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The Sermon of The Revd Charles S. Mims
What's Yours is Mine, and What's Mine is Mine
Realizing Revival by Following The Rules
Exodus 20:15
15Thou shalt not steal.
A man, wanting to rob a downtown Bank of America, walked into the branch and
wrote "this iz a stikkup. put all your muny in this bag." While standing in
line, waiting to give his note to the teller, he began to worry that someone had
seen him write the note and might call the police before he reached the teller
window. So he left the Bank of America and crossed the street to Wells Fargo.
After waiting a few minutes in line, he handed his note to the Wells Fargo
teller. She read it and, surmising from his spelling errors that he was not the
brightest light in the harbor, told him that she could not accept his stickup
note because it was written on a Bank of America deposit slip and that he would
either have to fill out a Wells Fargo deposit slip or go back to Bank of
America. Looking somewhat defeated, the man said "OK" and left. The Wells Fargo
teller then called the police who arrested the man a few minutes later, as he
was waiting in line back at Bank of America.
It doesn't take the brightest bulb in the chandelier to be a thief. In fact, it
would seem that sometimes stupidity is a requirement to be a thief. Consider the
man who walked into a bank, handed the teller a note demanding money. When he
arrived home, he found the police waiting for him. It seems that this erstwhile
bank robber had written the robbery note on his own deposit slip. The police
simply went to his house and waited on him. Or consider the two who decided to
steal an ATM machine from a convenience store. They hooked up a chain to the
machine, and intended to drag it home. Apparently they failed to consider how
securely the ATM was anchored to the wall, because during the attempt the bumper
of their truck fell off. Afraid of getting caught, they took off down the road
leaving the bumper behind. Unfotunately for them the tag for the truck was still
attached to the bumper. They were caught. Or the man who walked into a
convenience store, put a $20 bill on the counter and asked for change. When the
clerk opened the drawer, the man pulled a gun and asked for all the cash in the
register. The man took the cash from the clerk and fled, leaving his $20 bill on
the counter. So how much did he get from the drawer? Fifteen bucks. Go figure.
It doesn't take a genius to steal, but it does take someone who has lost their
sense of honor. It takes someone who has lost the meaning of integrity. It takes
a person who is more concerned about their own wants than the rights of others
around them. God cares about the property rights of the other guy. He cares
enough that it makes his top ten list of sinful acts.
We don't always realize it when we commit sin. In fact, often times we don't
really recognize sin for what it is.
Once upon a time, there was a young pastor whose first church was in a small
logging community in the Pacific Northwest. Everyone in the town worked for
the logging mill, which was the only business and was involved in fierce
competition with another mill just upstream. To get a break from his study,
the pastor climbed up a slope overlooking the river. To his horror, he saw his
church members pulling logs branded by the other mill from the river, cutting
off the branded ends and running them through their own mill. The next Sunday,
he preached a powerful sermon called, "Thou Shalt Not Covet They Neighbor's
Property." After the service, the loggers shook his hand, patted his back and
told him how much they enjoyed his preaching. However, the next week, they
were back in business stealing their competitor's logs. So, he fired off
another scorching sermon called, "Thou Shalt Not Steal". Again he was
commended for his powerful delivery and keen insights into the Scriptures; but
on Monday the other mill's logs were still being swiped. Enough was enough.
This time he decided not to hold anything back. The next Sunday he preached a
message entitled, "Thou Shalt Not Cut the Branded Ends Off Someone Else's
Logs". The results, he was run out of town!
(Rev. Coy Wylie, from a sermon entitled: " Becoming A Model of
Integrity"/Pastor Tom Dooley in a message entitled "What's Happened to
Inegrity" at http://www.zoomnet.net/~dooley/time8.txt )
Just like these loggers, we listen closely when the preacher say Thou Shalt Not
Steal. We shake our head and say how horrible it is for people to steal, thank
God we are not like them. Perhaps we should look this morning at what this
commandment is talking about.
How Do We Steal?
The most obvious way that we steal is when we take something from someone else
without his or her permission. Simple stealing is easy for us to understand, and
for most of us not something we engage in on a regular basis. Children have a
simple philosophy of life. The way the look at the world what's mine is mine,
and what's yours is mine too if I can get to it. My cousin had a stuffed
reindeer when he was a toddler, and we would tease him by trying to take it from
him. The name of that reindeer eventually became "MINE" because he wanted us to
be sure we understood who it belonged too. In children this sort of behavior can
be somewhat amusing, and even to a point charming. In adults this sort of
behavior is criminal and sinful. We are supposed to learn, as we grow older,
that some things belong to other people and we simply cannot have them. They are
not ours to have. If you walk into a bank and demand money, you are a thief. If
you stick a candy bar in your pocket and walk out of the store you are a thief.
