The Ten Commandments of God can be summed up as a summary of all the laws we were created with. The Ten Commandments started off with the words, "Thou shalt have no other gods before me." What people do not realize is that the commandments in the Ten Commandments of God are for everyone, and not just for the Israelites. Moses explained in the Bible that if we keep the commandments, then he would help save the Israelites from their enemies.
The Ten Commandments are basically a summarized version within the entire Torah Law. The entire law contained the ways to commit adultery, how to deal with economic issues, how to deal with food scarcity etc. But as Romans and Galatia declare, the ten commandments were only a schoolmaster to teach the Israelites that it was impossible for them to keep the commandments. So, in fact, the ten commandments found in the Torah are summed up to say that we should love our neighbor as ourselves.
It was after the death of Moses, that the Ten Commandments of God became part of the Mosaic Law. When the Israelites left Egypt, their sacred documents were lost. They therefore had to write these laws on tablets which were later discovered at Mount Sinai.
Therefore, we have kept the commandments - we want to obey the Lord thy God; he alone knows whom he is speaking to. The first commandment starts off with, "Spake unto the children of Israel, saying, Behold, thou art consecrated to me with this vow", and it ends with, "Behold, thou art consecrated to me with this vow, to do no wrong". The entire tablet is written on tablets of stone. The ten commandments begin with the word, "commandments". The only commandment that starts or ends with a throne is, "thou shall keep My commandments".
The first commandment also begins with the word, "commandments", and is written on a tablet of stone. The ten commandments begin again with the word, "commandments", and is written on another tablet. The third commandment is written on a tablet of stone and is also on another tablet that is used to record the life history of Ishmael, Abraham, Moses, and the elders of the Children of Israel. All these tablets bear the seal of the Presence. These tablets also bear witness to the presence of the Holy One of Israel, Jesus Christ.
The tablets also bear witness to the presence of the true religion, Christianity. In the book of Acts the Ten Commandments of God are repeated many times. At the time of Pentacles, the Ten Commandments of God were repeated over again. The people of Israel believed that if they obey God and His laws, they will inherit eternal life with Him. The ten commandments read like a chapter from the Bible and were essential for the New Testament religion.
When we read the ten commandments of God we find, they do not mention any kind of worship. It just reads as a message of warning to mankind. It commands that the people of Israel should not give any attention to their physical senses. The ten commandments of God do not urge them to raise their eyes to the sun or to the moon. Neither does it urge them to rejoice or to be glad. The ten commandments of God simply exhort the Israelites to remember the Lord.
The ten commandments of God say, "Thou shall not make them come to hurt. Thou shall not oppress them, neither shall thy human possession be defiled. The voice of the Lord is unto all people, but the judgments of the Lord are in favor of the children of Israel." The ten commandments of God also state, "Behold, thou art consecrated to me with this Sign, according to the counsel of thyself." This information clearly shows us that the people of Israel were never given the right to worship on their own for God promised in Deuteronomy to them that he would take care of them and keep his ways.



















