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Rev. Dr. Eric D. Barreto

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What the Ten Commandments Are, And Are Not

Posted: 09/28/11 03:42 PM ET

How many of the Ten Commandments can you name? If you are like most Americans, the number is far below the full ten. A 2007 survey reported that most Americans could rattle off the ingredients of a Big Mac more readily than the Ten Commandments.

And yet the Ten Commandments play an unquestionably powerful role in our culture and politics today. The image of Charlton Heston hoisting a pair of stone tablets over his head is indelibly etched into the pop culture psyche. Debates about the placement of the Ten Commandments and other religious symbols in public buildings continue to roil communities all around the United States. It is clear that the Ten Commandments are powerful cultural and religious symbols even if our knowledge of their actual contents is fuzzy at best.

What is the source of the power of the Ten Commandments? How can they draw so much attention, so much furor, when so few know them, let alone comprehend them? To begin to understand their continued power, let's turn to their originating story in Exodus 20.

Curiously, the narrative begins not with the listing of the first and thus most important rule but with the story of God's deliverance of Israel from Egyptian captivity. That is, these commandments are rooted not just in God's power to enunciate them but in the Israelite experience of deliverance and salvation. These are not just good pieces of advice from a powerful God but the required response of a grateful people. No other deity saved you from your chains, therefore you will call no other god by name.

The lectionary does then leave out some difficult parts of the passage. Specifically, it leaves out that God promises to visit the parents' sins upon their children and grandchildren. The Lord God has a long memory apparently. While we may acknowledge that the mistakes of one generation may certainly have long-standing--even generational--consequences, it rings fundamentally unfair that we would be held responsible for the sins of our parents or grandparents. How do we make sense of this now strange rationale?

After prohibitions against using God's name flippantly and a demand for Sabbath observance, Exodus then turns to commandments we can all seemingly embrace. Respect your parents. Don't murder. Don't commit adultery. Don't steal people's stuff. Don't lie. Don't look at your neighbor's property with jealousy.

But of course, even these commandments are complicated. When is the taking of human life not murder and thus permissible? Debates about war and the death penalty are not easily settled by merely pointing to the commandments, for their absolute prohibitions meet uneasily with the complicated nuances of daily life. Can stealing ever be justified? Can lying ever be done for the sake of the other? That is, can a lie be a kindness? Most striking to me is the now archaic cultural assumption in verse 17 that houses, livestock, wives, and slaves are all equally property of the powerful. Even these seemingly straightforward commandments are complicated by the messiness of everyday life but also by the huge gaps between the cultural assumptions of antiquity and today.

As the narrative closes, we hear not just from God but from God's audience. For the Israelites who bore witness to this event, the presence of God was sobering and frightening. These commitments were not to be taken lightly. The thunder, lightning, smoke, and tumult that accompanied God's voice was a humbling show of might. So powerful is this God that the people urge Moses to speak to God for them, for direct contact with God--they presumed--would prove fatal.

Watch Video: In Rural Virginia, Furor Erupts Over The Ten Commandments

According to Exodus, the people feared the God who spoke to them from the cloud. And yet I wonder if the content of the Ten Commandments might not have also caused them to shake. Perhaps they feared because they recognized not only the power of the one who spoke to them but also the significant requirements and reflection the commandments demand. Perhaps we too should shake if we hope to abide by these admittedly difficult and complex calls to be in peace with God and one another.

Why does furor continue today over these commandments? Are they merely relics of an ancient people and an ancient time? Are they absolute rules for all time and all places? Are they mere but powerful symbols deserving of special enshrinement in public spaces? I wonder if as people of faith our relationship to the commandments today is more complex than these alternatives.

The Ten Commandments are not primarily a set of universal rules, a binding list of dos and don'ts for all people at all times and all places. They don't seek to summarize all the world's wisdom on two stone tablets. Instead, the Ten Commandments are integral to the identity of a particular people at a particular place. The Ten Commandments were first spoken to a people who had been delivered from enslavement, who had been provided sustenance in the wilderness, a people who had been both faithful and feckless. With that last count, we could all relate, I imagine.

