Ultimately, the Lord's Supper.
So it's pointing to to what? Verse nine. When you reap the
harvest of your land, you shall not reap. your field right up
to the edge. Neither shall you gather the
gleanings after your harvest and you shall not strip your
vineyard there. Neither shall you gather the fallen grapes
of your vineyard. You shall leave them for the
poor and for the sojourner. I am the Lord your God. Again,
language that always reminds us of the table. God gives us
grace and we're to extend that grace. Charity is the immediate
context for this prohibition against theft. And we've seen
this in Deuteronomy and another text where charity is bound up
with the eighth word or closely aligned to it. We rob God when
we don't pay our tithe. That's obvious. But we also rob,
we steal, as it were. We're guilty of theft and injustice
when we're not given to charity, given to charity. This is who
we're supposed to be as Christians. We've been given grace by God
to extend it to others. Charity is not the poor's right,
ultimately, but it is God's requirement of us. So it's not an entitlement
in that sense. It is a requirement that God
has put upon His people to help the poor. There are certain conditions
for all of that. The man won't work. He's not
supposed to eat. But in general, we have this
charitable attitude. God's possessions is what we
always have, and God wants us to be like Him. He wants us to
image him. He wants us to be his presence
in the world. And his presence is a gracious,
salvific presence. And we're supposed to be gracious
in giving to others in charity. Community life has a God-centered
focus, as it were, and the context for the Eighth Commandment is
always community and either extending community or sinning against
community. God requires us to help the needy,
and he particularly requires the people who are wealthy or
rich to help the needy. And as a result of that, that
blesses them. Now, if you're needy, you have to let people
help you. I've talked about this before,
but I want to say it again. The Bible makes clear, there's
this thing, you know, the most fulfillment most people find
in life, if you ask them, and I think this is true of probably
everybody in this room, the thing that brings you more joy than
anything else in life, or at least one of the highest joys,
is helping somebody. And so, but people who need help,
they're reticent to ask. They don't want to be an imposition
or a burden. But when you do that, you're
depriving somebody of the thing that, as Christians at least,
we most want to do. It is our heart to want to help
people out of tough spots and to encourage them and to be charitable
toward them. Isn't it? Of course it is. So
don't hold back if you need help or charity. Charity is the immediate
context on one end of the verses that are before us here. On the
other end, there is oppression. Look down at verse. So now we've
dealt with the first part of the context. The second part
of the context begins in verse 13. You shall not oppress your
neighbor or rob him. So now this is oppression, you
know, which means to beat somebody down or to take advantage of
them. And now we have the word rob in verse 11. It's steel. Verse 11 is steel, which implies
deceit. Verse 13, dealing with oppression,
is robbery, where you just rip people off. You rip it off them.
And actually, the word has that kind of literal connotation to
it, to rip somebody off. So this is oppression. Making
another person's life harder through sin. Okay? And so, This
root of oppression means to trample somebody down. Oppression by
force, first of all, as I said, to rip somebody off, right? To
rob somebody and not to steal from them is oppression. And
that's the continuation, as it were. in this in this next section. I think that you can see at the
end of verse twelve. I am the Lord bold. You see that
verse twelve. I am the Lord. So these two verses
are a section, but the next section sort of picks up again with the
same theme of the eighth commandment in terms of oppression and outright
theft. So first by force or then by
a lack of consideration, the wages of a hired servant shall
not remain with you all night until the morning. We saw this
in Deuteronomy as well. Well, So, a lack of consideration. There are some jobs, you know,
our Savior in Matthew 20 verse 8 uses the vineyard example and
how a guy can pay people in the vineyard what he wants to pay
them. But in the parable, he assumes that at the end of the
day is when the wages are distributed every day. And so fieldwork is
generally seen as being paid daily. And it's because fieldwork
is the least paying of jobs, and those people tend to need
the money to go home and get the dinner for dinner that night.
