LOS ANGELES, Calif. — A 17-foot-tall modernist statue stands in the atrium of Hebrew Union College in Los Angeles. Shards of broken metal lie at the figure’s feet, and he raises a rectangular slab over his head, about to dash it against the ground. This is a statue of Moses.
“It's trying to capture the moment when he goes down and sees the Golden Calf and gets so angry that he smashes the first set of the tablets," says professor of Bible Kristine Henriksen Garroway.
The tablets represent the 10 Commandments. For some, what the Commandments are seems straightforward. But those who study and teach the text say context and nuance are everything.
Garroway explains that for Jews, the 10 Commandments — listed in both the biblical books of Exodus and Deuteronomy — are just the beginning.
“That's a stand-in for the entire Torah,” she says, “for the entire revelation and covenant that was given to the Jewish people.”
It’s a covenant that includes 613 laws about which ancient rabbis loved to argue.
“The one they really hone in on is Shabbat,” she explains, pointing out the two variations of the commandment governing a day of rest. “So the commandment to keep the Shabbat versus the commitment to remember the Shabbat. And different wording appears in Exodus and Deuteronomy.”
Much ink has been spilled about the nuances between the words keep and remember – just one example of multiple understandings of the text.
Evangelicals push for the Bible in the classroom
That millennia-old tradition of arguing over the exact text of the 10 Commandments has now moved to some U.S. public schools.
In Louisiana, a new law mandates that the 10 Commandments be displayed in all public school classrooms, and Oklahoma’s top education official hasordered that the Bible – including the 10 Commandments – be taught starting in the 5th grade.
Evangelical Christians are the main proponents of both these measures, and their understanding of the Commandments is somewhat different from those of Jews and many other Christians.
“It is a very important part of a covenantal relationship,” says Professor Kyong-Jin Lee, who teaches the Bible at Fuller Seminary, an evangelical school in Pasadena, California.
She says the 10 Commandments are crucial because they are “about how you relate with divinity vertically, and how you relate with your fellow human beings horizontally.”
Lee elaborates that the first five Commandments – including prohibitions against graven images and taking the Lord’s name in vain – are about the human relationship to God.
“God has delivered you from slavery in Egypt and he has walked with you all this time,” she explains. “You are going to become a nation. You're going to have an identity.”
The second five Commandments are about people’s relationships to each other – don’t lie, don’t covet.
“There are these basic guidelines,” Lee says, “and they will teach you how you can make major decisions in terms of the basic ethics.”
Those who pushed for the Louisiana law say the 10 Commandments were and continue to be an important, foundational, and influential document in American history.
Those who oppose the posting of the Commandments on legal grounds object, generally, to the fact that they are taken from specific Jewish and Christian religious scripture and insist on a specific relationship with the divine.
There are also religious objections to posting the Commandments. A federal lawsuit filed against Louisiana for its new law includes plaintiffs who are Jewish, Christian and Unitarian, as well as non-religious. The people of faith bringing that lawsuit say they object to it because they don’t want the state involved in their children’s religious education.
Public displays diminish context and nuance
The 10 Commandments are not meant to be understood out of context, says Marvin Sweeney, professor of Hebrew Bible at Claremont School of Theology in Los Angeles, a Methodist seminary. The language of the Commandments, he explains, comes from ancient treaty formulas that begin by stating the names of the parties and then go on to include the terms of the relationship going forward.
Teaching them as part of a world history or a world religions class is one thing, Sweeney says, but understanding the Commandments cannot be accomplished by simply displaying a specific version of them, even if Louisiana’s law also requires a brief description of how the Commandments influenced thought during the country’s founding.
They are complicated, he says. And they’re not even easy to count.
"When you look at the Ten Commandments, there are more than ten,” he says.
For example, in Judaism “I am the Lord Your God” is the First Commandment. But in the Roman Catholic tradition, that sentence is part of the First Commandment, which includes what Judaism lists as the second commandment: “Thou shalt have no other gods before me.”
Some traditions, Sweeney says, separate the commandments about coveting into multiple commandments, while others group the prohibition against coveting your neighbor’s wife and maidservant along with their house and their cattle.
He points out that “different traditions number them differently. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine different orders of the Ten Commandments.” And specific translations are laden with interpretation.
“Thou shalt not murder is sometimes rendered as thou shalt not kill,” Sweeney says. “The Hebrew means, specifically, ‘murder.’”
