DOCTRINAL STATEMENT
1] The Ten Commandments, as revealed by God, codified
by Moses, and ratified and magnified by Christ, are the perfect
expression of God's law. They are the foundation of all biblical
teaching, showing man how to express love toward God and fellowman, and
are consequently the focal point of Christian life.
DOCTRINAL OVERVIEW
2] When God
initially spoke to the Israelites from Sinai, He gave them the Ten
Commandments (Ex. 20:1-17). It is true that the full covenant made with
Israel at Sinai also contained other rules, regulations and commands
(Ex. 20-24). Yet the only code spoken directly to the people, rather
than through Moses, and written on the tables of stone placed in the ark
of the covenant was the code of the Ten Commandments. The vital
importance of these ten major precepts to our culture has been
recognized even by historians who see no uniqueness in the Old Testament
as a religious document.
3] Jesus Christ
specifically listed five of the Ten Commandments (fifth, sixth,
seventh, eighth and ninth commandments) when He told the young rich man,
"If thou wilt enter into life, keep the commandments " (Mt.
19:17). He also pointed out that the Ten Commandments have two basic
objectives (Mt. 19:16-22; Mk. 10:17-22; Lk. 18:18-23): (1) the first
four show how one is to love, worship and honor God, and (2) the
final six
give the basis for how to love other human beings. Indeed, Jesus
summarized the two basic objectives of the Ten Commandments when He
answered the Pharisee's question:
"Master, which is the great commandment in
the law? Jesus said unto him, Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy
mind. This is the first and great commandment. And the second is
like unto it, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. On these
two commandments hang all the law and the prophets" (Mt.
22:36-40).
4] James wrote
that "whoever keeps the whole law but fails in one point has become
guilty of all of it" (Jas. 2:10). What "law" was James so strongly
upholding in this context? He makes this plain in the next verse by
discussing two of the Ten Commandments (the sixth and seventh
commandments).
5] John wrote
profoundly about God's commandments in his first epistle: "And hereby we
do know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments" (I John. 2:3), for
anyone "that saith, I know Him, and keepeth not His commandments, is a
liar, and the truth is not in Him" (v. 4). Moreover, "whatever we ask,
we receive of Him, because we keep His commandments" (I John. 3:22).
6] Ultimately,
the whole object is the love of God, which is the essence of God's
being: "For this is the love of God, that we keep His commandments. And
His commandments are not burdensome" (I John. 5:3). The entirety of the
law-in both its major and minor points-has the object of teaching us
what godly love is. Yet even though each part is a section of the whole,
unique stress has always been placed on the specific ten points first
enumerated as such at Mount Sinai. One can see an obvious reason for
this.
7] The problems
of our modern legal system are well-known. Some laws are so badly worded
that the individual citizen is hard put to know exactly what the
legislators had in mind in framing them and how he is to adhere to those
laws. On the other hand, each individual is continually beset on all
sides by a welter of picayune regulations which seem to irritate more
than help. How is one to come to grips with the situation without having
to become a professional lawyer, as it were? The Ten Commandments, by
contrast, are a paradigm for the modern legislator. The Ten Commandments
provide a few convenient categories by which all laws can be summarized
and organized.
8] To illustrate
the importance of the Ten Commandments as the basic summarizing
principles of God's mind, the following section gives a precis
[a concise summary] of each
and shows how it serves as a major category of rubric
[broad heading] under which many
important but more detailed commands can be systematized.
9] First
Commandment: Worshipping No Gods But the True God. Many
regulations of the Old and New Testaments relate to worshipping and
honoring only the one God. In today's society there are few who follow
blatant polytheism. And though historians acknowledge Israel as the
cradle of monotheism, most educated Romans and Greeks also thought in
terms of a basic monotheism by the time of Jesus. Yet polytheism easily
exists in a more subtle form in every age and society. Human nature
naturally places the self rather than God at the center of the personal
universe. Man by nature first worships himself. Even the initial impulse
to worship a superior being-a god-or even the true God-is often a
selfish one, since such worship is undertaken in order to stave off
disaster (by sacrifice or other propitiatory means), or to ask a favor,
or to obtain salvation. Worship of God for its own sake is completely
possible only by means of the Holy Spirit.