If you drive off a car lot without paying for the car, you are a thief. It seems
simple doesn't it? In a way it is just this simple on the surface, but
underneath it becomes more complicated. You see, you don't have to pull a knife
or a gun to steal. There are many ways in which we violate this commandment.
Some people steal from their employers. There are numerous ways this happens,
some blatant, some extremely subtle. When you accept a job you are given a set
of responsibilities. If you don't live up to your end of the bargain, you are
stealing from your employer. Your employer expects you to give them a full days
work for a full days pay. You might also take the office supplies home for
personal use, or slip out early one day to escape rush hour. All of these acts
are stealing, and they make you into a thief.
You also steal when you cheat. Whether it is on your taxes or your spelling
words. In a recent poll 35% of executives overstate tax deductions, 75% take
work supplies home for personal use, and 78% use the business phone for personal
calls. This is thievery pure and simple. Even if we don't want to acknowledge
it. I realize that there are only a handful of you, but I want you young people
to listen very closely to me. If you cheat…if you copy that paper, or get the
answers to the test from the person next to you, or if you allow someone else to
cheat off of you…if you do any of these, you are guilty of stealing! You are a
thief!
We have some sophisticated ways to steal nowadays. We can steal now without even
lifting a finger. We have made a distinction between blue collar and white
collar crime. If a person embezzles money from the church he is not branded a
robber, but he is just a guilty as the man who robs the neighborhood bank. When
a government official misuses public money, he or she has stolen and is a
criminal. Call it whatever you want, paint a nice white face on it, but it is
still stealing and God has forbidden us to participate in it.
But we have been talking about things. About belongings and money. We may also
sometimes steal spirituality from people. When we gossip we have stolen some
person's reputation When we fail to witness we have stolen a chance for
salvation from a sinner. When we degrade another person we steal their joy.
Finally we steal from God by not returning to Him the things that are His. We
steal money, time, and talent from God on a daily basis. Malachi 3:8-10 tells us
that if we neglect to give our tithe to the church we have stolen from God. On
top of that, in many churches, people are actually taking money! Ten years ago
in the Ocala National Forest, the treasurer of one of the Baptist Churches was
indicted for embezzling $85,000.00 from the church over a period of several
decades. This man was regularly taking money that had been given to God's
ministry and stealing it! Let me tell you this morning that I wouldn't want to
be in his shoes. God will surely judge him for his actions.
We rob God when we do not give Him time. When our lives get so cluttered and
busy that we cannot find time for God, we are stealing from Him. We are given
this time on earth, and we should gladly give some of it back to God, yet we
forget that it is His time to begin with and claim it all for ourselves.
The Prescription for Integrity
If we find ourselves mired in the sinfulness of deceit, how do we go about
repairing our lives?
Indeed, why would we want to make the effort? Putting it simply we have an
obligation to live a life filled with integrity. The world is looking to us to
be a moral beacon, guiding those about to be shipwrecked on the shoals of
thievery. The first step in this restoration process is to admit our sins. To
realize that we have made mistakes and actively set out to right the wrongs. God
knows our hearts, and what we have done in our lives, so we need to examine
ourselves and agree with Him. Then we must repent for our actions. Sometimes we
need to shock the world with our changes.
According to an Associated Press account, in September 1994 Cindy Hartman of
Conway, Arkansas, walked into her house to answer the phone and was confronted
by a burglar. He ripped the phone cord out of the wall and ordered her into a
closet. Hartman dropped to her knees and asked the burglar if she could pray
for him.
"I want you to know that God loves you and I forgive you,'' she said. The
burglar apologized for what he had done. Then he yelled out the door to a
woman in a pickup truck: "We've got to unload all of this. This is a Christian
home and a Christian family. We can't do this to them."
As Hartman remained on her knees, the burglar returned furniture he had taken
from her home. Then he took the bullets out of his gun, handed the gun to
Hartman, and walked out the door. Praying for our enemies is incredibly
disarming.
Something was changed in this thief's life, and he tried to make things right.
He tried to change what he had done. This is how we must act.
After repentance, we must also make restitution. We must repay the things that
we have stolen. That is often easier said than done, but the effort must be made
if we are to restore our relationship with God. And stealing will surely ruin
that relationship.
To protect our relationship with God, we must live a life of integrity.
Ephesians 4:28 says:
Let him that stole, steal no more: But rather let him labor, working with his
hands the thing which is good, that he may have to give to him that needeth.
We must stop stealing. We must stop stealing from each other, from God, from the
world. We must stand out and be different from everyone else and live a life
beyond reproach.
Let's stop stealing and give back to God.
Copyright © 1998 by Rev. Charles S. Mims, All Rights Reserved