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- D.L. Moody - The Ten Commandments
"The Ten Commandments" by D.L. Moody
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The Eighth Commandment
Thou shalt not steal.
DURING THE TIME of slavery, a slave was preaching with great power.
His master heard of it, and sent for him, and said:
"I understand you are preaching?"
"Yes," said the slave. "Well, now," said the master, "I will give
you all the time you need, and I want you to prepare a sermon on the
Ten Commandments, and to bear down especially on stealing, because
there is a great deal of stealing on the plantation."
The slave's countenance fell at once. He said he wouldn't like to do
that; there wasn't the warmth in that subject there was in others.
I have noticed that people are satisfied when you preach about the
sins of the patriarchs, but they don't like it when you touch upon
the sins of today. That is coming too near home. But we need to have
these old doctrines stated over and over again in our churches.
Perhaps it is not necessary to speak here about the grosser
violations of this eighth commandment, because the law of the land
looks after these; but a man or woman can steal without cracking
safes and picking pockets. Many a person who would shrink from
taking what belongs to another person thinks nothing of stealing
from the government or from large public corporations, such as
street car companies. If you steal from a rich man it is as much a
sin as stealing from a poor man. If you lie about the value of
things you buy, are you not trying to defraud the storekeeper? "It
is naught, it is naught, saith the buyer: but when he is gone his
way, then he boasteth" (Pr 20:14).
On the other hand, many a person who would not steal himself, holds
stock in companies that make dishonest profits; but "though hand
join in hand, the wicked shall not go unpunished" (Pr 11:21).
A young man in our Bible Institute in Chicago got on the streetcar,
and before the conductor came around to take the fare, they reached
the Institute, and he jumped oh without paying his fare. In thinking
over that act he said: "That was not just right. I had my ride, and
I ought to pay the fare."
He remembered the face of the conductor, and he went to the car
barns and paid him the five cents.
"Well," the conductor said, "you are a fool not to keep it."
"No," the young man said, "I am not. I got the ride, and I ought to
have paid for it."
"But it was my business to collect it."
"No, it was my business to hand it to you."
The conductor said, "I think you must belong to that Bible
Institute."
I have heard few things said of the Institute that pleased me so
much as that one thing. Not long after that the conductor came to
the Institute and asked the student to come to see him. A cottage
meeting was started in his house; and not only himself but a number
of others around there were converted as a result of that one act.
You can hardly take up a paper now without reading of some cashier
of a bank who has become a defaulter, or of some large swindling
operation that has ruined scores, or of some breach of trust, or
fraudulent failure in business. These things are going on all over
the land.
I would to God that we could have all gambling swept away. If
Christian men take the right stand, they can check it and break it
up in a great many places. It leads to stealing.
WHERE THE STREAM STARTS
The stream generally starts at home and in the school. Parents are
woefully lax in their condemnation and punishment of the sin of
stealing. The child begins by taking sugar, it may be. The mother
makes light of it at first, and the child's conscience is violated
without any sense of wrong. By and by it is not an easy matter to
check the habit, because it grows and multiplies with every new
commission.
The value of the thing that is stolen has nothing to say to the
guilt of the act. Two people were once arguing upon this point, and
one said: "Well, you will not contend that a theft of a pin and of a
dollar are the same to God?" "When you tell me the difference
between the value of a pin and of a dollar to God," said the other,
"I will answer your question."
The value or amount is not what is to be considered, but whether the
act is right or wrong. Partial obedience is not enough: obedience
must be entire. The little indulgences, the small transgressions are
what drive religion out of the soul. They lay the foundation for the
grosser sin. If you give way to little temptations, you will not be
able to resist when great temptations come to you.
GOD'S WEIGHTS
Extortioner, are you ready to step into the scales? What will you do
with the condemnation of God-- "Thou hast taken usury and increase,
and thou hast greedily gained of thy neighbors by extortion, and
hast forgotten me, saith the Lord God" (Eze 22: 12)?
Employer, are you guilty of sweating your employees? Have you
defrauded the hireling of his wages? Have you paid starvation wages?
"Thou shalt not oppress an hired servant that is poor and needy,
whether he be of thy brethren, or of thy strangers that are in thy
land within thy gates (Deu 24:14). What mean ye that ye beat my
people to pieces, and grind the faces of the poor? saith the Lord
God of hosts (Is 3:15). Behold, the hire of the laborers who have
reaped down your fields, which is of you kept back by fraud, crieth:
and the cries of them which have reaped are entered into the ears of
the Lord of sabaoth" (Ja 5:4).
And you, employee, have you been honest with your employer? Have you
robbed him of his due by wasting your time when he was not looking?
If God should summon you into His presence now, what would you say?
Let the merchant step into the scales. See if you will prove light
when weighed against the law of God. Are you guilty of adulterating
what you sell? Do you substitute inferior grades of goods? Are your
advertisements deceptive? Are your cheap prices made possible by
defrauding your customers either in quantity or in quality? Do you
teach your clerks to put a French or an English tag on domestic
manufactures, and then sell them as imported goods? Do you tell them
to say that the goods are all wool when you know they are half
cotton? Do you give short weight or measure? See what God says in
His Word: "Shall I count them pure with the wicked balances, and
with the bag of deceitful weights?" (Mic 611; "Thou shalt not have
in thy bag divers weights, a great and a small: thou shalt not have
in thy house divers measures, a great and a small. But thou shalt
have a perfect and just weight, a perfect and just measure shalt
thou have: that thy days may be lengthened in the land which the
LORD thy God giveth thee" (Deu 25:13-16).
