Tim James’ sermon titled "Thieves" addresses the Eighth Commandment, "Thou shalt not steal," as found in Exodus 20:15. The main theological theme is the moral and spiritual implications of theft, highlighting that stealing is rooted in a heart of dissatisfaction with God’s provision. James argues that all property ultimately belongs to God, and theft is not merely a legal transgression but an affront to divine ownership. He references Leviticus 25:23 to illustrate God’s intent regarding property rights and critiques societal systems that undermine these principles, emphasizing that God’s grace should never be commoditized. Practically, James exhorts believers to recognize that stealing is not just physical theft but manifests in various ways, including spiritual robbing of God through insincere worship and false teaching.
“Stealing can be done clandestinely, often required still. The robbing is open and involves a face-to-face encounter with the one being robbed.”
“Ultimately, since all anyone has is by the hand of God, all theft is against God, and all theft is a matter of the heart.”
“What is due the Lord? He's due his glory. So any robbing of God is in worship, it's in religion, it's in saying you're face to face with God, but you're stealing from him.”
“What is of sight can be stolen, and that which is of faith cannot be stolen.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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