"Thou shalt not kill."
I used to say: "What is the
use of taking up a law like this
in an audience where, probably,
there isn't a man who ever
thought of, or ever will commit
murder?" But as one gets on in
years, he sees many a murder
that is not outright killing. I
need not kill a person to be a
murderer. If I get so angry that
I wish a man dead, I am a
murderer in God's sight. God
looks at the heart and says he
that hateth his brother is a
murderer.
First let us see what this
commandment does not mean.
It does not forbid the killing
of animals for food and for
other reasons. Millions of rams
and lambs and turtle-doves must
have been killed every year for
sacrifices under the Mosaic
system. Christ Himself ate of
the Passover lamb, and we are
told definitely of cases where
He ate fish Himself and provided
it for His disciples and the
people to eat.
It does not forbid the killing
of burglars, etc., in self-defence.
Directly after the giving of the
Ten Commandments, God laid down
the ordinance that if a thief be
found breaking in and be smitten
that he die, it was pardonable.
Did not Christ justify this idea
of self-defence when He said:
"If the goodman of the house had
known in what watch the thief
would come, he would have
watched, and would not have
suffered his house to be broken
up?"
It does not forbid capital
punishment. God Himself set the
death penalty upon violations of
each of the first seven
commandments, as well as for
other crimes. God said to Noah
after the deluge--"Whoso
sheddeth man's blood, by man
shall his blood be shed;" and
the reason given is just as true
to-day as it was then--"for in
the image of God made He man."
What it does forbid is the
wanton, intentional taking of
human life under wrong motives
and circumstances. Man is made
in God's image. He is built for
eternity. He is more than a mere
animal. His life ought therefore
to be held sacred. Once taken,
it can never be restored. In
heathen lands human life is no
more sacred than the life of
animals; even in Christian lands
there are heartless and selfish
men who hold it cheap; but God
has invested it with a high
value. An infidel philosopher of
the eighteenth century said: "In
the sight of God every event is
alike important; and the life of
a man is of no greater
importance to the universe than
that of an oyster." "Where is
the crime," he asked, "of
turning a few ounces of blood
out of their channel?" Such
language needs no answer.
THE VALUE OF A MAN.
Let me give you a passage from
H. L. Hastings: "A friend of
mine visited the Fiji Islands in
1844, and what do you suppose an
infidel was worth there then?
You could buy a man for a
musket, or if you paid money,
for seven dollars, and after you
had bought him you could feed
him, starve him, work him, whip
him, or eat him--they generally
ate them, unless they were so
full of tobacco they could not
stomach them! But if you go
there to-day you could not buy a
man for seven million dollars.
There are no men for sale there
now. What has made the
difference in the price of
humanity? The twelve hundred
Christian chapels scattered over
that Island tell the story. The
people have learned to read that
Book which says: 'Ye were not
redeemed with corruptible things
as silver and gold, but with the
precious blood of Christ'; and
since they learned that lesson,
no man is for sale there."
Men tell me that the world is
getting so much better. We talk
of our American civilization. We
forget the alarming increase of
crime in our midst. It is said
that there is no civilized
country on the globe where
murder is so frequently
committed and so seldom
punished.
SUICIDE.
There is that other kind of
murder that is increasing at an
appalling rate among
us--suicide. There have been
infidels in all ages who have
advocated it as a justifiable
means of release from trial and
difficulty; yet thinking men, as
far back as Aristotle, have
generally condemned it as
cowardly and unjustifiable under
any conditions. No man has a
right to take his own life from
such motives any more than the
life of another.
It has been pointed out that the
Jewish race, the people of God,
always counted length of days as
a blessing. The Bible does not
mention one single instance of a
good man committing suicide. In
the four thousand years of Old
Testament history it records
only four suicides, and only one
suicide in the New Testament.
Saul, king of Israel, and his
armor-bearer, Ahithophel, Zimri
and Judas Iscariot are the five
cases. Look at the references in
the Bible to see what kind of
men they were.