To be sure, the Ten Commandments certainly enunciate basic morals that all kinds of people would embrace. One would be hard-pressed to find peoples or cultures who would willingly endorse murder or advocate lying. Then again, we would be hard-pressed to find any people or cultures that do not also flagrantly violate these basic beliefs. These absolute prohibitions usually become situational limits applicable only when consistent with our other goals or desires.

But ultimately, the story of the Ten Commandments in Exodus is less about proper behavior than it is about identity. Who are we? What is our relationship to God? What is our relationship to one another? We tend to separate these foundational questions, compartmentalizing each to a separate realm of reflection, but the narrative in Exodus conjoins these queries.

Public debates about the propriety of the displaying of the Ten Commandments often revolve around a concern for rules, for an unchanging sense of law and order in a world that is constantly in flux. Even as the world shakes beneath our feet, we have two stone tablets to remind us how to act and who we are. It is precisely this intense mix of human emotions, beliefs, and identities that make the public display of religious symbols so difficult to discuss but also so important.

In these debates, however, we may lose the primary orientation of the Ten Commandments. They are not primarily guides for good behavior, for their simplicity masks the complexity of moral and theological reflection. The Ten Commandments are not mere symbols either. Their power does not come from public display and recognition.

Instead, the Ten Commandments are primarily about the identity of God, the character of God's followers, and our relationships to one another. Our identity, our theology, and our relationships are all inter-mixed in a set of commandments we may find indispensable but also--if we are honest--incredibly difficult to understand and embrace fully.

Editor's Note: ON Scripture is a series of Christian scripture commentaries produced in collaboration with Odyssey Networks. Each week pastors from around the country will approach the lectionary text of the week through the lens of current events, providing a religious voice that is both pastoral and prophetic.

 
How many of the Ten Commandments can you name? If you are like most Americans, the number is far below the full ten. A 2007 survey reported that most Americans could rattle off the ingredients of a Bi...
How many of the Ten Commandments can you name? If you are like most Americans, the number is far below the full ten. A 2007 survey reported that most Americans could rattle off the ingredients of a Bi...
 
 
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09:53 AM on 10/05/2011
What the 10 Commandments are: inefficient!

All you need is the Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure redux...
"Be excellent to each other"! - Ted "Theodore" Logan

10? Really? Gotta be padding... blasted biblical bureaucracy!
11:03 AM on 10/07/2011
The Bible appears to suggest that God’s original set of restriction amounted to only one: the tree of knowledge of good and evil was off-limits. The Bible appears to further suggest that humanity lost its moral compass when Adam and Eve rejected God’s leadership over that sole restriction. As a result, apparently, increasing detail of what should not be done became one of, apparently, many solutions to restore the damage done by Adam and Eve. The Bible appears to suggest that one original restriction was followed by the nation of Israel, then ten, then many, then the entire Bible.

I welcome your thoughts.
01:18 PM on 10/10/2011
Sorry. Took me time to think this through. Kudos on your thought provoking ability btw :D
Your suggestion / characterization of God's one restriction - stay away from the tree - is theistically plausible. However, it is imperfect, as this leaves ample room for other "sins", if only framed as such later. These include carving an image of any representation of that which is heavenly (#2), speaking God's name in vain (#3) and holding true to the Sabbath (#4) (A & E had no time reference). Clearly, these behaviors would have not violated the "one restriction".

Of course, it may well be argued that the writings that give us this information may be biased, transcribed incorrectly from the original, or have other flaws (after all, commandment #2 tells us that God can be jealous, yet commandment #10 tells us not to be...

I still maintain that the facetious B & T credo still is more complete, encompassing and elegant. Go Theodore Logan!

