The Ten Commandments are Sacred – but What if Another One was Added?
This week, I spent four nites sleeping in a hospital room, helping an elderly friend who had pneumonia which can be a killer. My friend is home now, recovering slowly. It was a week with a lot of prayer, intense stress, and it made me think about a previous blog I had written, which I have updated here.

Christ and the Rich Young Ruler by Heinrich Hofmann.
Story of the Rich Young Ruler.
A certain ruler asked Him, “Good Teacher, what shall I do to inherit eternal life?” Jesus said to him,” …You know the commandments: ‘do not commit adultery, do not murder, do not steal, do not testify falsely, honor your father and your mother.’”
He replied, “I have kept all these things from my youth.”
When Jesus heard this, He said to him, “You still lack one thing; sell everything that you have and distribute the money to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and come, follow Me.”
But when he heard these things, he became very sad, for he was extremely rich.
Jesus looked at him and said, “How difficult it is for those who are wealthy to enter the kingdom of God! For it is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.”
[Luke, chapter 18, Amplified Bible]
The Interpretation.
The standard interpretation is that the wealthy man focused too much on his riches, placing his faith in wealth or status.
But is there a deeper message here… that the man was ignoring the poor, and that this was a spiritual problem? It’s clear that Jesus was sensitive to the poor and disenfranchised. It seems to me he spent half of his three-year ministry helping the poor and needy, and the other half telling parables or preaching.
An Eleventh Commandment?
Is it possible that this is an eleventh commandment? I looked carefully and helping the poor isn’t embedded in any of the other ten commandments. But helping the poor is a common theme of the Bible – both Old and New Testaments.

The Promise.
There is a promise of this eleventh commandment: “If you sell everything you have and give the money to the poor—it will become treasure for you in heaven.” Everyone loves the idea of seeking treasure and finding it. Whenever Kim and I go rockhounding, it’s like a treasure hunt, searching for that one special rock.
I still recall the shine on Ibok’s face when I gave him a few hundred dollars. He was a faculty member at Oral Roberts University, originally from Africa, and his family was hurting for money to pay bills. He wrote in a card his thanks, and how important the gift was for his family. I inserted the card in my Bible and have kept it there for twenty-five years. It’s a reminder to me to keep helping someone to hope. I think Ibok’s face will be part of the shine of the treasure in heaven.
Takeaway.
The ending of the story is negative: the rich man walked away very sad. And it suggests that Jesus might have been disappointed.
I found myself asking if Jesus might be disappointed about my behavior. I’ve been a follower of God (and Jesus) for many years now. I’ve always tried to keep the Ten Commandments, and…
I feel like I’m rich. Living in the USA… the richest country in the world. I own a two-story house, I drive a Rav 4 Plug-in hybrid, own a big flat-screen TV and an iPhone, and am able to take a vacation each year in my retirement.

Food for overseas Starving Children program.
So… how much time and money do I spend helping the poor? I do give away 10-20% of my time and money. A lot of this I send to NGOs that drill water wells in Africa, or feed refugees in Somalia, or provide medical attention to Haitians, or shelter children rescued from sexual slavery in Thailand. Should I be giving more? How much more?
And one last thought: are our churches doing enough? It’s probably fair to say our Christian churches are rich also, being American. Do our pastors and ministers talk enough about helping the poor and needy in the USA… or in third-world countries overseas?
Post-script.
The slide here shows a list of references in the Bible about helping the poor. I didn’t compile this list, so I can’t say if its comprehensive or not.

But at first glance it seems that just about every book in the New Testament addresses the issue of helping the poor. Not surprising since the New Testament is all about Jesus.
But the message is in the Old Testament as well. I can’t read the rich, poetic verses of Isaiah 58:6-11 without being moved.
I heard that in the first few centuries after Jesus, when a plague arose in Italy and killed a huge number of people, the Christians didn’t flee the plague but stayed behind to help the sick and dying.
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The Gray Nomad ….. Spring is on the way in the US, and is a reminder to Help someone to Hope.
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And if you pour out that with which you sustain your own life for the hungry, and satisfy the need of the afflicted, then shall your light rise in darkness… and the Lord shall guide you continually… and make strong your bones.
[Isaiah chapter 58]
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