They're doing hand-to-mouth daily. And a lack of consideration from
them, using accounting practices in a way that diminishes the
life of your servant instead of meeting his needs, is prohibited
here and is one of the contexts. That's directly following on
to this eighth word. Next, by their absence, this
is interesting. You shall not curse the deaf
or put a stumbling block before the blind, but you shall fear
your God. I am the Lord. So, you know, OK, you say, well,
I never curse a deaf person and I never let a blind person out
of the way. Maybe you have. The blind person can't see the
way we're supposed to help people find the way and when we misdirect
people from their way, We do what this case law referring
to blind people says. It's an obligation on us to show
people the correct way to walk. And when we don't do that and
we tell them the incorrect way, we've put a stumbling block in
front of a blind person, you see, by way of application. All
false instruction is prohibited by this particular case law.
We have an obligation to increase men's life by showing them proper
ways and not improper ways. Don't curse the deaf to speak
something about a person that that person can't hear that's
negative, right? That's what's going on. The deaf
guy can't hear it. You're going to curse. We're going to say
something bad about him. He can't hear it. Now, when do we ever
do that? Well, we do it all the time.
You're not here. I'm at someplace away from here. Can I talk about you in a bad
way? That's what this case is referring to as well. Don't let
yourself off the hook. We have an obligation not to
oppress people by their absence and using our speech inappropriately. Whenever we slander, whenever
we talk about people in a negative way, cursing them, that's a violation
of this word. And it's part of this whole stuff
related to the Eighth Commandment and oppression and robbery. Our next is injustice in verse
15. You should do no injustice in
court. You should not be partial to the poor or defer to the great.
But in righteousness, shall you judge your neighbor? Now, this
is an important verse in terms of social justice. Again, what
it says is there's to be no class justice. You know, if we called
social justice, class justice, it'd be more obvious what's going
on there. And you certainly can't defer
to the rich, but you also can't defer to the poor. Mamonides
and other Jewish authorities, they would make people, when
they went to court, have the same clothes on as they're sitting
there before the judge. You know, we've got justices
blind, right? And the way we do it is usually
the defense attorney will have you put a suit on, because that's
kind of the common dress that we have today. We sort of do
the same thing. But it's all based upon this. And to properly
not oppress people, is to engage in proper biblical justice, not
man's will and class justice, but God's will. Quoting from
R.G. Rajduni here, the modern beliefs
in class justice, racial justice, economic justice, and so on,
are all perversions of justice and law. They enthrone man's
will as law. Class justice is an untenable
doctrine. But it is now the basic doctrine
of socialism in all forms and always evil. Justice is to be
done to all because justice is not a class doctrine, but God's
nature and his requirement. OK, so oppression through justice
by a failure of direct dealing. And we've talked about this in
recent sermons, so I won't go into these in detail. But that's
the last one is when we don't deal honestly with people. Instead,
we talk about them behind their back. We get a hatred in our
heart for them. And this text says we're taking
away their life. We're stealing their life. We're
enslaving them again. We're violating the eighth word
when we don't have direct dealings with people. The corrective doll.
This is the fear of God. He says, look, You're doing things
that people won't see. Slandering, whatever it is, having
partiality in your heart toward a poor man or toward a rich man.
But the corrective is fear God, right? That's what it says to
do here. We're to fear God. Verse fourteen. You shall not
curse the deaf but his family block before the blind. But you
shall fear your God. He sees he hears everything. And so the fear of God is essential
to our avoiding violations of the eighth word. Alright, now
let's get to the verse itself. Number two on your outline the
progression into the ring of fire. And there is this stealing
first. I've always sort of showed us
what's happening here. Oops, I've lost the actual text. Where did I put it? So now we're
going to deal directly with verses 11 and 12. And if you look at
that text, either in your Bibles or in the handout. Give me just a minute. There
it is. Okay. Okay. So, verse 11, you
shall not steal. Okay. And as I said, that is
primarily deception. You shall not deal falsely. So we'll talk about that in a
minute. But first, don't steal, which is to take another's goods
without consent or knowledge. And as I said, the emphasis is
normally on secrecy. Okay. Absalom stole the people's
hearts. Second Samuel 15. What does he
do? David's having a hard time getting
people to court on time and meeting out justice. The people are kind
of complaining about it. Absalom goes around and he says,
well, you know, I could really, I know it's really tough. I'm
so sympathetic with you. I'm so compassionate with you.
I know it's kind of tough. David isn't doing that great
a job. And what he does is he's building revolution and rebellion,
which is a sorcery, the Bible says, but he does it by stealing.