10] Second
Commandment: No Manufactured Images of God. Human beings
naturally like to deal with physical objects. Worshipping an invisible
God and recognizing that He is more real than even the physical world
does not come easily. Therefore, man seeks physical "aids" in
worshipping God rather than coming to grips with the true reality of the
transcendent, invisible God inaccessible to the five senses. Pagan
worshippers seldom regarded their idol as the actual deity itself. On
the contrary, the idol was merely a representative of the invisible god
in heaven. The idol served as an aid to worship just as the icons and
statues still used in various religions, do today. Since the use of
images in reality only serves to impede true understanding of the
spiritual and invisible Creator God, it was-and is-forbidden.
11] Third
Commandment: Not Taking God's Name in Vain. Respect the
world over is to a considerable extent demonstrated by the manner in
which one refers to the object of respect. One does not address the
chairman of the board frivolously or familiarly. To make use of God's
name lightly-whether as an interjection in day-to-day conversation, or
as a witness to an event which really doesn't concern Him (swearing and
taking oaths), or in a context which does not show respect or
honor-shows an unacceptable attitude toward God Himself. We all
eventually have to come to see God as the center of the universe and of
all reality. That required insight is impossible without the utmost
respect and honor toward God. How one uses His name is an outward
indicator of how one really feels towards Him.
12] The third
commandment has a deeper meaning as well-we are not to do anything that
could hold God's name up to scorn. As Christians-and as God's
Church-what we do, what we teach and how we teach it directly reflects
upon God. We should take this responsibility seriously.
13] Fourth
Commandment: Sabbaths for Rest and Worship. The Sabbath
command is very much a pivotal one, serving both as a means of honoring
and worshipping God and of aiding man. First of all, the Sabbath is a
memorial of Creation pointing to God as the Creator. Secondly, the human
body requires rest for efficient bodily function and a proper mental
outlook. Therefore, God commanded man to rest a full day once a week
plus setting aside certain other days for annual times of rest and
rejoicing. Man by nature needs periodic holidays. Had God not given some
to Israel, they would have invented their own. Moreover, God not only
gave weekly and annual days of rest, but He required that slaves-and
even beasts of burden-be allowed to enjoy rest on these days. This was a
demonstration of love for one's fellow man as well as kindness to
animals.
14] Thirdly,
while periodical physical rest is sufficient to meet physical needs, the
Sabbath and annual holy days serve a spiritual function as well. Indeed,
this is their primary purpose. They provide the opportunity for study
and for meeting to receive instruction in the ways of God. They provided
the opportunity for worship and intellectual and spiritual pursuits
which may not be possible during the day-to-day task of making a living.
Again, any day of the week would suffice for this as well as for
physical rest. The spiritual aspect lies in the fact that (1) it is a
time God has chosen, a fact significant in itself since one shows
respect to God by worshipping when, and as He says, rather than as the
individual chooses; and that (2) the choice of the seventh day also
points back to Creation and, as a consequence, to the Creator. Further,
both the weekly and annual Sabbaths serve to point out God's overall
plan to man. This is all part of the process of acquiring God's mind,
which is perfect love. (An expression of the fourth commandment to
include the annual festivals is indicated by some of the scriptures
which utilize the plural form of the Hebrew word shabbat.)
15] Fifth
Commandment: Honor of Parents. The parents are the first
authority in a child's life. They are also the first source and the
first object of his love. By respecting and honoring his parents the
child learns respect for constituted authority in general, and
eventually learns respect for the ultimate authority, God. In the same
way, he learns love from the love of his parents. As he returns that
love, he begins to see how love must also be directed toward a broader
circle, and eventually toward the Source of all things. Familial love is
the basis of a stable family unit, which in turn is the basis of a
stable society. Loving one's parents is thus crucial in a positive
environment in which love is learned and expressed, and God thereby
worshipped. It is also a necessary step in learning to love God.
16] Sixth
Commandment: Respect for Another's Life. Any
orderly society has certain restrictions on the taking of human life.
