Hilarious 10-Commandments criticism from Slate

by Phantom Stranger 47 Replies latest jw friends

  • Phantom Stranger
    Phantom Stranger

    (I have added italics where I felt like it :)

    Moore's Law The immorality of the Ten Commandments. By Christopher Hitchens
    Posted Wednesday, August 27, 2003, at 2:04 PM PT

    The row over the boulder-sized version of the so-called "Ten Commandments," and as to whether they should be exhibited in such massive shape on public property, misses the opportunity to consider these top-10 divine ordinances and their relationship to original intent. Judge Roy Moore is clearly, as well as a fool and a publicity-hound, a man who identifies the Mount Sinai orders to Moses with a certain interpretation of Protestantism. But we may ask ourselves why any sect, however primitive, would want to base itself on such vague pre-Christian desert morality (assuming Moses to be pre-Christian).

    The first four of the commandments have little to do with either law or morality, and the first three suggest a terrific insecurity on the part of the person supposedly issuing them. I am the lord thy god and thou shalt have no other ... no graven images ... no taking of my name in vain: surely these could have been compressed into a more general injunction to show respect. The ensuing order to set aside a holy day is scarcely a moral or ethical one, unless you assume that other days are somehow profane. (The Rev. Ian Paisley, I remember, used to refuse interviewers for Sunday newspapers even after it was pointed out to him that it's the Monday edition that is prepared on Sunday.) Whereas a day of rest, as prefigured in the opening passages of Genesis, is no more than organized labor might have demanded, perhaps during the arduous days of unpaid pyramid erection.

    So the first four commandments have almost nothing to do with moral conduct and cannot in any case be enforced by law unless the state forbids certain sorts of art all week, including religious and iconographic art—and all activity on the Sabbath (which the words of the fourth commandment do not actually require). The next instruction is to honor one's parents: a harmless enough idea, but again unenforceable in law and inapplicable to the many orphans that nature or god sees fit to create. That there should be no itemized utterance enjoining the protection of children seems odd, given that the commandments are addressed in the first instance to adults. But then, the same god frequently urged his followers to exterminate various forgotten enemy tribes down to the last infant, sparing only the virgins, so this may be a case where hand-tying or absolute prohibitions were best avoided.

    There has never yet been any society, Confucian or Buddhist or Islamic, where the legal codes did not frown upon murder and theft. These offenses were certainly crimes in the Pharaonic Egypt from which the children of Israel had, if the story is to be believed, just escaped. So the middle-ranking commandments, of which the chief one has long been confusingly rendered "thou shalt not kill," leave us none the wiser as to whether the almighty considers warfare to be murder, or taxation and confiscation to be theft. Tautology hovers over the whole enterprise.

    In much the same way, few if any courts in any recorded society have approved the idea of perjury, so the idea that witnesses should tell the truth can scarcely have required a divine spark in order to take root. To how many of its original audience, I mean to say, can this have come with the force of revelation? Then it's a swift wrap-up with a condemnation of adultery (from which humans actually can refrain) and a prohibition upon covetousness (from which they cannot). To insist that people not annex their neighbor's cattle or wife "or anything that is his" might be reasonable, even if it does place the wife in the same category as the cattle, and presumably to that extent diminishes the offense of adultery. But to demand "don't even think about it" is absurd and totalitarian, and furthermore inhibiting to the Protestant spirit of entrepreneurship and competition.

    One is presuming (is one not?) that this is the same god who actually created the audience he was addressing. This leaves us with the insoluble mystery of why he would have molded ("in his own image," yet) a covetous, murderous, disrespectful, lying, and adulterous species. Create them sick, and then command them to be well? What a mad despot this is, and how fortunate we are that he exists only in the minds of his worshippers.

