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Sanctification Commanded Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 6, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: The Second Commandment forbids the linking of God to any fixed image. This Third Commandment forbids that we link His name with any idea that is unworthy of His nature. Many who would never dream of reducing God to an idol will reduce Him to a curse word, which is equally vile.
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During the Civil War one company of soldiers adopted a
rule that every man who swore would be required to read
aloud a chapter from the Bible. While that rule was in force
one private read all of Genesis and Exodus and was starting
on Leviticus. The one recording the experience said he had
a fine prospect of finishing the Old Testament before his
three months enlistment was up. If ever there was a good
thing done for a bad reason, this was it. I suspect that the
Bible societies could scarcely meet the demand if this rule
was in force today. Swearing and using the name of God
and Christ in vain are so common today that it is hardly
even shocking anymore.
Swearomaniacs are allowed to run loose everywhere in
our society filling the air with pollution as dangerous to the
soul as carbon monoxide to the body. Profanity is one of our
greatest air pollution problems. It is highly contagious, and
young people grow up becoming infected with it almost
unconsciously. When I was a chaplain at a county jail I
asked the men to think about why they swear so much.
Every one of them agreed, they picked it up as children from
their parents.
Modern novels and films spew the poisonous germs of
profanity into the stream of our consciousness at a
frightening rate. If somebody is not swearing somewhere in
a movie it is supposedly unrealistic. As a matter of fact, it is
unrealistic to portray the lives of typical people without
profanity. Anyone who works among the public is aware of
the impure vocabulary of modern man, and regrettably,
modern women also. It use to be in poor taste to swear in
the presence of a lady, but now days she is liable to beat you
to it.
Young people are exposed to profanity from every angle.
And English teacher assigned a composition to be written
containing 250 words. The next day one boy stood up to
read his, and said, "My uncle was driving his new car one
day and he had a puncture. The other 236 words are not fit
for publication." It is not likely that the teacher would let
him get by with this, but it is also true that God will not let
the uncle get by with his profanity.
The Third Commandment has a concluding statement that says, "For
the Lord will not hold him guiltless who takes his name in
vain." We are not dealing here with a trivial matter, but one
that is extremely important from God's point of view. The
Third Commandment has to be taken seriously in our day,
for it is as far from being obsolete as sunshine and oxygen in
this dark and polluted world.
The implications and applications are two numerous to
cover in one message, and so we will be limiting ourselves to
a practical explanation of what is involved. Like the
previous commandments, this one is in a negative form, but
we will see Jesus give it a positive side. Let's consider first
the negative emphasis which-
I. PROHIBITS PROFANITY OF SPEECH.
You will notice that out of ten commandments two of
them deal with sins of the tongue--this one, and the ninth,
concerning false witness. Here it is our tongue in
relationship to God, and in the ninth, it is our tongue in
relationship to man.
The first thing we need to see concerning taking the
name of God in vain is that it is a serious sin. The tendency
is to think that after all, this is a minor matter in a world
plagued by war and crime and immorality. This attitude
reveals the degree of our deception and the superficial
nature of our understanding concerning the cause of mans
depravities. People often swear and say they mean nothing by it.
They think that eliminates them from danger, but that is the
very thing that is forbidden. To use Gods name in vain
means to use it in an empty and meaningless way. If you
mean nothing by it, you confess you have used it in vain.
We ought never to use the holy name of God except when we
mean something by it, and something worthy to be identified
with His great name. What is more empty and worthless
than men constantly asking God to damn someone or
something? Does anyone really think that God will follow
through? All they do by this empty use of God's name is
heap to themselves damnation. The person who uses God's
name in vain is saying that God is an empty meaningless
word.
All other sins are by-products of the loss of respect and
reverence for God. Once a man loses the sense of the holy
and the sacred he has broken down the only restraint that