@Rufus @gdl
For those who cannot understand what is meant by the ten commandments representing the moral law of God, and are unable to see how this is so, and how and why it is spelled out in the Mosaic covenant. Deut 5:6-12 which is a reiteration of what was given in Ex 20.
1.
I am the Lord you God, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery. You shall have no other gods before me.
Moses himself fleshes this out in Deut 6:4-5 and is what Jesus quoted when asked which was the greatest commandment
"Hear o Israel: the Lord our God, the Lord is one. Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength."
What does that mean? Love Him perfectly and all the time as only Jesus did. Loving Him with all our heart, strength , and soul is shown in our obedience to Him, all the time and with all our strength and heart and soul. If we do that we will:
2. Have no other gods before Him.
3. We will not misuse His name.
4. We will observe the sabbath in it's spiritual intent, finding our true rest in Christ. (Hebrews 4) In the Mosaic covenant Law it was a reminder of their delivery from Egypt .(Deut 5:12-15) This covers our duty to God. The following six are out due to society and one another.
If we love the Lord with all our heart, and all our soul, and all our strength we will:
5. Honor our father and mother, as the Lord our God commanded us, so that we may live long and that it may go well with us.
6. We will not murder.
7. We will not commit adultery.
8. We will not steal.
9. We will not give false testimony against anyone.
10 We will not covet our neighbor's wife, or set our desire on our neighbor's house or land, or anything that belongs to our neighbor.
How are these things in the laws of the Mosaic covenant Law that define their meaning through legal stipulations? Deut 12-26 and Lev.
Moral
1
a
: of or relating to principles of right and wrong in behavior
: ETHICAL
moral judgments
b
: expressing or teaching a
conception of right behavior
a moral poem
c
: conforming to a standard of right behavior