    It's obviously too much to expect that a Bronze Age demagogue should have remembered to condemn drug abuse, drunken driving, or offenses against gender equality, or to demand prayer in the schools. Still, to have left rape and child abuse and genocide and slavery out of the account is to have been negligent to some degree, even by the lax standards of the time. I wonder what would happen if secularists were now to insist that the verses of the Bible that actually recommend enslavement, mutilation, stoning, and mass murder of civilians be incised on the walls of, say, public libraries? There are many more than 10 commandments in the Old Testament, and I live for the day when Americans are obliged to observe all of them, including the ox-goring and witch-burning ones. (Who is Judge Moore to pick and choose?) Too many editorialists have described the recent flap as a silly confrontation with exhibitionist fundamentalism, when the true problem is our failure to recognize that religion is not just incongruent with morality but in essential ways incompatible with it.

    Christopher Hitchens is a columnist for Vanity Fair and author of The Long Short War: The Postponed Liberation of Iraq.

    Article URL: http://slate.msn.com/id/2087621/

  • Phantom Stranger
    Phantom Stranger

    Well, I thought it was funny...

  • rem
    rem

    tres drole

    rem

  • DanTheMan
    DanTheMan
    exhibitionist fundamentalism

    I like that description, very accurate.

    Good article, shows how utterly banal the 10 commandments are.

  • Mary
    Mary

    I'm amazed people haven't bitched about the statue outside the UN that quotes Isaiah:

    "They will have to beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning shears. Nation will not lift up sword against nation, neither will they learn war any more."

    Seeing as this is also a direct quote from the OT, why are all these other religions whining about it and demanding that it be removed?

  • Yerusalyim
    Yerusalyim

    Personally, I find the article rather banal. Let the author criticize the skewed morality of Society instead of bitching because someone actually respects 10 of the 613 Commandments.

    Funny? No! "tres drole"? No! Insightful or thought provoking? Not at all! Petty? Quite! Flippant? Certainly! Relevant? Hardly! Insulting? Quite...which was quite obviously the point of the exercise...to couch disrespect...even hostility...in the guise of irony.

  • rem
    rem

    Yeru,

    Can you honestly defend the relevance of the 10 commandments in modern society?

    rem

  • rem
    rem

    Mary,

    As far as I know, there is no principle of separation of church and state at the UN... the UN is not a government, but an organization.

    Also, it completely misses the point. The scripture is a beautiful one that expresses the ideals of modern society. Just because the Bible is quoted doesn't make something religious. It's just like quoting poetry or any other literary work. The ten commandments are nothing like this. They are a part of barbarious and primitive laws that have nothing to do with our modern values.

    Also, as Judge Moore explained, the ten commandments monument was not just to express the ideals of western law. It was to "acknowledge god." Also, the monument turned into an idol that was worshiped by Moore's followers. This type of monument has no place in our secular government.

    rem

  • Yerusalyim
    Yerusalyim

    REM,

    I wish the 10 (or all 613) had MORE relevance in society today. We live in a society where NOTHING is sacredfirst thre commandments made irrelevant there...where adultery is winked at...stealing is common (ever "exagerate on your income tax return?) coveting drives the market...lying...well, what is the meaning of "IS" anyhow...society respects the role of parents so little that kids are allowed to abort and many other things, without parental consent...so no...I can't make the case that the 10 commandments are relevant...only that I wish they were.

    As to Judge Moore admitting that he was "acknowledging God" with the monument...well...yeah...that's pretty much what the State Constitution said he had to do.

  • rem
    rem
    I wish the 10 (or all 613) had MORE relevance in society today.

    Well besides the obvious ones that all societies have endorsed (lying, stealing, murder, etc.) there isn't much that is relevant to modern society. The sabbath day? Dietary restrictions? Treating women as property? No freedom of religion? The list goes on and on. I want none of that in my society - and even less codified in law.

    As to Judge Moore admitting that he was "acknowledging God" with the monument...well...yeah...that's pretty much what the State Constitution said he had to do.

    He can acknowledge god all he wants - it's a free country. You just can't promote a specific religion or god on government property (why not acknowledge Brahma?). Was he not able to do his job properly before without this monumnent? Also, the 'acknowledging god' issue is moot. It's just a sentence that includes the word 'god' in the preamble of the Alabama constitution. It's not a part of the body of the Alabama state constitution.

    rem

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