TY for being part of the conversation!
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H P
Citizen
03:23 PM on 10/04/2011
comparison of the 10 commandments to the Egyptian Book of the Dead.. fascinating reading:
http://edward.de.leau.net/the-10-commandments-are-a-copy-from-chapter-125-in-the-egyptian-book-of-the-dead-20070513.html
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H P
Citizen
03:13 PM on 10/04/2011
Beyond 'have no other god before me'( then 3 others saying the same thing) , obey your parents and don't commit adultry.. they mostly seem to be property issues actually, coveting property, not coveting your neighbors wife is in there too.. more or less to my mind making women property.
11:59 AM on 10/04/2011
One of the gems of the 10 commandments is the treatment of Women as Chattle.

Apparently it's seminal that one should not envy one's neighbor's wife - but it's inconsequential if women envy their neighbors husband?
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BravoFour
04:27 PM on 10/04/2011
The opposite is true. You can envy your neighbors wife all day, you're not getting any unless she wants you.
06:19 PM on 10/04/2011
I don't need my neighbor's wife for that!
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Thumbody
just for the halibut!
11:10 AM on 10/04/2011
The 10 commandments are not rules to be lived by us alone. It is impossible for us to keep them, instead they demonstrate a need for a relationship with God to help us live this life according to his will and with his help.
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H P
Citizen
03:14 PM on 10/04/2011
except that jesus said "love your neighbor as your self"
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08:33 PM on 10/03/2011
I'd be happy to meet just a handful of Christians who took "Thou shalt not kill" seriously.
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11:54 AM on 10/04/2011
and the one about not lying
07:40 PM on 10/03/2011
They're a bunch of rules stolen from the Book of the Dead. Like everything else in Christianity.
Even the 10 commandments in the Bible are stolen directly from Judaism, since that part is NOT originally part of the Bible. It's part of the Torah.

So, the 10 Commandments is ironically a bunch of rules about not stealing, which have been stolen over and over and quoted by people who can't read.
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H P
Citizen
03:16 PM on 10/04/2011
well strickly speaking the bible is Jewish, the old testament actually IS Judiasm..
the Bible didn't steal them from Jutiasm at all.. they ARE Jewish
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02:11 PM on 10/03/2011
They are not something to be taken literally in all sense. thats pretty simple and common sensical.
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Daniel S1
11:46 AM on 10/04/2011
Unfortunatly common sense is simply missing from from this world
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Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
12:28 PM on 10/03/2011
Apparently issue #1 was the whole monotheism trip. Most of the others make sense, and have more to do with how we should treat each other as we emerged from the Bronze Age.
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jdryv
non cogitamus, ergo nihil sumus
07:16 PM on 10/02/2011
keeping holy the sabbath could put an end to football as we know it.
11:57 AM on 10/04/2011
lot of Saturday football in your state?
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guitargeorge1964
Independent!!!
01:44 PM on 10/04/2011
Yes, there's a lot of Saturday football in every state.
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BravoFour
04:30 PM on 10/04/2011
Football has caused religious schisms in my community.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twelve_Tribes_communities

"On January 12, 1975, the group arrived at First Presbyterian to find the service had been cancelled for the Super Bowl; for the group, this was an intolerable act and led them to form The Vine Christian Community Church."
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Newfoundlander
I'm a pessimist, an optimist with experience!
04:22 PM on 10/02/2011
As is usual, the ten commandments referred to are those enumerated in Ex. 20:1 - 17 but there is another list of commandments in Ex.34:11 - 28 that are very different from the Exodus 20 version. The Exodus 34 version is about the commandments uttered by "God" after Moses had broken the first set in anger, and had to go up the mountain to get a new set. Please read the entire chapter 34, and note that although the commandments listed are different from the commonly accepted Big Ten, the Exodus 34 list are specifically referred to as the "Ten Commandments" (Ex. 34:28).
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phal4875
The world is run by cats; we just feed them.
04:58 PM on 10/01/2011
The Ten Commandments consist of three that are an obvious part of any society (numbers 6, 8, and 9), one that is ignored in legal systems (#7), one thought crime (#10), three that relate to a specific God (numbers 1 to 3), one that has to do with a day off (#4), and one that has to do with treating parents properly (#5). The brilliance of the commandments is overstated - much like the supposed brilliance of Solomon when he threatened to cut a baby in half.
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SayBlade
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09:53 AM on 10/01/2011
What is so odd is that there are Christians, particularly in the US who give such prominence to the 10 commandments. As Christians, followers of Jesus (the Christ) why would they not give prominence to the two great commmandments apparently uttered by Jesus in all three of the synoptic gospels?

