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THE DECALOGUE-ITS FORM
Deu 5:1-21
AS the fourth chapter belongs to the speech which concludes the
legislative portion of Deuteronomy both in contents and language
(see chapter 23), we shall pass on now to the fifth chapter, which
begins with a recital of the Decalogue. As has already been pointed
out, the main trunk of the Book of Deuteronomy is a repetition and
expansion of the Law of the Covenant contained in Exodus 20-23. Now,
both in Exodus and Deuteronomy, before the more general and detailed
legislation, we have the Decalogue, or the Ten Words, as it is
called, in substantially the same form; and the question immediately
arises as to the age at which this beautifully systematized and
organized code of fundamental laws came into existence. Whatever its
origin, it is an exceedingly remarkable document. It touches the
fundamental principles of religious and moral life with so sure a
hand that at this hour, for even the most civilized nations, it sums
up the moral code, and that so effectively that no change or
extension of it has ever been proposed. That being its character, it
becomes a question of exceeding interest to decide whether it can
justly be referred to so early a time as the days of Moses. In both
the passages where it occurs it is represented as having been given
to the people at Horeb by Yahweh Himself, and it is made the
earliest and most fundamental part of the covenant between Him and
Israel. It would accordingly seem as if a claim were made for it as
a specially early and specially sacred law. Now, much as critics
have denied, there have been found very few who deny that in the
main some such law as this must have been given to Israel in Moses’
day. Even Kuenen admits as much as that in his "History of the
Religion of Israel." The only commandment of the ten he has
difficulty in accepting is the second, which forbids the making of
any graven image for worship. That, he thinks, cannot have been in
the original Decalogue, not because of any peculiarity of language,
or because of any incoherency in composition, but simply because he
cannot believe that at that early day the religion of Yahweh could
have been so spiritual as to demand the prohibition of images. But
his reasons are extremely inadequate; more especially as he admits
that the Ark was the Mosaic Sanctuary, and that in it there was no
image, as there was none in the Temple at Jerusalem. That Yahweh was
worshipped under the form of a calf at Horeb, and afterwards in
Northern Israel at Bethel and elsewhere, proves nothing. A law does
not forthwith extinguish that against which it is directed, for
idolatry continued even after Deuteronomy was accepted as the law.
Moreover, if, as Kuenen thinks, calf-worship had existed in Israel
before Moses, it was not unnatural that it took centuries before the
higher view superseded the lower. Even by Christianity the ancient
superstitions and religious practices of heathenism were not
thoroughly overcome for centuries. Indeed in many places they have
not yet been entirely suppressed. Nor does Wellhausen make a better
case for a late Decalogue. His hesitation about it is most
remarkable, and the reasons he gives for tending to think it may be
late are singularly unsatisfactory. His first reason is that
"according to Exodus 34, the commandments which stood upon the two
tables were quite different." He relies on the words in Exo 34:28 of
that chapter-"And he (Moses) was there with the Lord forty days and
forty nights; he did neither eat bread nor drink water. And he wrote
upon the tables the words of the covenant, the ten words"-taking
them to imply that the immediately preceding commandments, which are
of the same ritual character with those which follow the Decalogue
in Exodus 20, fire here called the ten words. But it is not
necessary to take the passage so. According to Exo 20:1 it was
Yahweh who was to write the words on the tables, and we cannot
suppose that so flagrant a contradiction should occur in a single
chapter as that here it should be said that Moses wrote the tables.
Yahweh, who is mentioned in the previous verse, must therefore be
the subject of wayyikhtobh (Exo 34:28), and the ten words
consequently are different from the words (up to Exo 34:27) which
Yahweh commanded Moses to write, somewhere, but not on the tables.
Besides, every one who attempts to make ten words of the commands
before Exo 34:27 brings out a different result, and that of itself,
as Dillmann says, is sufficient to show that the second Decalogue in
chapter 34, is entirely fanciful. Wellhausen’s second reason is
this: "The prohibition of images was quite unknown during the other
period: Moses himself is said to have made a brazen serpent, which
down to Hezekiah’s time continued to be worshipped as an image of
Jehovah." But the Decalogue does not prohibit the making of every
image; it prohibits the making of images for worship. Therefore
Moses might quite well have made a figure of a serpent, even though
he wrote the Decalogue, if it was not meant for worship. But there
is nothing said to lead us to believe that the serpent was regarded
as an image of Yahweh. Indeed the very contrary is asserted; and if
Israel in later times made a bad use of this ancient relic of a
great deliverance, Moses can hardly be held responsible for that. In
the third place, Wellhausen says: "The essentially and necessarily
national character of the older phases of the religion of Yahweh
completely disappears in the quite universal code of morals which is
given in the Decalogue as the fundamental law of Israel; but the
entire series of religious personalities throughout the period of
the Judges and Kings-from Deborah, who praised Jael’s treacherous
act of murder, to David, who treated his prisoners of war with the
utmost cruelty-make it very difficult to believe that the religion
of Israel was from the outset one of a specifically moral
character." Surely this is very feeble criticism. On the same
grounds we might declare, because of the Massacre of St.