And this is the specific phrase that's given to us in Second
Samuel, First Samuel. He's stealing men's hearts, Second
Samuel, First or Second, the Book of Samuel. He's stealing
men's hearts and he's doing it covertly, right? He's getting
them to like him. And so that's the idea here is
the beginning of this list is don't steal. This is, again,
the beginning of a process. And the second word is to not
deal falsely. And here I've got Shine On, right?
If robbing is ripping people off, Dealing falsely is shining
people on. You know, oh I really like you.
It's either feigned respect for authority or fawning thus over
those who are inferior. It's this kind of representing
who you are in a way that doesn't really represent your heart attitude
toward that particular people. So it has that connotation to
it. You know, Joab, was a smart guy
and he dealt falsely with Amasa. He goes up to him and he kisses
him. Oh, how are you doing? And he gives him an embrace and
stuff like shaking hands today. And Amasa doesn't see that in
his other hand, the one that's not embracing him, there's the
dagger. So he's dealing falsely. He's
blessing him with his mouth and he's in the process of murdering
with him. Sound familiar? That's Judas with Jesus. In the
garden, and that's what we do a lot of times. We steal something
deceptively. We pretend that we're OK with
the purse, with the owner of it. And we actually try to assure
them of what we're doing is right. And we deal falsely when we do
this. And then third, we actually lie.
The word lie means to say something that has no basis in truth. So
it's countersteering reality. But the idea is it's empty words. And in the Psalms, you get a
lot of this vanity and lying words. And we wonder why those
two are put together. Well, because lying that particular
Hebrew word has the connotation of having nothing in substance. So now you tell your neighbor
something else about what you stole from. You make up a story
is the idea. And so you lie about it. Right.
And you just don't tell the truth. And what you say doesn't have
a basis in reality. Ephesians, of course, tells us
to speak the truth to one another. Speak reality, reality, God's
reality, not the falsehood or lie, the emptiness. Idols in
the Bible, the same word is applied to them. They're lies because
there's nothing to them. They're nothings. And a lie is
a nothing. It's not, it doesn't represent
reality. And then the last step in this
progression is swearing falsely. So you move from wanting something
You then lie about whether you took it or not. You first of
all, you deal falsely by trying to pretend you've got relationship
with the person and like him. You lie about the fact of whether
you stole it. And then you'll even say, I swear to God, I didn't
take it. And now you've sworn falsely before God. And the end
result of this progression is profaning God's name, right?
Don't steal. Don't deal falsely. Don't lie.
Don't swear by my name falsely. and so profane the name of your
God. The end result, the ring of fire
that we fall into is the profanation of God's name. That means to
diminish, to make unclean somehow the name of God, which is him
himself, his very person. Now in Proverbs 30 verse 9, think
of this in terms of class justice. Ager says, don't let me be rich,
or don't let me be poor, lest I be full and deny you and say
who is the Lord, or listen now, lest I be poor and steal and
profane the name of my God. He connects the stealing, the
violation of the eighth word, to profaning the name of God,
and he says even if I'm poor, If I steal, I'm profaning the
name of God. So, theft is tied to the profanation
of God's name. Even theft, as in la miserable,
whatever it is, it seems to be justified by a kind of abject
poverty. Still, Ager, the wisdom of Proverbs,
tells us that even then, when we steal, even if we're hungry,
it profanes the name of the Lord. We rely upon Him, not our own
mechanisms. to protect who we are. In Amos
2 verse 7, those who trample the head of the poor into the
dust of the earth, turn aside the way of the afflicted. A man,
and we read this before in a couple of weeks, a man and his father
go into the same girl, so that my holy name is profaned. And
don't stop at the sexual sin, it's connected to the oppression
of the poor. The oppression of the poor, the
violation of the eighth word, produces the profanation of God's
very name. The profanation. of God's very
name. The end result of this is God's
judgment. Of course, these same words are found in Leviticus
6 verses 1 to 7. We won't look at those, but they're
the same words for steel and lie and swear falsely are found
there and there. It's required that an atonement
be made because this is great sin. The violation of the eighth
word. The conclusion of this whole
ethics section of Leviticus 22. So chapter 23 begins a whole
new section of Leviticus. The conclusion is this in verses
31 to 33. You shall keep my commandments.
