Mid-Lent 5
9th
and 10th Commandments
3/24/21
Several
trends have been very evident in model railroading during the last twenty
years. The first is that far fewer models of engines and freight cars are
produced as kits that a person builds, assembles or details. Instead the models come completely finished
and ready to put on the track for operation.
The second
has been that these models have a degree of detail and accuracy that is
outstanding. I mean, these are gorgeous
models that are exact representations of the prototype. Engines now make the sound that a particular
diesel engine or steam engine made. When you run them, they sound just like the
real thing.
The third
probably won’t surprise you. If the
manufacturer does all the work of assembly and detail, and provides a model
that is far more detailed and accurate, the price is not going to get
any cheaper. Instead, prices have
skyrocketed to the point that when it comes to engines, it really doesn’t
matter what comes out because it is going to be too expensive for me to buy.
Prices
have gone through the roof. But
manufacturers continue to produce new models because there are people buying
them. Matthew and I always marvel at
this, and it usually leads to the observation: “There are people out there who
have a lot more money than we do.”
There are
indeed people out there who have a lot more money than I do. They can buy these models, when I really
can’t. Now would I like to have some of
these models? Yes. Do I really need
these models – well, not really. Do I
already have many nice models to run and enjoy?
Certainly yes. This raises the
issue of whether I am going to be content. I have every reason to be – I mean I
am really blessed have my model railroad equipment and the layout on which to
run them. But boy, I’d love to have a
trio of Rapido RS-11’s to pull my freight trains. And I know there are people out there who get
to do this.
The Ninth
and Tenth Commandments both state that we are not to covet. The Ninth Commandment says, “You shall not
covet your neighbor’s house.” The Tenth
Commandment says, “You shall not covet your neighbor’s wife, or his manservant
or maidservant, his ox or donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbor.” It’s not a perfect division, but we usually
think of the Ninth Commandment as dealing with things, and the Tenth
Commandment as dealing with people.
To covet
is to envy what belongs to our neighbor.
We want to have it. It is to
begrudge the fact that they have it and we don’t. We are upset because
it seems unfair that they have something that we want, but don’t have. And it is the action by which see seek to get
it from our neighbor – especially in a way that only appears to be right.
The Ninth
and Tenth Commandments deal with God’s gift of contentment. The apostle Paul
told Timothy in his first letter, “Now there is great gain in godliness with
contentment, for we brought nothing into the world, and we
cannot take anything out of the world. But if we have food and
clothing, with these we will be content.”
God teaches us to contemplate the
blessings that he has given to us. We
must recognize that the only thing God has promised to us is daily bread –
those things that are needed to support our body and life. And then, God has blessed us with so much
more than that! He has provided us with
every reason to be content when we consider all that he has given to us.
Of course, the old Adam in us is
never satisfied. He is always looking to
have more – to have better. He looks around and zeroes in on the things that
other people have – the things that we don’t.
He sees the things and people in the lives of other that are better than
in ours, and causes us to ignore the great blessings that we do have. He kindles dissatisfaction with our lives,
and prompts us to consider how we can get what others have.
This is a great challenge for us
because we live in a world that is constantly telling us that we need more and
we need better. The advertising industry
has finely tuned methods by which it delivers this message to us – by which it
dangles things in front of us. Our
culture which is so void of spiritual substance knows little else than those
things that will make for the “good life.”
But the good life is an ever moving target as a continual flow of new
products, renders what we have dated, obsolete and unacceptable.
What the world teaches us about
things it also does with people – especially our spouse. The world’s view of relationships is that
“it’s all about me.” My happiness, my satisfaction are all that matter. If
those aren’t sufficient, then surely there is someone else out there who will
fix that. It teaches us to think nothing
of leaving our spouse in order to be with someone else – even that if that person
is someone else’s spouse.
The Small Catechism explains the
Ninth Commandment by saying that we are not to “scheme to get our neighbor’s
inheritance or house, or get it in a way which only appears right.” It explains
the Tenth Commandment by saying that we are not to “entice or force away” those
in the life of our neighbor. Luther
emphasizes that these actions may not appear to be stealing. They may be strictly speaking “legal.” But he says, “It might not be called stealing
or cheating, but it is coveting – that is, having designs on your neighbor’s
property, luring it away from them against their will, and begrudging what God
gave them.”
Naturally, there is a similarity
with the Seventh Commandment as it forbids stealing. And just as in the Seventh Commandment, so
also in the Ninth and Tenth Commandments the positive action that is inherent
in keeping the commandments is to help our neighbor keep what they have. We are to “help and be of services to him in
keeping it.” We are to urge the people
in our neighbor’s life “to stay and do their duty.” We help our neighbor and treat our neighbor
just as we would want to be treated.
We do covet. We fail to embrace contentment in the
recognition of God’s many blessings.
Because of this our sin, the Son of God gave up the greatest possible contentment
of the divine life of the Holy Trinity in order to suffer and die for us. Paul told the Philippians, “Have this mind
among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was
in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be
grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the form of
a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in
human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of
death, even death on a cross.”
Christ loved us. He did not seek
something better for himself. Instead, he gave up all in order bring us into
the fellowship with God. He humbled
himself by being obedient to the Father to the point of death – even the
humiliating and shameful death of the cross.
He did this in order to reconcile us to God – to win forgiveness by
which we have been restored to the status of being children of God.
Our Lord Jesus submitted himself to
suffering and death for us. But he did
so in the knowledge that thereby he was also giving us life. He entered into the world in the incarnation
in order to die. But as he told his
disciples during his ministry, he also came to be raised from the dead. He came
to defeat death and begin the resurrection of the Last Day.
On Easter we will celebrate that Jesus has risen. He lives! Because he does, we will live too, even if we die. Paul said in the first chapter of his letter to the Philippians, “My desire is to depart and be with Christ, for that is far better.” Because our Lord has risen we know death cannot separate us from him. And we also know that he will yet give us something even better. He will give us a share in his resurrection. He will give us physical life that will never know suffering, pain or sickness - life that will never die. As Paul told the Philippians, “we await a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body, by the power that enables him even to subject all things to himself.” On that day, we will know contentment that has no end.
No comments:
Post a Comment