Exodus 20:8-11, 17
Curing Restless Acquisition Syndrome
Sabbath and the Tenth Commandment
James Sledge August
3, 2014
For
all the attention that the Ten Commandments have received in recent years via
court cases and movements to affix them to public buildings, I’ve never heard
much discussion of the final commandment on the list, the one against coveting.
That’s too bad because it’s one of the more interesting commandments. But it’s
also understandable. What do you do with a commandment against wanting things
that other people have?
Does
God really get upset if I look at my neighbors nice, new Lexus and say to
myself, “Man, I’d really like to have that car.”? What if someone finds her
neighbor’s husband attractive and does a little flirting with him at a party?
Where exactly are the lines with coveting? What exactly is the point of this
command?
In
truth, the command is not really a prohibition on wanting things that belong to
others. The word translated “covet” refers not simply to desire, but inordinate
desire, desire that leads to action and undermines the neighborly community that
God dreams for humanity.
I
think a lot of people assume that coveting is about people with less wanting
what people with more have. But in the Bible, coveting usually works the other
way round. It is about those with a lot wanting – and seizing –what belongs to
those with little.
There
are a number of coveting stories in the Bible. Some prominent ones involve
kings, who have a lot. King David murders Bathsheba’s husband because he
coveted her. But perhaps the epitome of coveting stories is the tale of
Naboth’s vineyard, one of the cycle of stories around the prophet Elijah.
Naboth
was just an ordinary guy who had the terrible misfortune to own a vineyard next
door to King Ahab’s palace. Ahab thought it a choice spot to acquire, a great
place to add a garden. And so he offered to purchase it. No real problem with the
story so far.
But
Naboth doesn’t want to part with his land, telling Ahab, “Yahweh forbid that I should give
you my ancestral inheritance.” Naboth invokes God’s name because
ancestral land was God’s doing. It was part of God’s design for a unique,
neighborly community in which the wealthy would not acquire more and more, and
the poor would not become destitute because hard times forced them to sell the
family farm. God’s law even required that such land revert back to its
ancestral family every fifty years, insuring that everyone would maintain a
rightful share of the land. But of course the powerful and the wealthy, and
especially kings, could usually find loopholes and ways around such
regulations.
Ahab
is none too happy that Naboth won’t sell, and he begins to pout. This allows
Ahab’s wife, Jezebel, to enter the narrative. Jezebel is quite the villainess.
I don’t know if that’s accurate history or if her nastiness is overplayed by
the men who wrote the Bible. Always nice to have a woman around to blame. Just
ask Eve.
Anyway,
Jezebel points out the obvious. Ahab is king and can get what he wants. She then
proceeds to manufacture a scenario where Naboth is falsely accused of cursing
both God and Ahab, crimes punishable by death. And so poor Naboth ends up
losing his life and his land, and Ahab, with Jezebel’s help, acquires what he
was after, what he coveted.
Now Ahab has been a rotten king from the
get go. And Jezebel had once tried, unsuccessfully, to have the prophet Elijah
killed. But it is the events of Ahab and Jezebel’s coveting that finally cause
God to pass judgment. Because of Naboth, Ahab’s lineage will no longer rule
Israel, and Jezebel will suffer a particularly gory fate.