The Ten Commandments are written with room for varying interpretation, reflecting their role as a summary of fundamental principles. They are not as explicit or as many other biblical laws and commandments, because they provide guiding principles that apply universally, across changing circumstances. They do specify severe punishments for their violation. Their precise import must be worked out in each separate situation. are said to have been "written with the finger of God" (). • The stone tablets were placed in the
Ark of the Covenant (, ). stating God's universal and timeless standard of right and wrong – unlike the rest of the
613 commandments which Jewish interpretative tradition claims are in the Torah, which include, for example, various duties and ceremonies such as various halachich
kashrut dietary laws, and the rituals to be performed by priests in the
Holy Temple. Jewish tradition considers the Ten Commandments the theological basis for the rest of the commandments.
Philo, in his four-book work
The Special Laws, treated the Ten Commandments as headings under which he discussed other related commandments. Similarly, in
The Decalogue he stated that "under [the "commandment … against adulterers"] many other commands are conveyed by implication, such as that against seducers, that against practisers of unnatural crimes, that against all who live in debauchery, that against all men who indulge in illicit and incontinent connections." Others, such as Rabbi
Saadia Gaon, have also made groupings of the commandments according to their links with the Ten Commandments. According to
Conservative Rabbi
Louis Ginzberg, the Ten Commandments are virtually entwined, in that the breaking of one leads to the breaking of another. Echoing an earlier rabbinic comment found in the commentary of Rashi to the
Song of Songs (4:5) Ginzberg explained—there is also a great bond of union between the first five commandments and the last five. The first commandment: "I am the Lord, thy God," corresponds to the sixth: "Thou shalt not murder," for the murderer slays the image of God. The second: "Thou shalt have no strange gods before me," corresponds to the seventh: "Thou shalt not commit adultery," for conjugal faithlessness is as grave a sin as idolatry, which is faithlessness to God. The third commandment: "Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord in vain," corresponds to the eighth: "Thou shalt not steal," for stealing results in a false oath in God's name. The fourth: "Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy," corresponds to the ninth: "Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor," for he who bears false witness against his neighbor commits as grave a sin as if he had borne false witness against God, saying that He had not created the world in six days and rested on the seventh day (the holy Sabbath). The fifth commandment: "Honor thy father and thy mother," corresponds to the tenth: "Covet not thy neighbor's wife," for one who indulges this lust produces children who will not honor their true father, but will consider a stranger their father. The traditional Rabbinical Jewish belief is that the observance of these commandments and the other
mitzvot are required solely of the Jewish people and that the laws incumbent on humanity in general are outlined in the seven
Noahide laws, a concept that is not found anywhere in the Tanakh, several of which overlap with the Ten Commandments. In the era of the
Sanhedrin transgressing any one of six of the Ten Commandments theoretically carried the
death penalty, the exceptions being the First Commandment, honouring your father and mother, saying God's name in vain, and coveting, though this was rarely enforced due to a large number of stringent evidentiary requirements imposed by the
oral law.
Two tablets The arrangement of the commandments on the two tablets is interpreted in different ways in the classical Jewish tradition. Rabbi Hanina ben Gamaliel says that each tablet contained five commandments, "but the Sages say ten on one tablet and ten on the other", that is, that the tablets were duplicates. This can be compared to diplomatic treaties of the ancient Near East, in which a copy was made for each party. According to the
Talmud, the compendium of traditional
Rabbinic Jewish law, tradition, and interpretation, one interpretation of the biblical verse "the tablets were written on both their sides", is that the carving went through the full thickness of the tablets, yet was miraculously legible from both sides.
Use in Jewish ritual The
Mishna records that during the period of the
Second Temple, the Ten Commandments were recited daily, or to dispel a claim by early Christians that
only the Ten Commandments were handed down at Mount Sinai rather than the whole Torah. The Ten Commandments are included in some prayerbooks for this purpose. Today, the Ten Commandments are heard in the synagogue three times a year: as they come up during the readings of Exodus and Deuteronomy, and during the festival of
Shavuot. though many rabbis, including
Maimonides, have opposed this custom since one may come to think that the Ten Commandments are more important than the rest of the
Mitzvot. In printed
Chumashim, as well as in those in manuscript form, the Ten Commandments carry two sets of
cantillation marks. The ''ta'am 'elyon
(upper accentuation), which makes each Commandment into a separate verse, is used for public Torah reading, while the ta'am tachton
(lower accentuation), which divides the text into verses of more even length, is used for private reading or study. The verse numbering in the Torah follows the ta'am tachton''. In the Torah, the references to the Ten Commandments are therefore and .
