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Wednesday, November 29, 2017

11/28/17 – Eph 6:2-3, The Ten Commandments, Pt 31, The 10th Commandments, Pt. 1, Lesson # 17-128
Grace Fellowship Church
Pastor/Teacher, Jim Rickard


Before we begin, if you are a believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, (If You have - Trusted in Him for Eternal Life), it is important to prepare yourself to: Take-in God’s Word and/or Participate in a Communion Service, so take a moment to name, cite, or acknowledge your sins privately, directly to God the Father. This will assure that you are in fellowship with God the Father & the Holy Spirit’s convicting ministry will then be able to teach you as the Holy Spirit is the real teacher.

1 John 1:9 says— “If we confess [simply name, cite, or acknowledge to God the Father] our sins [known sins], He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins [known sins] and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness [all unknown & forgotten sins].”

For those of you who have not yet accepted Jesus Christ as your Lord & Savior, please see: The Salvation Message @ the end of this document.

2 Pet 3:9, “The Lord is not slow about His promise, as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing for any to perish but for all to come to repentance.
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The Doctrine of the Ten Commandments Related to the Church Age, Part XXXI
Ex 20:17; Deut 5:21; Gen 2:6; 3:9; Num 11:4, 34; Prov 21:10; 23:3; Mark 15:19


The 10th Commandment.

Ex 20:17, “You shall not covet your neighbor’s house; you shall not covet your neighbor’s wife or his male servant or his female servant or his ox or his donkey or anything that belongs to your neighbor.”

Deut 5:21, You shall not covet your neighbor's wife, and you shall not desire your neighbor's house, his field or his male servant or his female servant, his ox or his donkey or anything that belongs to your neighbor.”

The final commandment in the Decalogue, reemphasizes the individual’s rights of privacy, property, person, and possessions. This is the 6th of the horizontal commandments that primarily deals with man’s relationship with man. But as all the commandments tell us, they have to do with our relationship with God, first and foremost. The previous commands implicitly forbid all acts that would harm or injure your neighbor; this forbids all inordinate inner desires of having what belongs to your neighbor that would presumably gratify yourself.

The Hebrew begins with LO for “not” once again. In Deuteronomy, it includes the WAW for “and,” before LO, as the previous three commandments did also.

Both “covets” in the Exodus passage are the Verb CHAMAD, חָמַד in the Qal Imperfect, spelled TAHMOD, that means, “to desire or take pleasure in.” CHAMAD is used 18 times in the OT, and has a variety of nuances stemming from the notion of desire related to physical beauty, both in a good and evil way. The motive of the subject who desires something or someone, often determines whether the desires are sinful or pleasing to the Lord, YHWH.

In the negative way, as it is used in the Decalogue, it means, “to lust, to want somebody else’s property, a strong desire to possess something that belongs to somebody else, to yearn to have, and to want to have something very much inordinately, culpably, or without due regard for the rights of others.”

In this commandment, there is a list of 7 things that are not to be coveted that belong to your neighbor, with an 8th that is a catchall for any other property or goods belonging to others: 1) house, 2) wife, 3) land, 4) male servant, 5) female servant, 6) ox, 7) donkey, or 8) anything that belongs to him.

Seven is the number of “spiritual perfection” in the Bible. Therefore, if we do not covet what our neighbor owns, we can walk in God’s light and righteousness.

Eight is the number of “superabundance” in the Bible and here reflects God’s provisions for each individual that should not be coveted by another.

Therefore, we are to be content with what we have been given by God, and not sinfully desire the things others possess.

As you may have noticed, the first two prohibitions in this command are reversed between Exodus and Deuteronomy. Exodus first prohibits coveting “your neighbor’s,” REA, “house,” BAYITH, that can mean, “home or household, family, or even property,” and then prohibits coveting your neighbor’s “wife,” ISHSHAH. Deuteronomy reverses them.

The Catholic church believes these are two different commands, but as Keil and Delitzsch note, “The objects of desire do not point to two different commandments. This is evident at once from the transposition of the house and wife in Deuteronomy.” (Keil and Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament).

In addition, even though the “wife” could rightly be included in BAYITH, “house,” she is called out separately, because she is the crown of the man, and a possession more costly than pearls, Prov 12:4; 31:10.

Nevertheless, this is one commandment with 8 examples of inordinate desire or lust. 
 

In fact, Deuteronomy’s second “covet” related to the neighbor’s house or household, is the Hebrew Verb AWAH, אָוָה‎ that also means, “to desire or lust for,” in the reflexive action Hithpael Imperfect. That means that this “lusting” comes from within, whereas CHAMAD emphasized lusting based on the beauty of the object. AWAH is used here in a morally or spiritually negative way for the inward desire to possess what your neighbor has.

As Keil and Delitzsch note, “The only difference between them being, that "the former (CHAMAD) denotes the desire as founded upon the perception of beauty, and therefore excited from without, the latter, (AWAH), desire originating at the very outset in the person himself, and arising from his own want or inclination,” (Schultz, as quoted in the Keil and Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament)

Prov 21:10 tells us,The soul of the wicked desires, (AWAH), evil; his neighbor finds no favor in his eyes.”

Examples of this covetousness include:

Num 11:4, 34, the Israelites in the wilderness started “craving” the food of Egypt. This disregard for God's deliverance and provision resulted in a plague that arrived simultaneously with the miraculous provision of quail.

Prov 23:3, warns of another kind of “craving” that is wrong. Here, the reader is warned against dining with a ruler who offers delicacies as a snare in disguise.

