chacko said:
I am a theistic evolutionist, but I am having some major problems with understanding the 10 commandments. Creationists often use them as 'proof' that God created the earth in 7 literal days and did not intend anyone to believe otherwise. But what really gets to me is what Exodus 31:18 says:
'When God have finished speaking to Moses on Mount Sinai; he gave him the two stone tablets on which God himself had written the commandments.'
Now if we are to assume the earth was not created in 7 literal days, then what does this do for the credibility of the Bible? If 'God himself' is reported to give flawed commandments, then what can we believe? If this is wrong, doesn't it shed immense suspicion on anything reported to have been said or done by God in the Old Testament? Not to mention suspicion on Jesus himself, as following the 10 commandments was one of his teachings. If they were wrong, why did he promote them?
This question is made even more pertinent by Moses' recitation of the 10 commandments in Deuteronomy 5.
Because in that recitation, Moses does not mention the days of creation at all.
When we come to the commandment on the Sabbath, Moses says:
"Observe the sabbath day and keep it holy as the LORD your God commanded you to do. Six days shall you labour and do all your work. But the seventh day is a sabbath to the LORD your God; you shall not do any work---you or your son......
Remember that you were a slave in the land of Egypt, and the LORD your God brought you out from there with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm; therefore the LORD your God commanded you to keep the sabbath day."
Emphasis added
What are we to make of this? Why would Moses give in Deuteronomy a completely different reason for the sabbath than the reason God wrote on the stone tablets?
I suggest two possible ways to deal with this issue. The first is this:
Neither the creation reference in Exodus, nor the slavery reference in Deuteronomy, is an actual part of the commandment and neither was written on the stone tablet. What was written on the tablet ends with "you shall not do any work---you, your son or your daughter, your male or female slave, your livestock or the alien resident in your towns."
That ends the commandment. The section beginning "For in six days..." or "Remember that you were a slave...." is Moses' commentary on why this commandment is included, and in Exodus he gives one reason and in Deuteronomy he gives another. Both are valid reasons for the commandment, but neither is a part of the commandment itself. So neither was written on the stone tablet by God. Only the actual command was so written.
The second possible solution is the one I prefer. It is this:
The scholars who developed the documentary thesis are correct. None of the Torah was written by Moses. There are various strands of writing which were assembled into the Torah during the Babylonian exile. One writer (D) wrote the story of the 10 commandments with one explanation for the Sabbath day and another writer (P) wrote the story of the 10 commandments using a different explanation.
Note that P wrote the Exodus version, referring to the six days of creation and also wrote Genesis 1, the only other place where the six days of creation are mentioned, and clearly ties them in Gen. 2:1-4a with the institution of the sabbath.
D--the Deuteronomist, writing independently from P, apparently learned a different version of why the sabbath was instituted.
A final note.
It is interesting that the bible does not refer to either of these passages as the 10 commandments. The only time this phrase is used in scripture is in reference to a still different group of 10 commandments in Exodus 34. This group of commandments also includes a short version of the command to keep the sabbath, but without any explanation as to why.
According to the Documentary thesis, this version of the 10 commandments was written by the Yahwist (J) who wrote the second creation story beginning at Genesis 2:4b.