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The First Commandment Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 6, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: God must win our obedience to the first commandment or the rest of them become meaningless. If we are not absolutely loyal to Him and Him alone, we will not be concerned about being loyal to His standard of morality.
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And God spoke all these words: I am the
Lord your God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the
land of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me.
In the book, The Doctor Of Crows Nest, and old doctor
Ferguson fell in love with the hands of young Barney Boyle.
"You must be a surgeon, Barney," he said. "You've got the
fingers and the nerves!" Barney was hesitant, but the
doctor pointed out all the advantages and the help he could
be to others. He concluded, "Ah, boy, God knows I'd give
my life to be a great surgeon. But He didn't give me the
fingers. I haven't the touch. But you have! You have the
nerve and the fingers and the mechanical ingenuity; you can
be a great surgeon. You shall have all my time and all my
books and all my money; I'll put you through! You must
think, dream, sleep, eat, drink bones and muscles and sinews
and nerves! Push everything else aside! He cried waving his
great hands excitedly. And remember!.... here his voice took
a solemn tone...let nothing share your heart with your
knife."
Here is an earthly example of the motivation behind the
first commandment. God had great ambitions for Israel. He
wanted a people who would be an instrument of His grace
and love to all the world. Though them He would bring into
the world the Great Physician, who alone would succeed as
an effective surgeon against sin. God had great plans, just
as the doctor did for young Barney, but both God and
doctor Ferguson had the same obstacle to overcome, and
that was the free will of man that can choose, not only less
than the best, but even the worst. Barney could choose to be
a bum and waste his gifts, and Israel could choose to go a
whoring after other gods and bring disgrace upon the name
of Jehovah. As a matter of fact, that is exactly what
happened, and it proves the point that free will is the basic
problem in the God-man relationship. Until the will is
submissive there is no way that man can be successful in
fulfilling the plan of God.
God must win our obedience to the first commandment
or the rest of them become meaningless. If we are not
absolutely loyal to Him and Him alone, we will not be
concerned about being loyal to His standard of morality. Dr.
Ferguson said "if you want to be a successful surgeon you
must let nothing share your heart with your knife." God is
saying in this first commandment, "if you want to be
successful in living a life pleasing to me, let nothing share
your heart with you love for me." In other words, make me
your first priority in all of life. All other loves, such as family,
friends, and neighbors must be subordinate to your love for
me. Love for God must be first and foremost, always.
Thoreau said, "Simplicity, simplicity, simplicity! I say,
let your affairs be as two or three, and not a hundred or a
thousand-simplify, simplify." God will not settle even for
two or three, however, but demands we simplify down to one
ultimate loyalty. This is what the first commandment is all
about. Let's look at the implication of this first
commandment.
The first implication of this commandment is that God
has made man free to defy His sovereignty. God does not
impose the benefits of His acts of grace upon man without
their consent. By shear power God brought Israel out of
Egypt, but He did not by shear power compel them to
acknowledge Him as their God. For their good He
commands that they do so, but the very existence of the
command implies that they have the freedom to do
otherwise. They demonstrated their freedom time and time
again by defying this first commandment. The whole history
of the sufferings of Israel is the history of their disobedience
to the first commandment. Yet, God did not by shear force
ever compel them to obey it as he compelled the water of the
Red Sea to separate. Taking Israel out of Egypt was simple
compared to the task of taking Egypt out of Israel. The first
was a matter of power, but the second called for the
cooperation of man's will.
God's sovereignty does not play the same role in the
moral and spiritual realm as it does in the physical. He does
not force men into submission. The poet wrote-
And He that looketh wide and high,
Nor pauses in His plan,
Will take the sun out of the sky,
Ere freedom out of man.
In the very giving of the law God respects man's freedom,
but He gives them the law as another act of sovereign grace,