Samaritan The
Samaritan Pentateuch varies in the Ten Commandments passages, both in that the Samaritan Deuteronomical version of the passage is much closer to that in Exodus, and in that Samaritans count as nine commandments what others count as ten. The Samaritan tenth commandment is on the sanctity of
Mount Gerizim. The text of the Samaritan tenth commandment follows:
Christianity Most traditions of Christianity hold that the Ten Commandments have divine authority and continue to be valid, though they have different interpretations and uses of them. The
Apostolic Constitutions, which implore believers to "always remember the ten commands of God," reveal the importance of the Decalogue in the
early Church. Through most of Christian history the decalogue was considered a summary of God's law and standard of behaviour, central to Christian life, piety, and worship. Distinctions in the order and importance of said order continues to be a theological debate, with texts within the New Testament confirming the more traditional ordering, which follows the
Septuagint of adultery, murder and theft, as opposed to the currently held order of the
Masoretic of murder, adultery, theft. Protestantism, under which there are several denominations of Christianity, in general gives
more importance to biblical law and
the gospel. Magisterial Protestantism takes the Ten Commandments as the starting point of Christian moral life. Different versions of Christianity have varied in how they have translated the bare principles into the specifics that make up a full
Christian ethic.
Baptists Baptists believe The Ten Commandments are a summary of the requirements of a works covenant (called the "Old Covenant"), given on Mount Sinai to the nascent nation of Israel. The Old Covenant is fulfilled by Christ at the cross. Unbelievers are still under the Law. The law reveals man's sin and need for the salvation that is Jeshua. Repentance from sin and faith in Christ for salvation is the point of the entire Bible. They do reflect the eternal character of God, and serve as a paragon of morality.
Catholicism In Catholicism it is believed that Jesus freed Christians from the rest of
Jewish religious law, but not from their obligation to keep the Ten Commandments. It has been said that they are to the moral order what the creation story is to the natural order. and serve as the basis for
social justice. Church teaching of the Commandments is largely based on the
Old and
New Testaments and the writings of the early
Church Fathers. The
Catechism of the Catholic Church believes that in the New Testament, Jesus
acknowledged their validity summarizing them into two "
great commandments." The
great commandments contain the Law of the Gospel, summed up in the
Golden Rule. The Law of the Gospel is expressed particularly in the
Sermon on the Mount. The
Catechism of the Catholic Church explains that, "the Law of the Gospel fulfills the commandments of the Law. The Lord's Sermon on the Mount, far from abolishing or devaluing the moral prescriptions of the Old Law, releases their hidden potential and has new demands arise from them: it reveals their entire divine and human truth. It does not add new external precepts, but proceeds to reform the heart, the root of human acts, where man chooses between the pure and the impure, where faith, hope, and charity are formed and with them the other virtues." The New Law "fulfills, refines, surpasses, and leads the Old Law to its perfection."
Lutheranism , a Lutheran. The
Lutheran Churches divide Mosaic Law into three components: the (1) moral law, (2) civil law, (3) ceremonial law. The Lutheran division of the commandments follows the one established by
St. Augustine, following the then current synagogue scribal division. The first three commandments govern the relationship between God and humans, the fourth through eighth govern public relationships between people, and the last two govern private thoughts. See Luther's Small Catechism and Large Catechism. As with the Reformed view, Wesley held that the moral law, which is contained in the Ten Commandments, stands today: In keeping with
Wesleyan covenant theology, "while the ceremonial law was abolished in Christ and the whole Mosaic dispensation itself was concluded upon the appearance of Christ, the moral law remains a vital component of the covenant of grace, having Christ as its perfecting end." A
confession begins with the Confessor reciting the Ten Commandments and asking the penitent which of them he has broken.
