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Preservation Of Property Commanded Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 6, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Stealing is wrong because ownership is right, and ownership is right because God has ordained it. Obedience to the eighth commandment, like all of the rest, is essential to the good life, and the good society.
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The teacher said to the little boy who had stolen an apple
from another boy's lunch pail, "Don't you know that you
broke the eighth commandment?" "Yes," he responded,
"But I figured I might just as well have the apple and break
the eighth commandment as covet it and break the tenth."
The truth that is immediate evident in this incident is that
the human ability to rationalize about sin, and even use the
Scripture to support it, is unusually keen. A mother caught
her little girl in the cookie jar after she had been forbidden
to take any. The mother said as she caught her in the act of
petty thief, "What commandment is being broken here?"
The little girl said, "Suffer little children to come unto me
and forbid them not."
It is this keen ability to rationalize that makes us fearful
of the new morality line on the eighth commandment. We
do not disagree with the principle that the lesser of two evils
is the best choice. If the little boy who stole the apple would
have followed this principle, he would have chosen to be
guilty of coveting rather than stealing. Often we have been
guilty of leading people to sin by teaching that all sins are
equal. A person with this attitude easily yields to temptation.
He figures if he desires to sin, and that is as bad as doing the
sin, then he has nothing to lose by acting out his desire, for
he is already guilty.
It is important that we give our youth protection against
this kind of reasoning. There are degrees and various levels
of offense. Some are punished by death, while others require
only fines or restitution, and still others are resolved through
repentance. A sin such as coveting remains a matter
between you and God, and it can be forgiven by confusing,
but to act on the coveting, and steal, becomes a crime against
man. This calls for a settlement on that level, plus
repentance before God, and it can involve imprisonment as
well as restitution. All sins make you a sinner, but only some
sins make you a criminal. All violations of the Ten
Commandments are not equal. There is such a thing as a
lesser of two evils.
If a man is going to shoot his neighbor, and I know it, and
steal his gun, I turn stealing into a virtue, for I preserve life
in obedience to the sixth commandment, and I prevent an
unjust killing. If a busload of school children is stalled on a
track, and a train is coming, there are many ways in which I
might steal, or be destructive to the property of others in
order to stop the approaching train. It could be as minor as
taking a sheet from a nearby wash line, and running down
the track waving it. I could be as radical as taking
someone's car and stopping it on the track to halt the train
before it hit the bus. In any case, you would be a hero, and
what ever you did would be considered a virtue rather than
a vice.
The problem comes when people pervert this reality. For
example, what of the man who stole from his neighbor
because he loved him? Love is the absolute he argues, and
so he reasons that his neighbor is becoming too materialistic.
So, in true love for him he decides to remove the false
foundation of materialism that he is resting on. He begins to
steal his possessions in the hope that his neighbor will began
to seek a more spiritual foundation for his life. Such is the
power of rationalization.
The logic of the new morality has hit our nation at a time
when it is least needed. Stealing has already been so
minimized as a serious moral offense that it is fast becoming
the All-American sport. Everyone is playing the game. In a
article titled, Stealing Their Way Through College, it is
brought out that the major problem of the National
Association Of College Stores is the problem of shrinkage.
They haven't determined if the motive is love or not, but
students from every kind of college and university are
relieving them of millions of dollars worth of merchandise
without paying for it. I once counseled with a girl in a
Christian college who stole several hundred dollars worth of
clothing and cosmetics in one semester.
In one large Ivy League University the bookstore loses
$90,000 a year to student heisters. The worse case was that
of a divinity school graduate student caught lifting a Bible.
If he would have gotten by with it, he might have considered
it an answer to prayer. This is just how weak the American
conscious is on the matter of stealing. Youth is on a shop