Bartholomew, or on account of Napoleon’s reported poisoning of his
own wounded at Acre, that Christianity was not a religion of a
"specifically moral character" at this present moment. Surely the
facts that people never live at the level of their ideals, and that
the lifting of a nation’s life is a process which is as slow as the
raising of the level of the delta of the Nile, should be too
familiar to permit any one to be misled by difficulties of this
kind. Nor is his last ground in any degree more convincing. "It is
extremely doubtful," he says, "whether the actual monotheism which
is undoubtedly presupposed in the universal moral precepts of the
Decalogue could have formed the foundation of a national religion.
It was first developed out of the national religion at the downfall
of the nation." The obvious reply is that this is a petitio
principii. The whole debate in regard to this question is whether
Moses was a monotheist, or at least the founder of a religion which
was implicitly monotheistic from the beginning; and the date of the
Decalogue is interesting mainly because of the light it would throw
upon that question. To decide this date therefore by the assertion
that, being monotheistic, the Decalogue cannot be Mosaic, is to
assume the very thing in dispute. Wellhausen himself seems to favor
the opposite view. In speaking of what Moses did for Israel he says
that through "the Torah," in the sense of decisions given by lot
from the Ark, "he gave a definite positive expression to their sense
of nationality and their idea of God. Yahweh was not merely the God
of Israel; as such He was the God at once of Law and of Justice, the
basis, the informing principle, and the implied postulate of their
national consciousness"; and again, "As God of the nation Yahweh
became the God of Justice and of Right; as God of Justice and Right,
He came to be thought of as the highest, and at last as the only
power in heaven and earth." In the Mosaic conception of God,
therefore, Wellhausen himself being witness, there lay implicitly,
perhaps even explicitly, the conception of Yahweh as "the only power
in heaven and earth." In that case, is it reasonable to put the
Decalogue late, because being moral it is universal, and so implies
monotheism?
But there is still other, and perhaps stronger evidence, that the
universality of the Decalogue is no indication of a late date. On
the contrary it would seem, from Professor Muirhead’s account of the
Roman fas, that universality in legal precept may be a mark of very
primitive laws. Speaking of Rome in its earliest stages of growth,
when the circumstances of the people in very many respects resembled
those of the Hebrews in Mosaic times, he says: "We look in vain for,
and it would be absurd to expect, any definite system of law in
those early times. What passed for it was a composite of fas, jas,
and boni mores, whose several limits and characteristics it is
extremely difficult to define." He then proceeds to describe fas:
"By fas was understood the will of the gods, the laws given by
Heaven for men on earth, much of it regulative of ceremonial, but a
by no means insignificant part embodying rules of conduct. It
appears to have had a wider range than ins. There were few of its
commands, prohibitions, or precepts that were addressed to men as
citizens of any particular state; all mankind came within its scope.
It forbade that a war should be undertaken without the prescribed
fetial ceremonial, and required that faith should be kept with even
an enemy-when a promise had been made to him under sanction of an
oath. It enjoined hospitality to foreigners, because the stranger
guest was presumed, equally with his entertainer, to be an object of
solicitude to a higher power. It punished murder, for it was the
taking of a God-given life; the sale of a wife by her husband, for
she had become his partner in all things human and Divine; the
lifting of a hand against a parent, for it was subversive of the
first bond of society and religion, the reverence due by a child to
those to whom he owed his existence; incestuous connections, for
they defiled the altar; the false oath, and the broken vow, for they
were an insult to the divinities invoked," etc. In fact, the Roman
fas had much the same character as the Decalogue and the legislation
of the first code. {Exodus 20-23} Consequently those who have
thought that all early legislation must be concrete, narrow,
particularistic, bounded at widest by the direct needs of the men
making up the clan, tribe, or petty nationality, are wrong. The
early history of law shows that, along with that, there is also a
demand for some expression of the laws of life seen from the point
of view of man’s relation to God. That fact greatly strengthens the
case for the early date of the Decalogue. For practically it is the
Hebrew fas. If it has a higher tone and a wider sweep if it provides
a framework into which human duty can, even now, without undue
stretching of it, be securely fitted, that is only what we should
expect, if God was working in the history and development of this
nation as nowhere else in the world. In short, the history of
primitive Roman law shows that, without inspiration, a feeble
wavering step would have been taken to the development of a code of
moral duty, within the scope of which all mankind should come. With
inspiration, surely this effort would also be made, and made with a
success not elsewhere attained.
