Exodus 20:1-21 · The Ten Commandments
God’s Ultimate Concern
Exodus 20:1-21
Sermon
by Walter Kimbrough
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The Bible records one of the most moving stories ever told. It is the account of God’s giving the ten commandments to Moses. This mountaintop experience was a most excellent setting for the revealing of such a historic document. “The Lord descended to the top of Mount Sinai and called Moses to the top of the mountain… (Exodus 19:20 NIV).” In other words, God and man had a summit meeting -- God came down and man had to go up.

We must note that God had a very special relationship with Israel. They were no ordinary people, they were God’s chosen people. They did not choose God -- God chose them and blessed them with an eternal covenant. God promised to always be their God and they would be the people of God. In other words, Israel enjoyed a relationship with God that others might envy.

The family of God is now chosen. Family, the tie that binds hearts and experiences to each other. Obviously, the family is the most significant organism in all of society. No other entity quite measures up to its magnitude of power and authority. No other organism has equal presence or promise as does the family. God’s family is preeminent. One would certainly say that the family of God is indeed the first family to which we belong. We are all members of the family of God, regardless of our racial or ethnic identifications.

The ten commandments are God’s way of providing a precise plan for our salvation -- to help us be delivered from the sins of the world that systematically destroy us. We become addicted to sin and rendered helpless in helping ourselves. God has a therapeutic plan for our detoxification from sin. So whether the commandments are stated positively or negatively, they are designed to usher in our deliverance from sin and death. They are indeed rules to live by, enabling us to be in right relationship with God. This is truly love in action. God interceding on our behalf.

In the introduction of the ten commandments, God simply says, “I am the Lord your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery… (Exodus 20:2 NIV).” In other words, the magnificent God declared authoritatively, I know who I am, I know who you are, I also know where you were and the condition you were in, and certainly, I know what I did for you. Now, therefore, God declared in that distant yesterday, and, yes, even declared today that:

1. “You shall have no other gods before me.

2. You shall not make for yourself an idol.

3. You shall not misuse the name of the Lord.

4. Remember the Sabbath day by keeping it Holy.

5. Honor your father and mother.

6. You shall not murder.

7. You shall not commit adultery.

8. You shall not steal.

9. You shall not give false testimony.

10. You shall not covet.”

These 10 laws, commandments, rules and regulations, a guide to live by -- call them what you may, they represent God’s ultimate concern for the people of the world. Jesus said it succinctly, “For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life… (John 3:16 NIV).” God’s ultimate concern, therefore, is for the salvation of the world. Let us look at four functions of the ten commandments in an attempt to better understand God’s ultimate concern -- our salvation.

The first function of the law is to reveal the character of God. We need to discover for ourselves who God is -- what makes God God. J. Coert Rylaarsdam states that, “In the Bible, law is God in action.” We have given all kinds of titles and descriptions to God. In the Greek, we declare that God is the Alpha and the Omega. Translated into the English, we declare that God is the beginning and the end, the first and the last. The psalmist declared that from everlasting to everlasting, God was still God. Time nor eternity were sufficient to change nor destroy the identity of God -- the character of God.

The character of God is so profound until mortal beings, at best, can only possess a microcosmic understanding of God. There is too much to know, therefore, we can never fully comprehend God. This inability does not give us permission to avoid knowing the character of God. For the more we know of God and seek to live in right relationship, the better off we will be. The God we serve is architecturally competent; created the magnificent art form of the world, designed waterways and mountainsides, sprinkled the landscape with vegetation of varying colors, conceptualized trilateral animal life, with some animals traveling by land, others by sea, while still others had wings to fly through the air. Now, that is a God we all can serve.

Church school teachers all over the world, utilizing the Bible dictionary, teach children and adults that God is omnipresent. That attribute of God fills the universe in all its parts and is present everywhere at once. Not a part, but the whole of God is present in every place. God is also omnipotent -- the attribute of God which describes the ability to do whatever God wills. And God is omniscient -- the attribute by which God perfectly and eternally knows all things which can be known, past, present and future. What a God we serve.

Then, we are forced to declare that we are related to a jealous God. Our salvation calls us to live in right relationship to God. This means that God demands to be first in everything and before everybody else. Jesus even declared, “Whoever loves mother or father more than me is not worthy of me.” Furthermore, God wants our first fruits -- not the leftovers, only the first.

The ten commandments begin with our relationship to God. The law says, “You shall have no other gods before me, you shall not make for yourself an idol, you shall not misuse the name of the Lord and then you must remember the Sabbath Day by keeping it holy.” There is no reason for us to get out of line with God. The law is plain and simple. Even a child can understand. Now that’s the character of God. Profound to the intellectually astute and simple to the young; the character of God is revealed.

