RPM, Volume 14, Number 50, December 9 to December 15, 2012

Give or Take

Exodus 20:1-17

By Mike Osborne

We are continuing our series on the Ten Commandments. Today's message is on the 8th Commandment, "You shall not steal." (vs. 15)

Why I decided to go ahead and preach on the 8th Commandment, despite the tragic death last Sunday of our friend Forrest Flaniken.


So I think it's very timely that we are thinking about God's law against stealing.

And not only that. You've stolen and I've stolen. In fact, I think you'll see that the sin of stealing is a lot more widespread than you might have thought.

  1. The seriousness of stealing
  2. The pervasiveness of stealing
  3. What to do about it

I. The seriousness of stealing

When someone steals from you, they are not just taking your stuff. In a very real sense, they are assaulting your dignity as a human being.

There's a reason we feel violated as a person when our things are stolen. It's because our stuff is not just stuff. It's part of who we are.

When God created Adam & Eve, he gave them dominion over the earth. He gave them the plants and trees and animals for them to rule over and use for their survival.

He gave them work to do. Labor was a pre-fall institution.

In the OT, God gave a specific land to the Israelites. Each tribe within Israel had a certain territory with boundary lines. This was one tribe's property and that was not. People built houses and claimed ownership of them.

So ownership of property is a Biblical concept.

The Bible says it is right and good that I have my things and you have your things, and that we should trust one another with our things. It's right and good to have boundary lines. It's right and good to own property.

But stealing is a violation of this principle. If I steal something from you, I am assaulting your dignity as a human being made in God's image. And I am violating the Biblical principle that what is yours is yours, and what's mine is mine.

Stealing destroys trust. And trust is foundational to the survival of a society.

Read through the laws of Israel and you'll see lots of case law about thievery.
• Ex 22

But ultimately, what makes stealing so serious is that it is a lack of trust in God. God is our provider. He will give us what he knows we need. Or he will enable us to work and earn money and buy what we need. But when you steal, you are saying, "I don't believe God. He is not my provider. He is not good. So I must take matters into my own hands."

Stealing, then, is a horrible form of unbelief.

Adam's sin was the sin of stealing. God had said, "You may eat from any tree of the garden except this one over there. You must not eat from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil." In a sense God was saying, "That tree over there is mine and mine alone. All these others are yours." But Adam did not trust God's Word. He ate from the tree that was not his, and in so doing disobeyed the 8th Commandment.

How serious is stealing? When you think about it, every one of the Ten Commandments is a commandment against stealing something.

Every commandment is in some way a command to protect and respect something that belongs either to God or to other people.

Stealing is a serious sin.

II. The pervasiveness of stealing

There are all sorts of ways we steal from each other.

We might go on and on. But the worst form of stealing is stealing from God.

My point is that stealing is a pervasive, widespread sin. And it's getting worse the more sophisticated we get at it.

Luther: "If we look at mankind in all its conditions, it is nothing but a vast, wide stable full of great thieves."

III. What to do about it: fight it!

If you have stolen something…(5)

  1. Fight stealing with confession
  2. Fight stealing with restitution
  3. Fight stealing with contentment
  4. Fight stealing with work
  5. Fight stealing with generosity

But what do you do when someone has stolen from you?

Obviously these are situations when you have to address it as a matter of injustice. This is why we have laws on the books. This is why we have a criminal justice system and why we have police officers and DCF and courts where citizens can appeal to the state and address our grievances with that person or persons who stole from us.

Within the church you should go to the elders and say, "This has happened to me and I need your mediation." This is why we believe in church discipline.

People who steal should be confronted with their sin and feel its consequences.

It's not something that you should just shrug your shoulders about and act as though you've not been hurt. You have.

When someone has stolen from you, it's an assault against you as the image of God, and ultimately it's an assault upon God himself. There are consequences to pay. The person has lost trust, and it takes time to rebuild that trust. In certain situations you will never trust the person again.

But eventually what you need to do is forgive.

Last week, Matt Ryman talked about adultery. He spoke to the victims of adultery, and said that we who have committed spiritual adultery against God must move toward forgiving the person who has committed adultery against us. Otherwise you become a hardened, bitter person.

It's the same with theft. You and I have stolen from God time and time again. We have stolen from other people. "We are a vast, wide stable full of thieves."

We are the thief on the cross next to Jesus.

We who have put our trust in Jesus have been forgiven. "He who had no sin became sin for us. He who had never stolen, not once in his life, became a thief for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in him."

Because of the cross, we who have been violated can and must forgive thieves. Let us who have been forgiven many trespasses, forgive others their trespasses against us.

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