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"SATISFACTION GUARANTEED"
TEXTS: Ex. 20:17; Rom.
7:7-8; I Kings 21:1-16; Philip. 4:4-19
INTRO:
The last commandment
is the lynch pin of the 10, the previous 9 commandments all have a
strong overt element to them, they are actions observed, but, this final
commandment strikes at the heart and mind!
In a sense this last
commandment is the basis of all the other 9! Even if all your overt
actions showed faithfulness to the commandments this last one would
condemn you for it reaches down inside the person's heart and desires
and motives.
In fact, it was Paul
in Romans 7:7-8 that stated that this
was the one commandment of the 10 that made him realize his sinfulness
and brought him to realize his need of Christ. (read passage:
"What shall we say, then?
Is the law sin? Certainly not! Indeed I would not have known what sin
was except through the law. For I would not have known what coveting
really was if the law had not said, "Do not covet." But sin, seizing the
opportunity afforded by the commandment, produced in me every kind of
covetous desire. For apart from law, sin is dead. Once I was alive apart
from law; but when the commandment came, sin sprang to life and I
died.") Until he hit the 10th commandment he could judge
himself "good" by overt actions, but with the 10th his mind and motives
were revealed to him and it opened to him the understanding of how much
he was a sinner!
ILLUS:
In Hank Ketcham's comic
strip "Dennis the Menace," Dennis is looking through a catalog saying,
"This catalog's got a lot of toys I didn't even know I wanted."
-- Robert C. Shannon, 1000 Windows, (Cincinnati, Ohio: Standard
Publishing Company, 1997).
It is therefore this
commandment that destroys the idea that good works can save a man or
woman, for it condemns the heart which is so wicked and reveals the
extent of our motives in any action we take.
ILLUS:
In Parker and Hart's "The
Wizard of Id" comic strip, one monk is putting up a sign on the bulletin
board in front of the church while another monk watches. The sign reads
"Thou Shalt Not Covet" and the visiting monk says, "Boy, I wish we had a
signboard like that at our church."
-- Robert C. Shannon, 1000 Windows, (Cincinnati, Ohio: Standard
Publishing Company, 1997).
PROP. SENT:
The Bible teaches us that we are to live a life that is content and
trusts God for all our needs, to covet what others have is the root of
all sin and takes our trust away from God and puts us in charge of
getting what we think we need.
I. THE COVETING HEART I Kings
21:1-16
A.
Corrupt 21:1-14
1. The literal
meaning of the word "coveting" is "to pant after" - like
my dog used to do when I ate ice cream and potato chips or buttered
popcorn!
a. It indicates an
intense desire that will not leave.
b. Usually becomes
consuming to the point that it will demand fulfillment.
2. Coveting is not
just something that happens to the poor, coveting is a problem for all
humans.
a. Take King Ahab for
example, though much richer than his neighbor Naboth, he covets Naboth's
vineyard, he had to have it.
b. His coveting was
so powerful that he couldn't feel happy unless he got what he wanted, it
didn't matter that he already had enough or more than Naboth.
c. This is the nature
of coveting, it is never satisfied … and it is the basis for breaking
the other commandments - King Ahab's wife proceeds to kill Naboth, steal
his field, bear false witness against Naboth, dishonor God's name, it
become the foundation of breaking many of the other commandments.
3. The fuel of
coveting is DISCONTENT.
a. When we allow
discontent to enter our spirit it is only a short time before we find
ourselves coveting what others have, and coveting leads to all kinds of
sins and broken commandments.
b. In the end
coveting not only destroys others, but it destroys our own happiness as
well since we keep looking for happines to come by getting something we
feel we should have but don't.
ILLUS:
Covetous men must be the
sport of Satan, for their grasping avarice neither lets them enjoy life
nor escape from the second death. They are held by their own greed as
surely as beasts with cords, or fish with nets, or men with chains. They
may be likened to those foolish apes which in some countries are caught
by narrow-necked vessels. Into these corn is placed, the creatures
thrust in their hands, and when they have filled them they cannot draw
out their fists unless they let go the grain. Sooner than let go they
submit to be captured. Are covetous men then so like to animals? Let
them ponder and be ashamed.
