October 15 – LD 42, Day 1: Biblical Stewardship (1)
by Pastor Steven Key
Luke 12:23: “The life
is more than meat, and the body is more than raiment.”
The eighth commandment is
short and to the point: “Thou shalt not steal.” But
as with all the commandments, so also here the law is very broad in its
application. The eighth commandment speaks of our required love towards the neighbour, specifically with respect to our neighbours’ earthly possessions. But it also speaks of our
own personal use of the possessions which God has given us. It sets before us
the positive instruction of this commandment as set forth in Luke 12:13-31, to
seek the
We also approach the
eighth commandment as those who have been redeemed in Christ. We read the Ten
Commandments as they follow the introduction to the law: “I am the LORD thy
God, which have brought thee out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of
bondage” (Ex 20: 2, Deut 5:6). That reality of our salvation is the
context in which we approach the law, including the eighth commandment. Hearing
the eighth commandment from Him Who redeemed us from the slavery of sin, we do not attempt to push aside this statute, but
desire to walk according to the will of God in thankfulness of heart. We see
that the redemptive work of Christ embraces all things, and necessarily affects
our perspective towards earthly possessions. So we seek God’s will also
concerning earthly possessions.
The eighth commandment is
undergirded by a fundamental principle — the biblical principle of stewardship.
The eighth commandment requires us to recognize that we are only stewards or
managers of God’s possessions. The Bible’s teaching concerning
stewardship emphasizes two things. The first point of emphasis is that God owns
all things. That is confirmed in the first two verses of Ps 24. He Who created all things is the absolute owner of all things.
There is nothing we can claim as our own. Therefore, when it comes to earthly
possessions, we must recognize that everything in our possession is an
extension of God’s kingly possessions. He is pleased to use certain means to
place those goods in our possession. But we are caretakers of what is His.