The second function of the law is to guide the believer’s faith response by specifying God’s expectations for our lives. King Jehoshaphat declared, “Listen to me, Judah and people of Jerusalem! Have faith in the Lord our God and you will be upheld; have faith in his prophets and you will be successful… (2 Chronicles 20:20).”

The book of Genesis describes how Abraham was instructed by God to go to the land of Moriah and offer his son as a sacrifice. He was obedient because of his faith. The life of Isaac was spared because of Abraham’s faith while the Son of God had to experience death on the cross as a means of our salvation.

Many years ago, there was a very poor woman who had wanted to give her granddaughter a watch for her high school graduation gift. The girl had done well academically, finishing third in her graduating class and had received a full four-year scholarship to college. With no money and no job, the woman convinced the jeweler that she would pay every dime that she owed. Faith became two-dimensional -- the woman had faith in her ability to pay and the jeweler had faith that she would keep her word. Faith was at work.

The gospel writer Mark records the event where there was a woman who was poor and widowed. This woman was at worship and at the time of the offering, the wealthy people came forward with large sums of money. They received great recognition for their contributions. The old woman put in next to nothing dollar-wise, but proportionately she out gave everybody else. For the others gave out of their abundance while out of her poverty she gave “all” that she had; her whole living. Now that’s faith.

This woman, in the experience of Jesus, declared her faith to God by giving all that she had. She reminds me of John Wesley, who declared, after feeling his heart strangely warmed, that he could trust God completely as the source of his salvation. Here is a woman who obviously trusts God completely and concretizes her faith response in the act of giving.

God expects us to live in faith; “The substance of things hoped for and the evidence of things not seen,” according to the writer of the book of Hebrews (11:1). We must be able to declare the words printed on U.S. currency, “In God We Trust.” Unashamedly, we declare our faith relationship with God, which places us in a faith relationship with our neighbors. We are being guided, therefore, in a faith response to God.

The third function of the law is to provide a basis on which God can discipline the people. Religion is designed to help the individual bring some discipline into his or her life. Everyone needs a life that has order in it. “Disorder” brings about confusion and chaos. “Order” opens up the door of possibility. We serve a God of order. It is this God, therefore, who formulated the ten commandments as a means of requiring us to have order in our lives. The commandments are also designed for the purpose of evaluating our effectiveness in relating to God and neighbor.

These commandments, then, are not to be viewed as a curse, but rather as a blessing. Some would argue that the commandments are primarily negative statements. But it is a plus to know what it is that you ought not be doing. A clergyman stated that instead of people seeking to find out who’s in charge of a group, they should discover who is not in charge. God was emphatic in telling Israel and us what we must not do; “you shall not murder, commit adultery, steal, give false testimony or covet.” All of these commandments bring us into right relationship with the people around. For how can we authentically love God and possess a warped relationship with those persons around us? The answer is obvious, we cannot.

These commandments become more objective than subjective. If we were being graded, the method would be mathematical and scientific because we would be right or wrong. The gray area has been eliminated, and so the verdict can be a clear and concise, guilty or innocent. The people of God are judged according to the law of God. The laws are the universal standard. They apply equally to all persons, non-discriminatory in application. God works that way.

We need to be disciplined in our living. The laws of the United Methodist Church, for example, are included in a document known as the Book of Discipline. It seeks to tell what United Methodists can and cannot do. Rather than a curse, it is a blessing because of its clarity. A Jewish Rabbi was addressing his congregation where the high school graduates were being recognized. He used an illustration of water. He stated that water which is allowed total freedom, soon loses its power and becomes still, constituting a swamp, breeding harmful insects. Water, on the other hand, that is totally free, but is confined by two banks, never loses its power and is called a river, generating power for electricity that will light up the whole town. We are to be like the water, disciplined by two banks so that we will never lose our power.

God sits in judgment on us according to how we pass the test of commandments. God is like the teacher who passes out the syllabus on the first day of the semester, spelling out with great clarity, when each assignment is due, all of the material to be covered, and the dates of every exam. Then there is no excuse for any student to declare that he/she did not know.

God has given to us 10 commandments to guide our lives, to help live in right relationship with the world and with God. We should know that God’s ultimate concern is our salvation. Every act of discipline is an act of love. The concern is for us to be saved. We can all be thankful for a God who cares about us and our salvation.

C.S.S. Publishing Company, NOTHING IS IMPOSSIBLE, by Walter Kimbrough