Prov 23:3, “Do not desire his delicacies, For it is deceptive food.”

The next difference we see is in Deuteronomy, where we are not to covet our neighbor’s, “field,” where SADEH, שָׂדֶה is added. Now that they were entering into the Promised Land to possess it, land property would be an issue. SADEH means, “field, territory, or countryside.” Now that they would own land and have fields, whereas in the wilderness they did not, they were prohibited from wrongfully desiring the land property of their fellow kinsmen.

The other prohibitions of lusting included the neighbor’s:

1. Household workers, slaves, servants, or employees.
  a. “Male servant,” which is the Noun EVED, עֶבֶד meaning, “servant, slave, or one who is under the authority of another.” Workers or employees are also in view.
  b. “Female servant,” which is the Noun AMAH, אָמָה‎ that means, “maid, handmaid, female slave, etc., and sometimes concubine.”


2. Working animals.
  a. “Ox,” is SHOR, שׁוֹר meaning “a fully grown male bovine, ox, bull, steer, or cattle,” but can also mean a female or a calf.
  b. “Donkey,” is the Noun CHAMOR, חֲמוֹר. It is referred to as the “beast of burden,” because of the heavy loads it is able to carry. This is the animal Jesus rode into Jerusalem on, as prophesied in Zech 9:9.


3. All other belongings.
  a. “Anything that belongs to your neighbor,” KOL ASHER LE REA.

Therefore, this commandment, like the prohibition against stealing, implies that God allows people to own things that belong to them and not to others.


The Conjunctions “or” in the English translations are for the Hebrew WAW to create groupings and differentials, as you can see.

The first time “covet” is used in the OT is Gen 2:9, of God’s creation of trees that are “pleasant to the sight,” yet the first sin of humanity entered because Eve “desired” the fruit which was “desirable to make one wise,” from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil, but was forbidden to be eaten by God, Gen 3:6. So, we see that coveting led to the first sin in mankind, and is the basis of all sin and crimes.

Unlike the other commandments, which focus on outward actions, this commandment focuses on thought; the mentality of your soul. It is an imperative against setting one’s desire on things that are the property or ownership of someone else. For example:
1. As the 7th Commandment forbids the act of adultery. This commandment forbids the desire for adultery.
2. As the 8th Commandment forbids stealing. This commandment forbids the desire for acquisition of another’s goods.

Therefore, coveting is the starting point of stealing, forbidden by the 8th Commandment, and, in the case of coveting someone else’s spouse, adultery, the 7th Commandment. 


As we have previously noted, the NT describes Jesus as interpreting the Ten Commandments as issues of the heart’s desires, rather than merely prohibiting certain outward actions, cf. Mat 5:28. The 10th Commandment makes clear that a relationship with God and man is a matter of the heart, first and foremost. As such, the 1st and 10th Commandments deal with what is in the heart, while the other eight focus on outward actions that begin in the heart. And as we have seen, covetousness is about the heart. It is about desire.

Desire, coupled with the Old Sin Nature, (OSN), creates a pattern for sinning called the “lust pattern” of the sin nature. When someone has a desire for praise, the lust pattern of the OSN tempts the soul in various forms of asceticism. When someone desires pleasure, the lust pattern of the OSN tempts in various forms of lasciviousness. See the doctrine and slides on the OSN, Lust Pattern of the Soul.

Jesus stated in Luke 12:15, “Beware, and be on your guard against every form of greed; for not even when one has an abundance does his life consist of his possessions.”

Covetous people will break any and all of God’s commandments in order to satisfy their desires, because at the heart of sin is the sin in the heart, Mat 15:19.

Mat 15:19, “For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false witness, slanders.”

To covet is to feed inward desires for anything that God says is sinful, and this commandment highlights the twisted desires of mankind and the sin of discontentment.


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A PERSONAL NOTE FOR YOU

John 6:47 says: “Most assuredly, I say to you, he who believes in Me [Jesus Christ] has everlasting life.”

Notice again what John 6:47 says, “he who believes in Me [Jesus Christ] has everlasting life.” It doesn’t say, “will have;” it says, “has.” Therefore, the very moment you believe Jesus Christ’s promise of everlasting life, you have it, and it can never be lost or taken away from you [John 10:28-29]. Furthermore, the gift of everlasting life [also called eternal life in Scripture] is available to every human being; there are absolutely no exceptions.

John 3:14-18 says: “And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted up, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life. For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. For God did not send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved. He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.”

Eph 2:8-9, “For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast.”

If you have never accepted Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, I am here to tell you that Jesus loves you. He loves you so much that He gave His life for you. God the Father also loves you. He loves you so much that He gave His only Son for you by sending Him to the Cross. At the Cross Jesus died in your place. Taking upon Himself all of your sins and all of my sins. He was judged for our sins and paid the price for our sins. Therefore, our sins will never be held against us.

Right where you are, you now have the opportunity to make the greatest decision in your life. To accept the free gift of salvation and eternal life by truly believing that Jesus Christ died for your sins and was raised on the third day as the proof of the promise of eternal life. So right now, you can pause and reflect on what Christ has done for you and say to the Father:

"Yes Father, I believe that Your Son, Jesus Christ, 
died on the cross for the forgiveness of my sins."


If you have done that, I Welcome You to the Eternal Family of God !!!
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Grace Fellowship Church
Pastor/Teacher: James H. Rickard
23 Messenger Street, Unit 3
Plainville, MA 02762


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