From the
Catechism of the Catholic Church
THE TEN COMMANDMENTS
"Teacher, what must I do . . .?"
2052 "Teacher,
what good deed must I do, to have eternal life?" To the young man who asked
this question, Jesus answers first by invoking the necessity to recognize
God as the "One there is who is good," as the supreme Good and the source of
all good. Then Jesus tells him: "If you would enter life, keep the
commandments." And he cites for his questioner the precepts that concern
love of neighbor: "You shall not kill, You shall not commit adultery, You
shall not steal, You shall not bear false witness, Honor your father and
mother." Finally Jesus sums up these commandments positively: "You shall
love your neighbor as yourself."1
2053
To this
first reply Jesus adds a second: "If you would be perfect, go, sell what you
possess and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven; and
come, follow me."2 This reply does not do away with the first:
following Jesus Christ involves keeping the Commandments. The Law has not
been abolished,3 but rather man is invited to rediscover it in
the person of his Master who is its perfect fulfillment. In the three
synoptic Gospels, Jesus' call to the rich young man to follow him, in the
obedience of a disciple and in the observance of the Commandments, is joined
to the call to poverty and chastity.4 The evangelical counsels
are inseparable from the Commandments.
2054
Jesus
acknowledged the Ten Commandments, but he also showed the power of the
Spirit at work in their letter. He preached a "righteousness [which] exceeds
that of the scribes and Pharisees"5 as well as that of the
Gentiles.6 He unfolded all the demands of the Commandments. "You
have heard that it was said to the men of old, 'You shall not kill.' . . .
But I say to you that every one who is angry with his brother shall be
liable to judgment."7
2055
When
someone asks him, "Which commandment in the Law is the greatest?"8
Jesus replies: "You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, and
with all your soul, and with all your mind. This is the greatest and first
commandment. And a second is like it: You shall love your neighbor as
yourself. On these two commandments hang all the Law and the prophets."9
The Decalogue must be interpreted in light of this twofold yet single
commandment of love, the fullness of the Law:
- The commandments: "You shall not commit
adultery, You shall not kill, You shall not steal, You shall not covet,"
and any other commandment, are summed up in this sentence: "You shall
love your neighbor as yourself." Love does no wrong to a neighbor;
therefore love is the fulfilling of the law.10
The Decalogue in Sacred Scripture
2056
The word
"Decalogue" means literally "ten words."11 God revealed these
"ten words" to his people on the holy mountain. They were written "with the
finger of God,"12 unlike the other commandments written by Moses.13
They are pre-eminently the words of God. They are handed on to us in the
books of Exodus14 and Deuteronomy.15
Beginning with the Old Testament, the sacred books refer to the "ten words,"16
but it is in the New Covenant in Jesus Christ that their full meaning will
be revealed.
2057 The
Decalogue must first be understood in the context of the Exodus, God's great
liberating event at the center of the Old Covenant. Whether formulated as
negative commandments, prohibitions, or as positive precepts such as: "Honor
your father and mother," the "ten words" point out the conditions of a life
freed from the slavery of sin. The Decalogue is a path of life:
- If you love the LORD your God, by walking in his
ways, and by keeping his commandments and his statutes and his
ordinances, then you shall live and multiply.17
This liberating power of the Decalogue appears, for example, in the
commandment about the sabbath rest, directed also to foreigners and slaves:
- You shall remember that you were a servant in
the land of Egypt, and the LORD your God brought you out thence with a
mighty hand and an outstretched arm.18
2058 The "ten
words" sum up and proclaim God's law: "These words the Lord spoke to all
your assembly at the mountain out of the midst of the fire, the cloud, and
the thick darkness, with a loud voice; and he added no more. And he wrote
them upon two tables of stone, and gave them to me."19 For this
reason these two tables are called "the Testimony." In fact, they contain
the terms of the covenant concluded between God and his people. These
"tables of the Testimony" were to be deposited in "the ark."20
2059 The "ten
words" are pronounced by God in the midst of a theophany ("The LORD spoke
with you face to face at the mountain, out of the midst of the fire."21).
They belong to God's revelation of himself and his glory. The gift of the
Commandments is the gift of God himself and his holy will. In making his
will known, God reveals himself to his people.
2060 The gift
of the commandments and of the Law is part of the covenant God sealed with
his own. In Exodus, the revelation of the "ten words" is granted
between the proposal of the covenant22 and its conclusion - after
the people had committed themselves to "do" all that the Lord had said, and
to "obey" it.23 The Decalogue is never handed on without first
recalling the covenant ("The LORD our God made a covenant with us in
Horeb.").24
2061
The
Commandments take on their full meaning within the covenant. According to
Scripture, man's moral life has all its meaning in and through the covenant.