Luke 10.27:
He answered, ‘You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your strength, and with all your mind; and your neighbour as yourself.’

Mark 12.30-31
30you shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with all your strength.” 31The second is this, “You shall love your neighbour as yourself.” There is no other commandment greater than these.’

Matthew 22.36-40
36‘Teacher, which commandment in the law is the greatest?’ 37He said to him, ‘ “You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and with all your soul, and with all your mind.” 38This is the greatest and first commandment. 39And a second is like it: “You shall love your neighbour as yourself.” 40On these two commandments hang all the law and the prophets.’
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lastwarning2earth rev14
Woe to them that call Evil Good and Good Evil
07:49 PM on 10/02/2011
Love the Lord your God with all your heart.
Christ also said, " If you love me keep the commandments" which leads us back to Ex. 20
02:36 AM on 10/03/2011
lastwarningtoearth: Those words of Jesus are recorded in John 14:15, "If you love me, you will obey what I command." And I think you know that the commands of Jesus were far deeper than the Ten Commandments. Such as, "Rejoice and be glad (when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me)," Matt. 5:11. "Anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart," Matt. 5:28. "Do not resist an evil person. If someone strikes you on the right cheek, turn to him the other also," Matt. 5:39. Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you," Matt. 5:44. And to his followers Jesus gave this command, "Love one another as I have loved you."

But the most wonderful thing is that Jesus promised that if we remain in him, we will bring forth those fruits, for he is like a vine that feeds life-giving sap out to us, the branches. John 15:1-8.
12:51 PM on 10/03/2011
The Ten Commandments are so Old Testament. Jesus came to start a new day. Read what Jesus said and stop slumming in the Book of the Jealous God.
04:13 PM on 10/04/2011
Jesus also stated that he did not come to replace the law. Not one jot nor tittle. There are instances in the New Testament where he not only advocates strongly maintaining Mosaic law, but actually comes down more harshly than the law demanded.

I find it interesting when Christians want to say, 'Ignore the O.T., Jesus replaced it with a new covenant!', but they're quick to quote O.T. themselves when they want to make a point about something like gays or even the disrespect they get from children.

The alleged Jesus never advocated the salad bar approach to the scriptures, yet all of his "followers" seem to.
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Original Intent
Because "Shall" is a directive, not a suggestion.
07:57 AM on 10/01/2011
It is not "don't lie"... it's don't bear false witness.

You should know better.
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SayBlade
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09:42 AM on 10/01/2011
Depending upon which translation you are using.
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Original Intent
Because "Shall" is a directive, not a suggestion.
12:19 PM on 10/03/2011
"Don't lie" is an over-simplistic interpretation not taken seriously.

Thou shalt not [bear] against thy neighbour
vain witness is the direct translation from ancient Hebrew Papyrus. Please post a direct translation from ancient papyrus that comes anywhere near "don't lie".

The author should know better.
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crydespite
no-one is ever 'just saying'
01:51 AM on 10/01/2011
"The image of Charlton Heston hoisting a pair of stone tablets over his head is indelibly etched into the pop culture psyche" unquote

No, It Is Not.
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Forester
Overeducated woods worker.
12:30 PM on 10/03/2011
Mel Brooks maybe, Chucky? not so much.