The True Witness
Scripture reference: Exodus 20:16
The
Ninth Commandment can easily be collapsed to, "They shalt not lie."
Which can then be expanded to mean lying with speech and behavior. For
everyone knows that as a picture is worth a thousand words, our actions
speak louder than words. And if our actions contradict the words we
speak, it is alway our actions which are believed. Therefore, we break
the Ninth Commandment both when we bare false witness about ourselves
with words that do not match our deeds, and bare false witness against
Christ when are deeds do not match His teachings.
When people
accused Jesus of being a servant of the Devil, he responded by pointing
to his behavior. Jesus often called people to consider his actions and
the things he did as proof that he was sent by God. And when Paul
responded to his critics, he always reminded them of how he and his
associates conducted themselves. Both Jesus and Paul relied on their
actions more than their words to prove their servitude to God.
I
have no doubt that when God commanded His people to no bare false
witness against each other, He did so because He knew that it would
reflect badly on Him. And is this not exactly what happens when
Christians behave in a manner others outside the Church know
contradicts the teachings of the Bible? Is it not God and Jesus who
suffer the most loss when some one claiming to be a Christian behaves
in a manner contrary to his words? Is it not the Church, the body of
Christ, that is injured when one of its members, by his behavior, bares
false witness against the Church?
The news of the land too often
contains a report of some minister doing something everyone knows the
Bible speaks against. Whether it be a minister chasing after money and
living a lavish lifestyle, or a minister having an affair with a gay
man, or a minister using his pulpit to speak hatred toward some group,
the false witness these men make is more against the gospel of Jesus
Christ than it is against themselves. And it is how these men behave
which attracts the attention of the public; much more so than anything
they say. As a result, it is the behavior of these false witnesses
which dominates the minds of someone a faithful witness speaks the Word
of truth to. So the truthful witness also suffers from the negative
perception of him planted in the lost sheep's mind by the false witness.
When
we correctly interpret the Ninth Commandment as forbidding the telling
of lies about another, we need to remember that God, Jesus, and the
Church count as "another." And we need to remember that we are
constantly being watched; our behavior is constantly being scrutinized.
We are always making a witness and giving testimony even when there are
no words coming out of our mouth. The giving or withholding of a smile;
the holding or not holding of a door; having a beer or a cigarette in
our hand; the magazine we look at while standing in line at the
checkout; the too tight or too baggy pants we are wearing. In all of
these silent ways and many others we present a witness loud and clear.
And whenever our non-verbal testimony is contrary to our words, it is
our behavior which will have prominence. Our verbal witness will be
ignored as false. For ultimately, people hear better with their eyes
than with their ears.
Therefore, let us go forth and bare no
false witness against our Heavenly Father and our master, Jesus Christ,
by our behavior. Let us strive to give a true testimony to the love of
the Father and the Son, and our obedience to their teachings with our
every action. And may God be glorified by both our words and deeds.
May the grace of God, the love of Jesus Christ, and the peace of the Holy Spirit be with you. Amen.

