"Thou
shalt not steal" (Exodus 20:15).
The
root from which theft proceeds is discontent with the portion God has allotted, and therefrom a coveting of what He has withheld from us and bestowed upon
others. With his usual accuracy Calvin hit the nail on the head when he wrote,
"This law is ordained for our hearts as much as for our hands, in order
that men may study both to protect the property and to promote the interests of
others." Like the preceding one, this precept also respects the government
of our affections, by the setting of due bounds to our
desires after worldly things, that they may not exceed what the good providence
of God has appointed us. Hence the suitability of that prayer,
"Remove
far from me vanity and lies: give me neither poverty nor riches, feed me with
food convenient for me; lest I be full and deny Thee, and
say, Who is the Lord? or lest I be poor, and steal, and take the name of my God
in vain" (Proverbs 30:8, 9).
"Thou
shalt not steal." The positive duty here enjoined us this: thou shalt by
all proper means preserve and further both thine own and
thy neighbor’s estate. This commandment requires proper diligence and industry
so as to secure a competency for ourselves and families, that we may not
through our own default expose ourselves and them to those straits which are
the consequence of sloth and neglect. Thus we are to "provide things
honest in the sight of all men" (Romans 12:17). But even more, this commandment is the law of love with respect to our
neighbor’s estate. It requires honesty and uprightness in our dealings one with
another, being founded upon that first practical principle of all human
conduct:
"Whatsoever
ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to
them" (Matthew 7:12).
Thus
this commandment places a sacred enclosure around property which none can
lawfully enter without the proprietor’s consent.
The
solemn and striking fact deserves pointing out that the first sin committed by
the human species entailed theft: Eve took of (stole) the forbidden fruit. So, too, the first
recorded sin against Israel after they entered the land of Canaan was that of
theft: Achan stole from among the spoils (Joshua 7:21). In like manner the
first sin which defiled the primitive Christian church was
theft: Ananias and Sapphira "kept back part of the price" (Acts 5:2)
How often this is the first sin committed outwardly by children! And therefore
this Divine precept should be taught to them from earliest infancy. Years ago
we visited a home, and our hostess related how she had that day secretly
observed her daughter (about four years old) enter a room in which was a large bunch of grapes. The little tot eyed them
longingly, went up to the table and then said, "Get thee hence, Satan. It
is written, ‘Thou shalt not steal,’ " and rushed out of the room.
"Thou
shalt not steal." The highest form of this sin is where it is committed
against God,
which is
sacrilege. Of old He charged Israel with this crime:
"Will
a man rob God? yet ye have robbed Me. But ye say, Wherein have we robbed Thee?
In tithes and offerings. Ye are cursed with a curse: for ye have robbed Me,
even this whole nation" (Malachi 3:8,9).
But
there are other ways in which this wickedness may be committed besides that of
refusing to financially support the maintenance of God’s cause on earth. God is
robbed when we withhold from Him the glory which is His due, and we are
spiritual thieves when we arrogate to ourselves the honor and praise which
belong to Him alone. Arminians are great offenders here,
by ascribing to free will what is produced by free grace. "Ye have not
chosen Me," said Christ, "but I have chosen you (John 15:16).
"Herein
is love, not that we loved God, but that He loved us" (1 John 4:10).
Another
way in which we rob God is by an unfaithful discharge of our stewardship. That
which God has entrusted to us may be just as really outraged by our mismanagement
as if we interfered with another’s trust or plundered our neighbor’s goods.
This commandment then requires from us that we administer our worldly estate,
be it large or small, with such industry as to provide for
ourselves and those dependent upon us. Idleness is a species of theft. It is
playing the part of the drone and compelling the rest of the hive to support
us. So prodigality is also a form of theft, since extravagance and wastefulness
are a spending of that substance which God has divided to us in riotous
living." He who remains in secular employment that
requires him to work on the Lord’s Day is robbing God of the time which ought
to be devoted to His worship. Before passing on it should be pointed out that
one who obtrudes himself into the Gospel ministry without being called of God
in order to obtain an easy and comfortable living is "a thief and a
robber" (John 10:1).