Absolute prohibition against taking human life does not exist in human
society, but the basic principle is, at least, recognized. A number of
Old Testament laws governing warfare and the execution of criminals
relate to a physical nation rather than to a spiritual church. Life
could be taken under certain circumstances. However, Jesus showed that
even hating was wrong, since hating preceded murder and murder never
embodied love. Even Old Testament laws clearly taught that lack of care
for the safety of another was only one step removed from deliberate
murder. A number of laws regulated potential or actual cases of
manslaughter. If a man accidentally killed another, the law protected
him by allowing a place for him to flee to. That is, it prevented
another life from being taken in revenge for the accident. On the other
hand, the one guilty of manslaughter had to suffer a temporary exile,
which demonstrated the seriousness of the incident, showing that he
might perhaps have prevented a death had he been more careful. In other
cases, the guilt of the careless individual was more clearly defined, as
for example, in not building a guard rail on his roof or not keeping a
belligerent farm animal safely locked up. Clearly, more than just
premeditated murder is being regulated and punished.
17] Seventh
Commandment: The Marriage Institution. Adultery is
probably the most blatant offense against another person's marital
partner. Forcible adultery (rape) or consenting adultery both violate an
intimate bond between husband and wife, even if the wronged partner is
not aware of it. Consenting adultery strikes at the very bedrock of
society, the marriage family unit, shattering the most intimate human
bond. Rape constitutes a violation of another person's body, mental and
physical health, and right to make personal decisions. Rape could never
be considered an act of love.
18] Other
unlawful sexual practices (e.g. homosexuality, bestiality) are illegal,
both because they degrade the human mind and body, and because they are
a substitution of the God-ordained marital bond. Sexual relations with
near of kin are potentially hazardous to unborn offspring. Premarital
sexual relations are potentially adulterous since the partners in such
relations may eventually marry someone else. Similarly, to live together
sexually before marriage is to give a distorted view of the purpose of
marriage and perhaps to take away an important physical incentive for
marriage in the first place. All of these have consequences for one's
ability to love others.
19] Finally,
since marriage is also a picture-in miniature-of God's plan, a wrong
approach towards marriage can cause one to overlook the important
spiritual truths about the ultimate and eternal Family of God which can
be learned from a proper marriage.
20] Eighth
Commandment: Respect for the Property of Others. Love for
another requires respect for his empirical self, which includes his
family and his physical possessions. While the greatest possession one
has is life, and the next greatest is one's marital partner and family,
personal property may be an important necessity for continued existence.
To take another's property in a poor society, may sentence him to
malnutrition and a slow death. In a more affluent society, it may
produce mental and emotional consequences. Consequently, we must learn
to respect the rights and needs of others.
21] Ninth
Commandment: Honesty in Dealing with Others. This
commandment is phrased in a legal manner because one of the most obvious
ways to defraud another is to testify falsely against him in court. This
could cause loss of property, freedom, or even life. Yet, complete
honesty and aboveboard dealing is also envisioned. One has, in a sense,
witnessed falsely when he uses a scale which has been tampered with.
Misrepresentation to get ahead means that a more deserving person is
passed over. Lying to boost one's ego, thereby deflating someone else's,
is also blatant disregard for another. Such self-centered dealings to
the exclusion of others are unconscionable and the antithesis of love-a
violation of the ninth commandment.
22] Tenth
Commandment: The Beginning of True Love is in the
Mind. The specific phrasing of this command proscribes desiring what
is not lawful for an individual to have: another person's property or
mate or position or whatever. In a sense, this gets at the heart of the
four previous commands. One does not kill unless he desires something
another person has or can give him (such as property, a better position,
an improved reputation, the elimination of a threat or problem, etc.).
Even revenge can usually be traced back to envy, a form of covetousness.
One does not commit adultery or other sexual sins unless he has first
desired what he was not entitled to, what he was not allowed to have.
One does not steal or gain through dishonesty without first taking
possession of the forbidden object in one's mind. If a person can
control his nature at this point, many of the other temptations shall
take care of themselves. Indeed, the tenth commandment is Spirit
in form and content-it is concerned with the unlawful desire in the mind
as well as the specific act. In this sense, it points to and foreshadows
the future teachings of Jesus Christ. As Paul wrote in Philippians
2:3,5: "Let nothing be done through strife or vain glory; but in
lowliness of mind let each esteem other better than themselves.... Let
this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus."
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