That's to guard them, preserve them, keep them going and do
them. I am the Lord and you shall not
profane my holy name that I may be sanctified among the people
of Israel. I am the Lord who sanctifies
you, who brought you out of the land of Egypt. To be your God,
I am the Lord. God has delivered us and redeemed
us in Jesus Christ, and he doesn't want us to profane his name by
a violation of his commandments, including and predominantly here
at the eighth word. To violate the eighth word is
to fall into the ring of fire, to get us going in a whole sequence
of events. One little line leads to another,
right? Oh, what a tangled web we weave
when first we practice to deceive, Sir Walter Scott. And that's
what's going on here. There's a progression. I fall
into a burning ring of fire. I begin with the simple appropriation
of something, stealing the cookie that mom and dad said I couldn't
take. And before I know it, I'm falling into the ring of fire
by that violation. Before I know it, I'm lying to
them. I'm even swearing that I didn't do the thing that they
say that I did. And the end result is what I'm
doing is I'm profaning the name of God himself. He takes that
very seriously. You know, people don't like the
name of the family being hurt by bad behavior on the part of
the kids. Well, that's OK. But the name
of God, of course, is even more important. And believe me, God
doesn't like it when we claim the name of Christian and don't
act like it. The end result is fire itself.
a place with sorcerers and adulterers. Malachi 3.5 says, listen, then
I will draw near to you in judgment. I will be a swift witness against
the sorcerers, against the adulterers, against those who swear falsely,
against those who oppress the hired worker in his wages, the
widow and the fatherless, against those who thrust aside the sojourner
and do not fear me, says the Lord of hosts. We place ourselves
with sorcerers and adulterers when we do these relatively benign
acts, so we think of them in this culture, of small theft,
small lies, and swearing by the name of God. When we profane
His name, we put ourselves in a position of judgment alongside
adulterers and sorcerers. We lead to excommunication. Psalm
24.4 says if you swear falsely, you shouldn't get in the door
to worship. That's what Psalm 24 says. Jeremiah 7 says the
same thing. Remember Jeremiah 7. Don't come
to the temple in these states. Will you steal, murder, commit
adultery, swear falsely, make offerings to Baal and go after
other gods that I have not known? If you're going to steal and
swear falsely, don't come. You're going to be turned away
at the door. You're going to be excommunicated if you don't repent
for that. Leviticus 20 verse 3, I myself,
the church won't do it, God will. I myself will set my face against
that man and will cut him off from among his people. Why? Because
he has given one of his children to Moloch to make my sanctuary
unclean and to profane my holy name. Now, there's a charge. They profaned his name, and therefore
he's going to cut them off from amongst his people. The specification
is giving our children to the state. That's what Moloch worship
was with state worship. But you see, stealing is another
specification for the same crime of profaning God's name, as Proverbs
30 makes quite clear. So you see, we're put ourselves
with those who would give themselves over their children over to the
state. And we give ourselves over to
a group of people that God says he will excommunicate if we don't. The end result of this is a devouring
curse. Zechariah five. Listen, big ears. Then he said to me, this is the
curse that goes out over the face of the whole land for everyone
who steals shall be cleaned out according to what is on one side
and everyone who swears falsely to see the connection. shall
be cleaned out according to what is on the other side. I will
send it out, declares the Lord of Hosts. It shall enter the
house of the thief and the house of him who swears falsely by
my name, and it shall remain in his house and consume it. Both timber and stones violate
the eighth word and to fail to come to repentance for it is
to fall into the profanation of God's name And to bring ourselves
the curse from God that devours our house. It was an old song
when I was a kid. Chip, chip, chip in the way,
chip in that dimension of love. George Truman's probably the
only guy that knows the song in this whole church. But the
chorus, this is a popular song in the top 20 songs. And the
thing was, you tell a little lie, you make your baby cry,
you cheat a little bit, you quarrel over it. And one day you're going
to discover that one little wrong leads to another chip, chip,
chip in a way, chipping at the mansion of love. The body of
Christ is the mansion of love and our homes represent a mansion
of love. And when we do these seemingly
small things of counter stating the truth in order to conceal
it, We're chipping away at the mansion of love. We're falling
into the ring of fire. We're profaning God's name, and
we're bringing upon ourselves and our house a terrible, devouring
curse. The corrective is the primacy
of God's name. What does God's name mean to
you? Profaning God's name. Well, what about God's name?
