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Easton's Bible Dictionary

 

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Commandments, the Ten
        (Ex. 34:28; Deut. 10:4, marg. "ten words") i.e., the Decalogue
        (q.v.), is a summary of the immutable moral law. These
        commandments were first given in their written form to the
        people of Israel when they were encamped at Sinai, about fifty
        days after they came out of Egypt (Ex. 19:10-25). They were
        written by the finger of God on two tables of stone. The first
        tables were broken by Moses when he brought them down from the
        mount (32:19), being thrown by him on the ground. At the command
        of God he took up into the mount two other tables, and God wrote
        on them "the words that were on the first tables" (34:1). These
        tables were afterwards placed in the ark of the covenant (Deut.
        10:5; 1 Kings 8:9). Their subsequent history is unknown. They
        are as a whole called "the covenant" (Deut. 4:13), and "the
        tables of the covenant" (9:9, 11; Heb. 9:4), and "the
        testimony."
        They are obviously "ten" in number, but their division is not
        fixed, hence different methods of numbering them have been
        adopted. The Jews make the "Preface" one of the commandments,
        and then combine the first and second. The Roman Catholics and
        Lutherans combine the first and second and divide the tenth into
        two. The Jews and Josephus divide them equally. The Lutherans
        and Roman Catholics refer three commandments to the first table
        and seven to the second. The Greek and Reformed Churches refer
        four to the first and six to the second table. The Samaritans
        add to the second that Gerizim is the mount of worship. (See LAW
Bibliography Information
Easton, Matthew George. M.A., D.D., "Biblical Meaning for 'Commandments, the Ten' Eastons Bible Dictionary".
bible-history.com - Eastons; 1897.

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