In none of the reasons which have been advanced, therefore, is there
anything to set against the Biblical statement that the ten words
were older and more sacred than any other portion of the Israelite
legislation, and that they were Mosaic in origin. The universal
hesitation shown by the greater among the most advanced critics in
definitely removing the Decalogue from the foundations of Israel’s
history, although its presence there is so great an embarrassment to
them, lets us see how strong the case for the Mosaic origin is, and
assures us that the evidence is all in favor of this view.
But if it be Mosaic, at first sight the conclusion would seem to be
that the form of the Decalogue given in Exodus is the more ancient,
and that the text in Deuteronomy is a later and somewhat extended
version of that. Closer examination, however, tends to suggest that
the original ten words, in their Mosaic form, differed from any of
the texts we have, and that of these the Exodus text in its present
form is later than that in Deuteronomy. The great difference in
length between the two halves of the Decalogue suggests the
probability that originally all the commandments were short, and
much the same in style and character as the last half, "Thou shalt
not steal," and so on. Further, when the reasons and inducements
given for the observance of the longer commands are set aside, just
such short commands are left to us as we find in the second table.
Lastly, differences between the versions in Exodus and Deuteronomy
occur in almost every case in those parts of the text which may be
regarded as appendices. In fact there are only two variations in the
proper text of the commands. In the fourth, we have in Exodus
"Remember the Sabbath day," while in Deuteronomy we have "Observe
the Sabbath day"; but the meaning is the same in both cases. In the
tenth, in Exodus the command is "Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s
house"; and the "house" is explained by the succeeding clause, "Thou
shalt not covet thy neighbor’s wife, nor his manservant," etc., to
mean "household" in its widest sense. In Deuteronomy the old meaning
of "house" as household and goods has fallen out of use, and the
component parts of the neighbor’s household possessions are named,
beginning with his wife. Then follows the "house" in its narrow
meaning, as the mere dwelling, grouped along with the slaves and
cattle, and with tithawweh substituted in Hebrew for tachmodh.
Fundamentally therefore the two recensions are the same. Even in the
reasons and explanations there is only one really important
variation. In Exo 20:11 the reason for the observance of the fourth
commandment is stated thus: "For in six days Yahweh made heaven and
earth, the sea and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day;
therefore Yahweh blessed the Sabbath day, and hallowed it." In
Deuteronomy, on the other hand, that reason is omitted, and in its
place we find this: "And thou shalt remember that thou wast a
servant in the land of Egypt, and Yahweh thy God brought thee out
thence by a mighty hand, and by a stretched out arm; therefore
Yahweh thy God commanded thee to keep the Sabbath." Now if the
reference to the creation had formed part of the original text of
the Decalogue in the days of the author of Deuteronomy, if he had
that before him as actually spoken by Yahweh, it is difficult to
believe that he would have left it out and substituted another
reason in its stead. He would have no object in doing so, for he
could have added his own reason after that given in Exodus, had he
so desired. It is likely, therefore, that in the original text no
reason appeared; that Deuteronomy first added a reason; while ver.
11 in Exodus 20. was probably inserted there from a combination of
Exo 31:17 b and Gen 2:2 b, -"For in six days Yahweh made heaven and
earth, and on the seventh day He rested and was refreshed"; "and He
rested on the seventh day from all His work which He had made." Both
these texts belong to P and differ in style altogether from JE, with
whose language all the rest of the setting of the Decalogue
corresponds. On these suppositions Exo 20:9 would necessarily be the
latest part of the two texts. Originally, therefore, the Mosaic
commands probably ran thus:
"I am Yahweh thy God, which brought thee out of the land of Egypt,
out of the house of bondage."
1. Thou shalt not have any other gods before Me.
2. Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image.
3. Thou shalt not take the name of Yahweh thy God in vain.
4. Remember (or Keep) the day of rest to sanctify it.
5. Honor thy father and thy mother.
6. Thou shalt not kill.
7. Thou shalt not commit adultery.
8. Thou shalt not steal.
9. Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbor.
10. Thou shalt not covet thy neighbor’s house.
In that shape they contain everything that is fundamentally
important, and exhibit the foundations of the Mosaic religion and
polity in an entirely satisfactory and credible form.