Is it important? It's the only important thing.
God has called us specifically to be portrayers of His name,
His person, His character to this world. And when we don't
do that, we've profaned His name and judgments come. Matthew Henry
said that this text tells us to maintain a very reverent regard
to the sacred name of God, a very reverent regard for the sacred
name of God. I don't think this is common
share in evangelicalism today in reform circles there, maybe
even in this church today. A very reverent regard for the
name of God, for the name that you bear as Christians, for the
name of Christ. Yet scriptures Ezekiel various
citations. He says, God said, I would pour
out my wrath upon them and spend my anger against them in the
midst of the land of Egypt, but I acted for the sake of my name
that it should not be profaned in the sight of the nations among
whom they live. God says that the reason he redeemed
his people out of Egypt was not for their sake. First and foremost,
it was for the sake of his very name. That's why he did it, he
said. God made you a Christian first
and foremost in terms of purpose, reason and goal that his name
would be honored and held up in a right regard for it might
be seen in the context of the nation's roundabout. God says
that his name in Ezekiel 20, 13 and 14, he says, but I acted
for the sake of my name that it should not be profaned. in
the sight of the nations that in verse twenty two, but I withered,
excuse me, but I withheld my hand and acted for the sake of
my name that it should not be profaned in the sight of the
nations here. He's talking about what happens in the wilderness
after he redeems them and they profane my Sabbath, he says,
in this section of Ezekiel. And I bring judgments upon them.
I was going to destroy them. But once more, grace prevails
for the sake of God's name. That's the reason. Ezekiel thirty
six. Verse 18, I poured out my wrath
upon them for the blood that they had shed in the land. Now,
this is talking about we're moving through the history of Israel
in these sections from Ezekiel. And this is about why he kicks
him out of the land, sends him into the dispersion that they
would say for the idols with which they have defiled it. I
scattered them among the nations. They were dispersed through the
countries in accordance with their ways and their deeds. I
judged them. But when they came to the nations,
wherever they came, they profaned my holy name. And the people
said of them, these are the people of the Lord. And yet they had
to go out of his land. So their sin called the judgment
profane God's name. But God says, I had concern for
my holy name, which the house of Israel had profaned among
the nations to which they came. Therefore, say to the house of
Israel, thus says the Lord, it is not for your sake, O house
of Israel, that I am about to act. to bring them back to the
land. It's not for your sake, he says,
but for the sake of my holy name, which you have profaned among
the nations for which you came. I will vindicate the holiness
of my great name, which has been profaned among the nations and
which you have profaned among them. And the nations will know
that I am the Lord, declares the Lord God, when through you
I vindicate my holiness before their eyes. Why did God save
us? Why did Jesus come to bring us
life from death, to bring us out of judgment back into the
promised land? Why does He do it? He does it
ultimately for the sake of God's name. Not for your sake, Christian. Not for your sake, He says here
in Ezekiel. But for the sake of my holy name.
Now, what does it mean to us? God's holy name? Do we have a
very reverent, high regard for it? That's what this text calls
us to. The Eighth Commandment is seen
here as containing elements that are common to the lives of many
people, many people in Christendom, certainly many people in our
culture. God says that the corrective to all of this is a high regard
for the holy name of God, Christian. God has called you here today
to remind you of your deliverance from sin and death through the
wondrous work of our Savior. But he wants you to know from
these texts of Ezekiel that he has done this for the sake of
his holy name. Honor that name this week. Let's pray. Lord God, we thank
you for your deliverance. We thank you for the exhibition
of your holy name and character through your grace in spite of
judgment. We thank you, Lord God, that you call us today to
see that name is central to our very being. Help us, Father,
not to be foolish people who have heard the need here to not
profane your name through theft, false dealings, lying and false
swearing. Help us to be those, Lord God,
who seek instead the restoration of all things for the proper
exercise of stewardship over the created things of the earth.
We thank you, Lord God, that we have the high calling this
week to honor your name and not to profane it. May we do that
by the power of your spirit. In Jesus name we ask it. Amen.