The Story of Patriarchs and Prophets
by Ellen G. White
Chapter 27: The Law Given to Israel
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"Honor thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long
upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee."
Parents are entitled to a degree of love and respect which is
due to no other person. God Himself, who has placed upon them
a responsibility for the souls committed to their charge, has
ordained that during the earlier years of life, parents shall stand
in the place of God to their children. And he who rejects the
rightful authority of his parents is rejecting the authority of
God. The fifth commandment requires children not only to yield
respect, submission, and obedience to their parents, but also to
give them love and tenderness, to lighten their cares, to guard
their reputation, and to succor and comfort them in old age. It
also enjoins respect for ministers and rulers and for all others
to whom God has delegated authority.
This, says the apostle, "is the first commandment with promise."
Ephesians 6:2. To Israel, expecting soon to enter Canaan,
it was a pledge to the obedient, of long life in that good, land;
but it has a wider meaning, including all the Israel of God, and
promising eternal life upon the earth when it shall be freed from
the curse of sin.
"Thou shalt not kill."
All acts of injustice that tend to shorten life; the spirit of hatred
and revenge, or the indulgence of any passion that leads to
injurious acts toward others, or causes us even to wish them harm
(for "whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer"); a selfish
neglect of caring for the needy or suffering; all self-indulgence
or unnecessary deprivation or excessive labor that tends to injure
health—all these are, to a greater or less degree, violations of
the sixth commandment.
"Thou shalt not commit adultery."
This commandment forbids not only acts of impurity, but
sensual thoughts and desires, or any practice that tends to excite
them. Purity is demanded not only in the outward life but
in the secret intents and emotions of the heart. Christ, who
taught the far-reaching obligation of the law of God, declared
the evil thought or look to be as truly sin as is the unlawful
deed.
"Thou shalt not steal." [p. 309]
Both public and private sins are included in this prohibition.
The eighth commandment condemns manstealing and slave
dealing, and forbids wars of conquest. It condemns theft and
robbery. It demands strict integrity in the minutest details of
the affairs of life. It forbids overreaching in trade, and requires
the payment of just debts or wages. It declares that every attempt
to advantage oneself by the ignorance, weakness, or misfortune
of another is registered as fraud in the books of heaven.
"Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor."
False speaking in any matter, every attempt or purpose to
deceive our neighbor, is here included. An intention to deceive
is what constitutes falsehood. By a glance of the eye, a motion
of the hand, an expression of the countenance, a falsehood may
be told as effectually as by words. All intentional overstatement,
every hint or insinuation calculated to convey an erroneous or
exaggerated impression, even the statement of facts in such a
manner as to mislead, is falsehood. This precept forbids every
effort to injure our neighbor's reputation by misrepresentation or
evil surmising, by slander or tale bearing. Even the intentional
suppression of truth, by which injury may result to others, is a
violation of the ninth commandment.
"Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor's house, thou shalt not
covet thy neighbor's wife, nor his manservant, nor his maidservant,
nor his ox, nor his ass, nor anything that is thy
neighbor's."
The tenth commandment strikes at the very root of all sins,
prohibiting the selfish desire, from which springs the sinful act.
He who in obedience to God's law refrains from indulging even
a sinful desire for that which belongs to another will not be guilty
of an act of wrong toward his fellow creatures.
Such were the sacred precepts of the Decalogue, spoken amid
thunder and flame, and with a wonderful display of the power
and majesty of the great Lawgiver. God accompanied the proclamation
of His law with exhibitions of His power and glory,
that His people might never forget the scene, and that they might
be impressed with profound veneration for the Author of the
law, the Creator of heaven and earth. He would also show to
all men the sacredness, the importance, and the permanence of
His law.
The people of Israel were overwhelmed with terror. The
awful power of God's utterances seemed more than their trembling
hearts could bear. For as God's great rule of right was [p. 310] presented before them, they realized as never before the offensive
character of sin, and their own guilt in the sight of a holy
God. They shrank away from the mountain in fear and awe.
The multitude cried out to Moses, "Speak thou with us, and
we will hear: but let not God speak with us, lest we die." The
leader answered, "Fear not: for God is come to prove you,
and that His fear may be before your faces, that ye sin not."
The people, however, remained at a distance, gazing in terror
upon the scene, while Moses "drew near unto the thick darkness
where God was."
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