OTHER KINDS OF MURDER.
But I want to speak of other
classes of murderers that are
very numerous in this country,
although they are not classified
as murderers. The man who is the
cause of the death of another
through criminal carelessness is
guilty. The man who sells
diseased meat; the saloon-keeper
whose drink has maddened the
brain of a criminal; those who
adulterate food; the employer
who jeopardizes the lives of
employees and others by unsafe
surroundings and conditions in
harmful occupations,--they are
all guilty of blood where life
is lost as a consequence.
When I was in England in 1892, I
met a gentleman who claimed that
they were ahead of us in the
respect they had for the law.
"We hang our murderers," he
said, "but there isn't one out
of twenty in your country that
is hung." I said, "You are
greatly mistaken, for they walk
about these two countries unhung."
"What do you mean?" "I will tell
you what I mean," I said; "the
man that comes into my house and
runs a dagger into my heart for
my money, is a prince compared
with a son that takes five years
to kill me and the wife of my
bosom. A young man who comes
home night after night drunk,
and when his mother
remonstrates, curses her grey
hairs and kills her by inches,
is the blackest kind of a
murderer."
That kind of thing is going on
constantly all around us. One
young man at college, an only
son, whose mother wrote to him
remonstrating against his
gambling and drinking habits,
took the letters out of the
post-office, and when he found
that they were from her, he tore
them up without reading them.
She said,
"I thought I would die when I
found I had lost my hold on that
son."
If a boy kills his mother by his
conduct, you can't call it
anything else than murder, and
he is as truly guilty of
breaking this sixth commandment
as if he drove a dagger to her
heart. If all young men in this
country who are killing their
parents and their wives by
inches, should be hung this next
week, there would be a great
many funerals.
How are you treating your
parents? Come, are you killing
them? This sixth commandment
follows very naturally after the
fifth,--"Honor thy father and
thy mother." Don't put any
thorns in their pillows and make
their last days miserable. Bear
in mind that the commandment
refers not only to shooting a
man down in cold blood; but he
is the worst murderer who goes
on, month after month, year
after year, until he has crowded
the life out of a sainted mother
and put a godly father under the
sod.
THE WORDS OF CHRIST.
Let us look once again at the
Sermon on the Mount, that men
think so much of, and see what
Christ had to say: "Ye have
heard that it has been said by
them of old time, Thou shalt not
kill; and whosoever shall kill
shall be in danger of the
judgment: but I say unto you,
that whosoever is angry with his
brother without a cause shall be
in danger of the judgment: and
whosoever shall say to his
brother, Raca, (an expression of
contempt), shall be in danger of
the council: but whosoever shall
say, Thou fool, (an expression
of condemnation), shall be in
danger of hell fire." "Three
degrees of murderous guilt," as
has been said, "all of which can
be manifested without a blow
being struck; secret anger--the
spiteful jeer--the open,
unrestrained outburst of violent
abusive speech."
Again, what does John say?
"Whosoever hateth his brother is
a murderer: and ye know that no
murderer hath eternal life
abiding in him."
Did you ever in your heart wish
a man dead? That was murder. Did
you ever get so angry that you
wished any one harm? Then you
are guilty. I may be addressing
some one who is cultivating an
unforgiving spirit. That is the
spirit of the murderer, and
needs to be rooted out of your
heart.
We can only read man's
acts--what they have done. God
looks down into the heart. That
is the birthplace and home of
the evil desires and intentions
that lead to the transgression
of all God's laws.
Listen once more to the words of
Jesus: "From within, out of the
heart of men, proceed evil
thoughts--adulteries--fornications--murders
--thefts--covetousness--wickedness--deceit--lasciviousness--an
evil
eye--blasphemy--pride--foolishness.
. . ."
May God purge our hearts of
these evil things, if we are
harboring them! Ah, if many of
us were weighed now, we should
find Belshazzar's doom written
against us--"Tekel--wanting!"
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