The 10 Commandments What They Mean, Why They Matter, and Why We Should Obey Them
Date
2018-08-18
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
Crossway
Abstract
The Good News of Law
And God spoke all these words, saying, “I am the LORD your God, who
brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of slavery.”
Exodus 20:1–2
Exodus 20:1–2 introduces one of the most famous sections in the Bible—
indeed, one of the most important pieces of religious literature in the whole
world—the Ten Commandments. Oddly enough, they are never actually
called the Ten Commandments. The Hebrew expression, which occurs three
times in the Old Testament (Ex. 34:28; Deut. 4:13; 10:4), literally means
“ten words.” This is why Exodus 20 is often referred to as the Decalogue,
deka being the Greek word for “ten” and logos meaning “word.” These are
the Ten Words that God gave the Israelites at Mount Sinai—and, I’ll argue,
the Ten Words that God wants all of us to follow.
Whatever we call them, the Ten Commandments are certainly commands
—more than that for sure, but not less. The problem people have is not with
what they’re called but with what they contain. Studying the Ten
Commandments reveals the very heart of human rebellion: we don’t like
God telling us what we can and cannot do.