-- Charles Haddon Spurgeon, The Quotable Spurgeon, (Wheaton: Harold Shaw
Publishers, Inc, 1990)
4. Coveting ALWAYS
corrupts the human soul, it never satisfies it!
B.
Callous! 21:15-16
1. Coveter's are by
nature callous people, all they care about is getting what they want.
a. They can be quite
indifferent to other people's feelings or needs.
b. They are so
focused on getting what they want that they can ignore normal moral
imperatives.
2. Even though Ahab
got what he wanted his life was still not happy or satisfied, people who
covet never find an end to their desire.
3. If only we could
see how blessed we already are and so not covet what we don't have,
coveters always fail to see how blessed they already are.
ILLUS:
The Hope Health Letter
(10/95) included this story:
Once upon a time, there was a man who lived with his wife, two small
children, and his elderly parents in a tiny hut. He tried to be patient
and gracious, but the noise and crowded conditions wore him down. In
desperation, he consulted the village wise man. "Do you have a rooster?"
asked the wise man. "Yes," he replied. "Keep the rooster in the hut with
your family, and come see me again next week." The next week, the man
returned and told the wise elder that living conditions were worse than
ever, with the rooster crowing and making a mess of the hut. "Do you
have a cow?" asked the wise elder. The man nodded fearfully. "Take your
cow into the hut as well, and come see me in a week." Over the next
several weeks, the man--on the advice of the wise elder--made room for a
goat, two dogs, and his brother's children. Finally, he could take no
more, and in a fit of anger, kicked out all the animals and guests,
leaving only his wife, his children, and his parents. The home suddenly
became spacious and quiet, and everyone lived happily ever after.
-- Leadership, Vol. 17, no. 1.
4. Ahab got the
vineyard he wanted, but he did not get the satisfaction from it he had
hoped.
a. God also told him
that there would be consequences for his choice to feed his coveting, it
would cost him his own life!
b. In the end Ahab
will lose far more than he ever gained through coveting, this is always
the case with coveting!
5. Ahab's callousness
is evident in that he not only takes Naboth's vineyard once his wife
Jezebel has Naboth killed, but has Naboth's children killed (see
II Kings 9:26) so there are no descendants left to claim the land
at any point.
a. Note too that Ahab
and Jezebel are later both killed, and all their descendants are also
killed much like what Ahab does to Naboth's family.
b. Coveters tend to
get back the same pain they give others.
6. This is the tragic
truth about coveting, it is the foundation for so many other sins as
well. So how do we fight coveting from taking over our lives?
II. THE
CONTROLLED HEART Philip. 4:4-19
A.
Context 4:4-9
1. What is the best
weapon spiritually against covetousness?
a. Rejoicing in what
you already have.
b. Avoiding anxiety
over what you don't have.
c. Ask for things
WITH thanksgiving to mitigate covetousness from developing in your heart
over those things you do ask for.
2. Instead of seeing
what is lacking, look at what is good and lovely, what things are of a
good report and dwell on this, not your lack.
a. These are very
practical guidelines that can stop a heart from developing a covetous
attitude.
b. This is the
context of a controlled heart.
3. In our culture we
are inundated with messages that says we MUST have more, or newer, or
something we don't already have … and it is the foundation for the vast
amount of dissatisfaction our people have though we live in a land of
great plenty!
a. Americans, though
rich, can be some of the most dissatisfied people on earth!
b. Our whole
prosperity is built on encouraging greed and need - to get
something we don't have, and probably don't need, but we must have.
c. Advertisers are
always sending messages of "You won't be happy until you get our
product", etc.
4. As Christians we
really need to evaluate our sense of happiness, what it is based on.
ILLUS:
Who could speak more
realistically about the illusion of a yuppie value system than Alexander
Solzhenitsyn, who suffered deprivation of all that money can buy? In
"The Prison Chronicle" he says, as few of us can, "Don't be afraid
of misfortune and do not yearn after happiness. It is, after all, all
the same. The bitter doesn't last forever, and the sweet never fills the
cup to overflowing. It is enough if you don't freeze in the cold, and if
hunger and thirst don't claw at your sides. If your back isn't broken,
if your feet can walk, if both arms work, if both eyes can see, and if
both ears can hear, then whom should you envy? And why? Our envy of
others devours us most of all. Rub your eyes and purify your heart and
prize above all else in the world those who love you and wish you well."