God
has ordained that men should earn their bread by the sweat of their brow, and
with that portion which we thus honestly obtain, we must be satisfied. But some
are slothful and refuse to labor, while others are covetous and crave a larger
portion. Hence many are led to resort to the use of force or fraud in order to
gain possession of that to which they have no right.
Theft, in general, is an unjust taking or keeping to ourselves what is lawfully
another’s. He is a thief who withholds what ought to be in his neighbor’s
possession just as much as one who takes his neighbor’s property from him.
Hence this commandment is grossly violated both by management and labor. If in
the past the poor have been wronged by inadequate wages,
the scales have now turned in the opposite direction, when employees often
demand a wage that industry cannot afford to pay them. If on the one hand it is
right that a fair day’s work should receive a fair day’s pay, it holds equally
true that a fair day’s pay is entitled to a fair day’s work. But where loafing
obtains it does not receive it.
"Thou
shalt not steal." Lying advertisements are a breach of this commandment.
Tradesmen are guilty when they adulterate or misrepresent their goods, and also
when they deliberately give short weight or short change to their customers.
Profiteering is another form of theft. The Apostle Paul admonishes
"that
no man go
beyond and
defraud his brother in any matter" (1 Thessalonians 4:6).
The
contracting of debts to support luxury and vanity is theft, as also is the
failure to pay debts incurred in procuring necessities. A
man is a thief in the sight of God who transfers property to his wife just
before he becomes bankrupt, and so also is any bankrupt who later on prospers
financially and then fails to pay his creditors to the full. That man or woman
is a thief who borrows and returns not. This commandment is broken by tenants
who heedlessly damage the property and furniture of the owner. Evasion in paying taxes is another form of theft; Christ has
set us a better example (Matthew 17:24). Gambling is still another form of
theft, for by it men obtain money for which they have done no honest work.
This
old saying is true. "Whatever is gotten over the
Devil’s back goes under the Devil’s belly." Certain it is that God sends a
curse upon what is obtained by force or fraud: it is put into a bag with holes
and under Providence soon wastes away. God, by His righteous judgment, often
makes one sin the punisher of another and what is gained by theft is lost by
intemperance and a shortened life. Therefore it is written,
"The
robbery of the wicked shall destroy them" (Proverbs 21:7);
and
again,
"As
the partridge sitteth on eggs and hatcheth them not; so he
that getteth riches, and not by right, shall leave them in the midst of his
days, and at his end shall be a fool" (Jeremiah 17:11).
Many
times God raises up those who deal with them as they have dealt with others.
The fearful increase of this crime in modern society is
due to failure to impose adequate punishment. If the reader is conscious of
having wronged others in the past, it is not sufficient to confess this sin to
God. At least a twofold restitution must be made (Luke 19:8 and 2 Samuel 12:6) —if the owner is dead,
then to his descendants; if he has none, then to some public charity.
Here
are a few suggested helps and aids to the avoidance of the sins prohibited and
to the performance of those duties inculcated by this eighth commandment.
(1) Engage in honest labor, or if a person of means, in some honorable
calling, seeking to promote the public good. It is idle
people who are most tempted to mischief.
(2) Strive against the spirit of selfishness by seeking the welfare of
others.
(3) Counter the lust of covetousness by giving
liberally to those in need.
(4) If your Savior was crucified between two thieves that the gift of salvation
might be yours, bring no reproach upon His name by any act of dishonesty.
(5) Cultivate the grace of contentment. In order
thereto, consider frequently the vanity of all things temporal, practice
submission to Divine providence, meditate much on the Divine promises (such as
Hebrews
13:5, 6), be temperate in all things, set your affections on things above, and
remind yourself daily of the earthly lot of Christ.