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Not Ten Suggestions

July 29, 2007

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The Pastor’s Pen 
by The Very Rev. Dr. Curtis Crenshaw, Th.D. 
 
Not Ten Suggestions 
 
If you haven’t noticed, Christianity has changed 
drastically in the last generation. From the righteous God 
who proclaimed the Ten Commandments, we now have a pretend 
god who has timidly made Ten Suggestions, or so we are led 
to believe. This is not to say that God Triune has 
changed, but that fickle people have changed their view of 
God and of His law. Just this past week it was reported 
that a priestess from The Episcopal Church worships with 
the Muslims on Friday and then leads her flock on Sunday in 
Christian worship. So whatever happened to the First 
Commandment: “Thou shalt have no other gods before Me”?  
Apparently, that commandment is meaningless. 
What is behind this laxity regarding God’s commandments is 
a low view of God and His law, and a very high view of 
mankind and their ability to create new moral law. But we 
should note that there is only one true and living God, and 
that His character is the basis for His law (Leviticus 
19:2; 20:7, 26; 21:8; Matthew 5:48; 2 Corinthians 6:14-16). 
If His character could change, then His law could change.  
But since He is the “same yesterday, today, and forever” 
(Hebrews 13:8). His law cannot change. Change His 
character, and His moral code changes. If His character 
cannot change, neither can His moral code. 
It is recorded in James 4:12 that there is only one 
Lawgiver. Just as we cannot create physical laws into 
existence, neither can we create moral law into existence.  
Indeed, even God cannot create moral law, for He cannot 
create His character. Like Himself, His character is 
forever. To put this another way, when Satan tempted Eve 
to sin, he said that she should ignore God’s law, His 
command, and eat the forbidden fruit, for contrary to what 
God told her, she would not die. In other words, she could 
make up her own moral code. We know what happened: Adam, 
Eve, and the serpent were judged. There was only one law, 
and that was God’s law. 
We can see the unchangeableness of God’s law another way.  
Every “law” enacted by us humans—whether by Congress, a 
state, a city, or a church or denomination—is either an 
application of God’s law or an act of rebellion. For 
example, the USA has a law against murder, which is a 
reflection of the Sixth Commandment: “Thou shalt not 
murder.” But when the Supreme Count in January of 1973 
ruled in Roe vs. Wade that abortion was legal, they 
sanctioned murder. That was an act of rebellion. Let us 
look at what Satan said again: 
 
4 Then the serpent said to the woman, “You will not surely 
die. 5 For God knows that in the day you eat of it your 
eyes will be opened, and you will be like God, knowing good 
and evil.” (Gen 3:4-5) 
 
Notice that Satan said Eve could be her own god (“you will 
be like God”), which further meant that she allegedly would 
“know good and evil,” which seems to mean that she could 
make her own law code. From Adam and Eve’s day to ours, 
people have wanted to be their own gods, to devise their 
own ethics to suit themselves. 
This means that people hate God’s law, or they would not 
constantly be trying to change it. And that in turn means 
that these people hate God since His law is a reflection of 
who He is. Make no mistake about it, there is no 
neutrality: one either loves the Triune God and His law, or 
one will seek to create a god after his/her own image, and 
also to remake the moral code. 
We hear such things as “affirm yourself,” “believe in 
yourself,” “feel good about yourself,” and so on. The new 
commandment has become: “Love the lord thyself with all 
your heart, mind, soul, body, time, and money.” The whole 
face of evangelicalism has changed, and now people will 
build mega-churches if you’ll affirm them, not talk of sin, 
but just make them the center of attention. Christianity 
has become a pop-psychology, another self-help gimmick. 
But the Ten Commandments will never change because God can 
never change, and though we can never earn our way to 
heaven, yet obedience to God’s law is the hallmark of true 
faith, and those who break it will be broken by God 
Almighty, not only now, but especially at the Last Day.  
Remember: 
 
3 And by this we know that we have come to know Him, if we 
keep His commandments. 4 The one who says, “I have come to 
know Him,” and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, 
and the truth is not in him.” (1 John 2:3-4, NAS)

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