-- As reported in Christianity Today, submitted by Rich Hardison,
Tabernacle Church of Norfolk, Virginia.
5. Notice that Paul
associates "PEACE" with those
who have learned the proper context to life. (4:9)
a. Those who covet
never find peace, for they are always longing for something they don't
have.
b. Those who are at
peace focus more on what they do have so they can find peace in life.
B.
Contentment 4:10-19
1. Paul describes his
life and joy as being centered on what he has, not what he doesn't have.
a. He has been
content with little.
b. He has been
content with much.
2. His strength and
joy comes in Christ, he says he "can do
everything through Him who gives me strength" (4:13)
since he already possesses the most important thing in life, Christ
Himself.
a. If we possess
Christ, there is nothing we really lack!
b. This should
destroy in us a covetous attitude.
3. What are the
signs of a coveter's heart?
a. Depression
can be a sign - notice King Ahab's depression when Naboth
refused to sell him the vineyard.
b. Withdrawal
can be a sign - notice too that King Ahab threw himself upon his
bed and refused to eat and go out.
c. Pouting can
be a sign - King Ahab acted like it was so unfair that he couldn't
have what he wanted, often those with coveting problems view others as
being unfair to them, they walk around with a chip on their shoulder,
they never get what others get in life.
d. Pessimistic
attitude is often a sign - those who covet tend to be negative about
most things, for they are focused on what they don't have rather than on
what they do have. They see the glass as always half empty instead of
half full. Though Ahab was far richer than Naboth, he was pessimistic
about his lack of this vineyard as he whined that Naboth wouldn't sell
it to him and as a King he couldn't make him give it to him because the
law of the land prevented property from passing away from a family
lineage even by sale … hence Jezebel's plan to kill Naboth since there
was no legal way to get it even as king.
e. Fault finding
can be a sign - the need to invent reasons for their lack and
others gain in order to placate the emptiness of their own heart and
life. Ahab often blamed the true prophets for his misery or others like
Naboth because they wouldn't give him what he wanted.
f. Misery can
be a sign - people who will tell you how miserable their lives are
tend to be full of coveting, they always want what others seem to have,
they look for happiness in procuring the "next" thing they think will
finally satisfy them.
g. Unthankfulness
can be a sign - Even when they do get some things, it is
never good enough or enough, there is a general unthankfulness about
life and their status and possessions or even their friendships. King
Ahab's coveting didn't stop with Naboth's vineyard, once he had that he
still wasn't thankful, he had all of Naboth's kids killed in order to
keep others them taking it back. (II Kings
9:26)
4. Paul's
prescription given here to the Philippian Church would not only destroy
coveting, it would also promote godliness and peace in the individual
believer.
a. Paul's promise to
those who heed his advice in this passage, their
"needs will all be met by Christ's glorious
riches." (see 4:19)
b.
Contentment kills coveting in the same way
coveting kills contentment! - Dennis
Marquardt
5. Coveting will
always leave a bad taste in your mouth and in others too, and in the end
you will actually have much less than before you coveted!
ILLUS:
Too busy? Distracted? When
we attempt to do too many things at once we often get rattled and
accomplish even less. The story is told of young Charles Darwin that one
day he was eagerly holding one rare beetle in his right fist, another in
his left and then suddenly he caught sight of a third beetle that he
simply knew he must have for his collection. What to do? In a flash he
put one of the beetles in his mouth for safekeeping and reached for the
third beetle with his now free hand. But the mouth-imprisoned beetle
squirted acid down
Darwin's throat--so
that in a fit of coughing he lost all three beetles.
--James S. Hewett,
Illustrations Unlimited (Wheaton: Tyndale House Publishers, Inc, 1988)
p. 26.
6. If you covet you
can expect to break lots of God's commandments - if you develop a
contented heart however you can expect to experience "SATISFACTION
GUARANTEED"!!
CONCLUSION: Discontented people by nature are covetous by the
very fact of being dissatisfied. Coveters are always in need because
they always desire something they don't have but want. Ironically, it is
the last commandment that is often at the heart of all the other 9! God
calls us to be content so we are controlled and not coveting. Following
God's commands brings SATISFACTION GUARANTEED!
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