Pentecostalism The Pentecostal Christianity believes the Ten Commandments were given directly from God summarizing the absolutes of spiritual and moral living that God intended for his people. They also attach a specific significance observing that the
Feast of Pentecost commemorates the giving of the Ten Commandments to
Moses. This view, admitted by several founders of the Pentecostal Church has passed into modern Christian ethic, where the feast is also celebrated as "the day of the giving of the Law" or
Shavuot as observed by
Judaic liturgical books and
Jewish Christianity. Pentecostals believe giving of the Ten Commandments on Mount Sinai fifty days after Passover and the
disciples of
Jesus Christ receiving the
Holy Spirit of God, as foretold by Him, fifty days after His
Resurrection on Day of Pentecost was foretold by the prophet
Jeremiah symbolizing God giving His Church the gift of the Holy Spirit, where law is written, not on tablets of stone, but in their hearts. Pentecostal
Christianity believes that through Jesus Christ and with the exception of the Ten Commandments, they are not bound by the
613 Commandments of the
Old Testament and any adherence to Judaic
Halakha.
Reformed Christianity Reformed Christianity includes the
Continental Reformed,
Presbyterian,
Congregationalist, and
Reformed Anglican traditions. The
Heidelberg Catechism, in explaining the third use of the Law, teaches that the moral law as contained in the Ten Commandments is binding for Christians and that it instructs Christians how to live in service to God in gratitude for His grace shown in redeeming mankind.
Presbyterianism The
Westminster Confession, held by
Presbyterian Churches, holds that the moral law contained in the Ten Commandments "does forever bind all, as well justified persons as others, to the obedience thereof".
Dispensationalism With the emergence of
dispensationalism (held to by Churches such as the
Plymouth Brethren and certain
Independent Baptists), certain communities believe and teach their adherents that all of the Law of Moses was fulfilled by Jesus Christ by His
Crucifixion, death and resurrection and the
Law of Moses including the Ten Commandments no longer apply to them while others believe in following only the commandments that appear in the New testament and hence do not follow or observe them as part of their faith and worship.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints According to the doctrine of
the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Jesus completed rather than rejected the Mosaic law. The Ten Commandments are considered eternal gospel principles necessary for
exaltation. 13:15–16, 13:21–24 and
Doctrine and Covenants. According to the Book of Mosiah, a prophet named
Abinadi taught the Ten Commandments in the court of
King Noah and was martyred for his righteousness.
Abinadi knew the Ten Commandments from the
brass plates. In an October 2011 address, the Church president and prophet
Thomas S. Monson taught "The Ten Commandments are just that—commandments. They are not suggestions." In that same talk he used small quotations listing the numbering and selection of the commandments. This and other sources don't include the prologue, making it most consistent with the
Septuagint numbering. A splinter group of the Church called the "
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints (Strangite)" have a belief similar to the Samaritans where they have the entire Ten Commandments in their scripture where others only have nine. The Strangite fourth Commandment is "Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself." The Strangite's founder and namesake
James Strang wrote in "Note on the Decalogue" as part of the
Book of the Law of the Lord (a Strangite holy book) that no other version of the Decalogue contains more than nine commandments and speculated that his fourth Commandment was omitted from other works perhaps as early as
Josephus' time (circa 37-100 AD). The Strangite Ten Commandments are as follows. •
Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy might, and with all thy strength. •
Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain. •
Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work, but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do any work; thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, nor thy manservant, nor thy womanservant, nor thy cattle, nor the stranger that is within thy gates. •
Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. •
Honour thy father and thy mother. •
Thou shalt not kill. •
Thou shalt not commit adultery. •
Thou shalt not steal. •
Thou shalt not bear false witness. •
Thou shalt not covet thy neighbour's inheritance.