But Louisiana mandates the word “kill.” In fact, the wording of the 10 Commandments specified in the law isn’t a direct quote from either Exodus or Deuteronomy. The heavily edited lines are from the 17th-century King James Bible.
Hebrew Union College professor Kristine Henriksen Garroway opposes both the posting of the 10 Commandments in public schools and this playing fast and loose with the text, because doing so dishonors the very tradition from which the Commandments come.
“As a scholar of the ancient world,” she says, “this drives me nuts.”
Transcript
AYESHA RASCOE, HOST:
This month, the Louisiana Legislature mandated that the Ten Commandments be displayed in all public school classrooms. And Oklahoma's top education official has ordered that the Bible, including the Ten Commandments, be taught starting in the fifth grade. Those Ten Commandments seem straightforward, but as NPR religion correspondent Jason DeRose reports, context and nuance are everything.
JASON DEROSE, BYLINE: At Hebrew Union College in Los Angeles, Kristine Henriksen Garroway is taking me on a tour.
KRISTINE HENRIKSEN GARROWAY: This is our atrium. It is a historical part of the building.
DEROSE: She's a professor of Bible at the rabbinical seminary.
HENRIKSEN GARROWAY: And one of the art installations we have is a giant statue of Moses, and it's trying to capture the moment when he goes down and sees the golden calf and gets so angry that he smashes the first set of the tablets.
DEROSE: The tablets representing the Ten Commandments. For Jews, Garroway says, the Ten Commandments listed in both the biblical books of Exodus and Deuteronomy are just the beginning.
HENRIKSEN GARROWAY: That's a stand-in for the entire Torah, for the entire revelation and covenant that was given to the Jewish people.
DEROSE: A covenant that includes 613 laws, about which Garroway says ancient rabbis loved to argue.
HENRIKSEN GARROWAY: The one they really hone in on is Shabbat, so the commandment to keep the Shabbat versus the commandment to remember the Shabbat, and the different wording appears in Exodus and Deuteronomy.
DEROSE: It's a tradition of conversation that makes room for multiple understandings. But it's evangelical Christians who are the main proponents of posting the Ten Commandments in Louisiana classrooms and teaching the Bible in Oklahoma. Professor Kyong-Jin Lee teaches Bible at Fuller Seminary, an evangelical school in Pasadena. She says knowing the Ten Commandments is crucial.
KYONG-JIN LEE: It is a very important part of a covenantal relationship, which is about how you relate with divinity vertically and how you relate with your fellow human beings horizontally.
DEROSE: Meaning the first five, including no graven images and not taking the Lord's name in vain, are about God.
LEE: God has delivered you from slavery in Egypt, and he has walked with you all this time. You are going to become a nation. You're going to have an identity.
DEROSE: And the second five are about people's relationships to each other - don't lie, don't covet.
LEE: There are these basic guidelines, and they will teach you how you can make major decisions in terms of the basic ethics.
DEROSE: Necessary, says Lee, in any society. But they're not meant to be understood out of context, says Marvin Sweeney. He teaches Hebrew Bible at Claremont School of Theology in Los Angeles, a Methodist seminary. He says the commandments aren't even easy to count.
MARVIN SWEENEY: When you look at the Ten Commandments, there are more than ten. The different traditions number them differently - one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine different orders of the Ten Commandments.
DEROSE: For example...
SWEENEY: In Judaism, I am the Lord your God is the first commandment, and in the Roman Catholic Church, that is part of the first commandment, which includes what Judaism numbers as the second commandment, thou shalt have no other gods before me.
DEROSE: And Sweeney says specific translations are laden with interpretation.
SWEENEY: Thou shalt not murder is sometimes rendered as thou shalt not kill. The Hebrew lo tirtzach means specifically murder.
DEROSE: Louisiana mandates the word kill. In fact, the wording of the Ten Commandments specified in the law isn't a direct quote from either Exodus or Deuteronomy. It's heavily edited lines from the 17th century King James version. Hebrew Union College Professor Kristine Henriksen Garroway has this reaction to plucking highly altered biblical verses out of context and posting them anywhere.
HENRIKSEN GARROWAY: As a scholar of the ancient world, this drives me nuts.
DEROSE: Because not providing a fuller context and playing fast and loose with the text itself dishonors the very tradition from which the commandments come.
Jason DeRose, NPR News, Los Angeles.
(SOUNDBITE OF MUSIC) Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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