The Ten Commandments: An Expression of God's Loveনমুনা
Be Honest
Because God wants us to respect the property of others, to treat others the way we want to be treated, and to love our neighbor as ourselves, He tells us plainly to not steal.
Stealing is more nuanced than we might think. One way to steal is seizure—old-fashioned theft. This includes burglaries, shoplifting, car theft, muggings, and store robberies. It includes pilfering items from your workplace. Moreover, we can steal productivity from our employer if we consistently come in late, take too long for lunch, or work on personal things. Unless we make this time up, we are stealing time from our employer.
Another form of seizure could be called long-term borrowing. We borrow something from a friend, such as a ladder or a book. We intend to give it back, but days or perhaps months go by, and we just don’t return it.
Besides seizure, there’s deception. We are not honest about the house or the car we are selling. A businessperson is not honest about a product or a service. A mechanic is not honest with a customer about the brakes. A physician is not honest with a patient about a surgery. We lie on our income tax return.
Will Rogers once said, “Income tax has made more liars of the American people than the game of golf has.” In addition to seizure and deception, there’s fraud—withholding something that belongs to someone else. If we hit a car in a parking lot and don’t leave a note, if an ex-husband does not make child support payments, if a landlord does not return a deposit that is due, and if we do not pay a bill we owe or make arrangements to repay it later, we violate the eighth commandment.
There are a lot of ways to steal besides robbing a store. God tells us, “Do not steal. Treat your neighbor the way you want to be treated. In obeying My commands, you are liberated to enjoy life and to enjoy Me.”
Scripture
About this Plan
The Ten Commandments are often seen as a list of demands impossible to meet. Many believe they are prohibitions that curtail their freedoms. In reality, they are limits full of God’s love for us, allowing us to enjoy life without the consequences not putting them into practice brings. They are one more expression of God's love for you.
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