"Ye shall do no unrighteousness in judgment, in mete yard, in
weight, or in measure. Just balances, just weights, a just ephah and
a just hin, shall ye have" (Lev 19:35-36). Are you like those who
said: "When will the new moon be gone, that we may sell corn? and
the sabbath, that we may set forth wheat, making the ephah small,
and the shekel great, and falsifying the balances by deceit? that we
may buy the poor for silver, and the needy for a pair of shoes; yea,
and sell the refuse of the wheatl (Amos 8:5-6).
"Show me a people whose trade is dishonest," said Froude, "and I
will show you a people whose religion is a sham." Unless your
religion can keep you honest in your business, it isn't worth much;
it isn't the right kind. God is a God of righteousness, and no true
follower of His can swerve one inch to the right or left without
disobeying Him.
STOLEN GOODS A BURDEN
I heard of a boy who stole a cannonball from a navy yard. He watched
his opportunity, sneaked into the yard, and secured it. But when he
had it, he hardly knew what to do with it. It was heavy, and too
large to conceal in his pocket, so he had to put it under his hat.
When he got home with it, he dared not show it to his parents,
because it would have led at once to his detection. He said in after
years it was the last thing he ever stole.
The story is told that one of Queen Victoria's diamonds valued at
six-hundred thousand dollars was stolen from a jeweler's window, to
whom it had been given to set. A few months afterward a miserable
man died a miserable death in a poor lodging-house. In his pocket
was found the diamond and a letter telling how he had not dared to
sell it lest it lead to his discovery and imprisonment. It never
brought him anything but anxiety and pain.
Everything you steal is a curse to you in that way. The sin
overreaches itself. A man who takes money that does not belong to
him never gets any lasting comfort. He has no real pleasure, for he
has a guilty conscience. He cannot look an honest man in the face.
He loses peace of mind here, and all hope of heaven hereafter. "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" (Jer 17:11). "That no man
go beyond and defraud his brother in any matter: because that the
Lord is the avenger of all such" (1 Th 4:6).
I may be speaking to some clerk who perhaps took five cents today
out of his employer's drawer to buy a cigar; perhaps he took ten
cents to get a shave, and thinks he will put it back tomorrow--no
one will ever know it. If you have taken a cent, you are a thief. Do
you ever think how those little stealings may bring you to ruin? Let
your employer find it out. If he doesn't take you into court, he
will discharge you. Your hopes will be blasted, and it will be hard
work to get up again. Whatever condition you are in, do not take a
cent that does not belong to you. Rather than steal, go up to heaven
in poverty--go up to heaven from the poorhouse. Be honest rather
than go through the world in a gilded chariot of stolen riches.
RESTITUTION
If you have ever taken money dishonestly, you need not pray God to
forgive you and fill you with the Holy Ghost until you make
restitution. If you have not got the money now to pay back, will to
do it, and God accepts the willing mind.
Many a man is kept in darkness and unrest because he fails to obey
God on this point. If the plough has gone deep, if the repentance is
true, it will bring forth fruit. What use is there in my coming to
God until I am willing to make it good, like Zacchaeus, if I have
done any man wrong or have taken anything from him falsely? "If the
wicked restore the pledge, give again that he had robbed, walk in
the statutes of life, without committing iniquity; he shall surely
live, he shall not die. None of his sins that he hath committed
shall be mentioned unto him" (Eze 33:15-16). Confession and
restitution are the steps that lead up to forgiveness. Until you
tread those steps, you may expect your conscience to be troubled,
your sin to haunt you.
I was preaching in British Columbia some years ago, and a young man
came to me and wanted to become a Christian. He had been smuggling
opium into the States.
"Well, my friend," I said, "I don't think there is any chance for
you to become a Christian until you make restitution." He said, "If
I attempt to do that, I will fall into the clutches of the law, and
I will go to the penitentiary." "Well," I replied, "you had better
do that than go to the judgment-seat of God with that sin upon your
soul, and have eternal punishment. The Lord will be very merciful if
you set your face to do right."
He went away sorrowful, but came back the next day, and said: "I
have a young wife and child, and all the furniture in my house I
have bought with money I have got in this dishonest way. If I become
a Christian, that furniture will have to go, and my wife will know
it." "Better let your wife know it, and better let your home and
furniture go." "Would you come up and see my wife?" he asked, "I
don't know what she will say."
I went up to see her, and when I told her, the tears trickled down
her cheeks, and she said: "Mr. Moody, I will gladly give everything
if my husband can become a true Christian."
She took out her pocketbook, and handed over her last penny. He had
a piece of land in the United States, which he deeded over to the
government. I do not know in all my backward track of any living man
who has had a better testimony for Jesus Christ than that man. He
had been dishonest, but when the truth came to him that he must make
it right before God would help him, he made it right and then God
used him wonderfully.
No amount of weeping over sin and saying that you feel sorry is
going to help it unless you are willing to confess, and make
restitution.
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