Exodus Chapter 20 verse 15 Holy Bible

ASV Exodus 20:15

Thou shalt not steal.
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BBE Exodus 20:15

Do not take the property of another.
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DARBY Exodus 20:15

Thou shalt not steal.
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KJV Exodus 20:15

Thou shalt not steal.
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WBT Exodus 20:15

Thou shalt not steal.
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WEB Exodus 20:15

"You shall not steal.
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YLT Exodus 20:15

`Thou dost not steal.
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 15. - Thou shalt not steal. By these words the right of property received formal acknowledgment, and a protest was made by anticipation against the maxim of modern socialists - "La propriete, c'est le vol." Instinctively man feels that some things become his, especially by toil expended on them, and that, by parity of reasoning, some things become his neighbour's. Our third duty towards our neighbour is to respect his rights in these. Society, in every community that has hitherto existed, has recognised private pro-petty; and social order may be said to be built upon it. Government exists mainly for the security of men's lives and properties; and anarchy would supervene if either could be with impunity attacked. Theft has always been punished in every state; and even the Spartan youth was not acquitted of blame unless he could plead that the State had stopped his supplies of food, and bid him forage for himself.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(15) Thou shalt not steal.--Our third duty towards our neighbour is to respect his right to his property. The framers of Utopias, both ancient and modern, have imagined communities in which private property should not exist. But such a condition of things has never yet been realised in practice. In the laws of all known States private property has been recognised, and social order has been, in a great measure, based upon it. Here, again, law has but embodied natural instinct. The savage who hammers out a flint knife by repeated blows with a pebble, labouring long, and undergoing pain in the process, feels that the implement which he has made is his own, and that his right to it is indisputable. If he is deprived of it by force or fraud, he is wronged. The eighth commandment forbids this wrong, and requires us to respect the property of others no less than their person and their domestic peace and honour.