But, before passing on to consider the substance of the Decalogue,
it will be worth our while to consider what the full significance of
these differing recensions of the Decalogue is. In both places the
words are quoted directly as having been spoken by Yahweh to the
people, and they are introduced by the quoting word "saying." Now if
we do not wish to square what we read with any theory, the slight
divergences between the two recensions need not trouble us, for we
have the substance of what was said, and in the main the very words,
and that is really all we need to be assured of. But if, on the
contrary, we are going to insist that, this being part of an
inspired book, every word must be pressed with the accuracy of a
masoretic scribe, then we are brought into inextricable
difficulties. It cannot be true that at Horeb Yahweh said two
different things on this special occasion. One or both of these
accounts must be inaccurate, in the pedantic sense of accuracy, and
yet both have the same claim to be inspired. In fact both are
inspired; it is the theory of inspiration which demands for
revelation this kind of accuracy that must go to the wall.
It will be seen that this instance is very instructive as to the
method of the ancient Hebrews in dealing with legislation which was
firmly held to be Mosaic, or even directly Divine. If we are right
in holding that originally the ten words were, as we have supposed,
limited to definite short commands, this example teaches us that
where there could be no question of deceit, or even an object for
deceiving, additions calculated to meet the needs and defects of the
particular period at which the laws are written down, are inserted
without any hint that they did not form part of the original
document. If this has been done, even to the extent we have seen
reason to infer, in a small, carefully ordered, and specially
ancient and sacred code, how much more freely may we expect the same
thing to have been done in the looser and more fluid regulations of
the large political and ceremonial codes, which on any supposition
were posterior, and much less fundamental and sacred. That there is
for us something disappointing, and even slightly questionable, in
such action is really nothing to the purpose. We have to learn from
the actual facts of revelation how revelation may be, or perhaps
even must be, conveyed; and we cannot too soon learn the lesson that
to a singular degree, and in many other directions than their
notions of accuracy, the ancient mind differs from the modern mind,
and that at any period there is a great gulf to be crossed before a
Western mind can get into any intimate and sure rapport with an
Eastern mind.
One other thing is noteworthy. Wellhausen has already been quoted as
to the quite universal and moral character of the Decalogue; and his
view, that a code so free from merely local and ceremonial
provisions can hardly be Mosaic, has been discussed. But, while
rejecting his conclusion, we must adhere to his premises. By
emphasizing the universal nature of the ten commandments, and by
showing that they preceded the ceremonial law by many centuries, the
critical school have cut away the ground from under the
semi-antinomian views once so prevalent, and always so popular, with
those who call themselves advanced thinkers. It is now no longer
possible to maintain that the Decalogue was part of a purely Jewish
law, binding only upon Jews and passing away at the advent of
Christianity as the ceremonial law did. Of course this view was
never really taken seriously in reference to murder or theft; but it
has always been a strong point with those who have wished to
secularize the Sunday. Now if the advanced critical position be in
any degree true, then the ten commandments stand quite separate from
the ceremonial law, have nothing in common with it, and are handed
down to us in a document written before the conception even of a
binding ceremonial law had dawned upon the mind of any man in
Israel. Nor is there anything ceremonial or Jewish in the command,
Remember or Observe the rest-day to keep it holy. In the reasons
given in Exodus and Deuteronomy we have the two principles which
make this a moral and universal command-the necessity for rest, and
the necessity of an opportunity to cultivate the spiritual nature.
Nothing indeed is said about worship; but it lies in the nature of
the case that if secular work was rigorously forbidden, mere
slothful abstinence from activity cannot have been all that was
meant. Worship, and instruction in the things of the higher life,
must certainly have been practiced in such a nation as Israel on
such a day; and we may therefore say that they were intended by this
commandment. Understood in that way, the fourth commandment shows a
delicate perception of the conditions of the higher life which
surpasses even the prohibition of covetousness in the tenth. In the
words of a working man who was advocating its observance, "It gives
God a chance"; that is, it gives man the leisure to attend to God.
But the moral point of view which it implies is so high, and so
difficult of attainment, that it is only now that the nations of
Europe are awaking to the inestimable moral benefits of the Sabbath
they have despised. Because of this difficulty too, many who think
themselves to be leaders in the path of improvement, and are
esteemed by others to be so, are never weary of trying to weaken the
moral consciousness of the people, until they can steal this benefit
away, on the ground that Sabbath-keeping is a mere ceremonial
observance. So far from being that, it is a moral duty of the
highest type; and the danger in which it seems at times to stand is
due mainly to the fact that to appreciate it needs a far more
trained and sincere conscience than most of us can bring to the
consideration of it.
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