God ends the Ten Commandments where they began, in the heart.
This commandment does not tell us how to act, but how to feel. God
created us and knows we are tempted to look across the fence at our
neighbor's house and wish we had what he has. God, in his wisdom,
forbids this. He tells us not to covet what belongs to others. Exodus
20:17 (NIV): You shall not covet your neighbor's house. You shall not
covet your neighbor's wife, or his manservant or maidservant, his ox
or donkey, or anything that belongs to your neighbor.
Covet
means to wish you had something that belongs to someone else. It also
involves being envious of others because of what they have. We are
God's children and he wants us to be content, but he knows we never
will be if we are continually wishing we had what others have. There
will always be something better to possess. There will always be more
success to grasp. There will always be a better job or spouse.
Contentment will never come. God knows that the key to contentment is
being happy with what we have, not longing for what others have.
Coveting will completely steal our joy.
The Ten
Commandments are not only spiritual, but practical. Does this
commandment mean we shouldn't try to better ourselves or strive to
become more successful? Not at all, but God wants us to focus on the
blessings he has given us instead of wishing our lives away, wanting
more. And believe me, God has blessed each of us.
Jesus
summed up the Ten Commandments like this: “Love the Lord
your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your
mind.” This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second
is like it: “Love your neighbor as yourself.” (Matthew
22:37-38). In this way, Jesus summed up the first commandments,
which deal with our relationship with God, and the last commandments,
which deal with our relationship with each other. As we see today, it
is not only how we treat God and each other that matters, but how we
feel as well. If we will obey these commandments, we will find
ourselves joyful and contented, and we will please God.
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