Islam Moses and the Tablets The receiving of the Ten Commandments by Prophet
Musa (Moses) is dealt with in much detail in Islamic tradition with the meeting of Moses with God on Mount Sinai described in Surah
A'raf (7:142-145). The Revealing of the Tablets on which were the Commandments of God is described in the following verse: The Tablets are further alluded to in verses 7:150, when Moses threw the Tablets down in anger at seeing the Israelites' worshipping of the golden calf, and in 7:154 when he picked up the Tablets having recovered from his anger:
Classical views Three verses of Surah
An'am (6:151–153) are widely taken to be a reinstatement (or revised version) of the Ten Commandments either as revealed to Moses
originally or as they are to be taken by Muslims now: Evidence for these verses having some relation to Moses and the Ten Commandments is from the verse which immediately follows them: According to a narration in
Mustadrak Hakim,
Ibn Abbas, a prominent narrator of
Israiliyat traditions said, "In Surah Al-An`am, there are clear Ayat, and they are the Mother of the Book (the Qur'an)." He then recited the above verses. Also in Mustadrak Hakim is the narration of
Ubada ibn as-Samit:
Ibn Kathir mentions a narration of
Abdullah ibn Mas'ud in his
Tafsir:
Other views Main points of interpretative difference Sabbath day The Abrahamic religions observe the Sabbath in various ways. In Judaism it is observed on Saturday (reckoned from dusk to dusk). In
Christianity, it is usually observed on Sunday, sometimes
observed on Saturday, and sometimes not at all (
non-Sabbatarianism). Observing the Sabbath on Sunday, the day of resurrection, gradually became the dominant Christian practice from the
Jewish-Roman wars onward. The Church's general repudiation of Jewish practices during this period is apparent in the
Council of Laodicea (4th century AD) where Canons 37–38 state: "It is not lawful to receive portions sent from the feasts of Jews or heretics, nor to feast together with them" and "It is not lawful to receive unleavened bread from the Jews, nor to be partakers of their impiety". Canon 29 of the Laodicean council specifically refers to the sabbath: "Christians must not judaize by resting on the [Jewish] Sabbath, but must work on that day, rather honouring the Lord's Day; and, if they can, resting then as Christians. But if any shall be found to be judaizers, let them be anathema from Christ." The imperative is against unlawful killing resulting in
bloodguilt. The Hebrew Bible contains numerous prohibitions against unlawful killing, but does not prohibit killing in the context of
warfare (),
capital punishment () or
defending against a home invasion (), which are considered justified. The New Testament is in agreement that murder is a grave moral evil, and references the Old Testament view of bloodguilt.
Theft German Old Testament scholar
Albrecht Alt:
Das Verbot des Diebstahls im Dekalog (1953), suggested that the commandment translated as "thou shalt not steal" was originally intended against stealing people, against abductions and slavery, in agreement with the Talmudic interpretation of the statement as "thou shalt not kidnap" (Sanhedrin 86a). Alt's claim is somewhat questionable, because the decalogue verse (Exodus 20:12, Deuteronomy 5:16) forbids theft in general, whereas the Sanhedrin 86a discussion (abductions and slavery) deals with another biblical verse: Deuteronomy 24:7 which explicitly refers to theft (i.e. abduction) of a person in order to sell that person.
Idolatry In Judaism there is a prohibition against making or worshipping an idol or a representation of God, but there is no restriction on art or simple depictions unrelated to God. Islam has a stronger prohibition, banning not just representations of God, but also in some cases of Muhammad, humans and, in some interpretations, any living creature. In the non-canonical
Gospel of Barnabas, it is claimed that Jesus stated that idolatry is the greatest sin as it divests a man fully of faith, and hence of God. The words attributed to Jesus prohibit not only worshipping statues of wood or stone; but also statues of flesh.
"...all which a man loves, for which he leaves everything else but that, is his god, thus the glutton and drunkard has for his idol his own flesh, the fornicator has for his idol the harlot and the greedy has for his idol silver and gold, and so the same for every other sinner." Idolatory was thus the basic sin, which manifested in various acts or thoughts, which displace the primacy of God. However, the Gospel of Barnabas does not form part of the Christian bible. It is known only from 16th- and 17th-century manuscripts, and frequently reflects Islamic rather than Christian understandings. Eastern Orthodox tradition teaches that while images of God, the Father, remain prohibited, depictions of Jesus as the incarnation of God as a visible human are permissible. To emphasize the theological importance of the incarnation, the Orthodox Church encourages the use of icons in church and private devotions, but prefers a two-dimensional depiction. In modern use (usually as a result of Roman Catholic influence), more naturalistic images and images of the Father, however, also appear occasionally in Orthodox churches, but statues, i.e. three-dimensional depictions, continue to be banned. This concept of adultery stems from a society that was not strictly monogamous, where the patriarchal economic aspect of Israelite marriage gave the husband an exclusive right to his wife, whereas the wife, as the husband's possession, did not have an exclusive right to her husband. ==Critical historical analysis==