The first of the "ten words" recalls that God loved his people first:
- Since there was a passing from the paradise of
freedom to the slavery of this world, in punishment for sin, the first
phrase of the Decalogue, the first word of God's commandments, bears on
freedom "I am the LORD your God, who brought you out of the land of
Egypt, out of the house of slavery."25
2062
The
Commandments properly so-called come in the second place: they express the
implications of belonging to God through the establishment of the covenant.
Moral existence is a response to the Lord's loving initiative. It is
the acknowledgement and homage given to God and a worship of thanksgiving.
It is cooperation with the plan God pursues in history.
2063 The
covenant and dialogue between God and man are also attested to by the fact
that all the obligations are stated in the first person ("I am the Lord.")
and addressed by God to another personal subject ("you"). In all God's
commandments, the singular personal pronoun designates the recipient. God
makes his will known to each person in particular, at the same time as he
makes it known to the whole people:
- The Lord prescribed love towards God and taught
justice towards neighbor, so that man would be neither unjust, nor
unworthy of God. Thus, through the Decalogue, God prepared man to become
his friend and to live in harmony with his neighbor. . . . The words of
the Decalogue remain likewise for us Christians. Far from being
abolished, they have received amplification and development from the
fact of the coming of the Lord in the flesh.26
The Decalogue in the Church's Tradition
2064 In fidelity to Scripture and in conformity with the example
of Jesus, the tradition of the Church has acknowledged the primordial
importance and significance of the Decalogue.
2065 Ever since St. Augustine, the Ten
Commandments have occupied a predominant place in the catechesis of
baptismal candidates and the faithful. In the fifteenth century, the custom
arose of expressing the commandments of the Decalogue in rhymed formulae,
easy to memorize and in positive form. They are still in use today. The
catechisms of the Church have often expounded Christian morality by
following the order of the Ten Commandments.
2066 The division and numbering of the
Commandments have varied in the course of history. The present catechism
follows the division of the Commandments established by St. Augustine, which
has become traditional in the Catholic Church. It is also that of the
Lutheran confessions. The Greek Fathers worked out a slightly different
division, which is found in the Orthodox Churches and Reformed communities.
2067 The Ten
Commandments state what is required in the love of God and love of neighbor.
The first three concern love of God, and the other seven love of neighbor.
- As charity comprises the two commandments to
which the Lord related the whole Law and the prophets . . . so the Ten
Commandments were themselves given on two tablets. Three were written on
one tablet and seven on the other.27
2068
The
Council of Trent teaches that the Ten Commandments are obligatory for
Christians and that the justified man is still bound to keep them;28
the Second Vatican Council confirms: "The bishops, successors of the
apostles, receive from the Lord . . . the mission of teaching all peoples,
and of preaching the Gospel to every creature, so that all men may attain
salvation through faith, Baptism and the observance of the Commandments."29
The unity of the Decalogue
2069 The
Decalogue forms a coherent whole. Each "word" refers to each of the others
and to all of them; they reciprocally condition one another. The two tables
shed light on one another; they form an organic unity. To transgress one
commandment is to infringe all the others.30 One cannot honor
another person without blessing God his Creator. One cannot adore God
without loving all men, his creatures. The Decalogue brings man's religious
and social life into unity.
The Decalogue and the natural law
2070 The Ten
Commandments belong to God's revelation. At the same time they teach us the
true humanity of man. They bring to light the essential duties, and
therefore, indirectly, the fundamental rights inherent in the nature of the
human person. The Decalogue contains a privileged expression of the natural
law:
- From the beginning, God had implanted in the
heart of man the precepts of the natural law. Then he was content to
remind him of them. This was the Decalogue.31
2071 The
commandments of the Decalogue, although accessible to reason alone, have
been revealed. To attain a complete and certain understanding of the
requirements of the natural law, sinful humanity needed this revelation:
- A full explanation of the commandments of the
Decalogue became necessary in the state of sin because the light of
reason was obscured and the will had gone astray.32
We know God's commandments through the divine revelation proposed to us
in the Church, and through the voice of moral conscience.
The obligation of the Decalogue
2072
Since
they express man's fundamental duties towards God and towards his neighbor,
the Ten Commandments reveal, in their primordial content, grave
obligations. They are fundamentally immutable, and they oblige always and
everywhere. No one can dispense from them. The Ten Commandments are engraved
by God in the human heart.
2073 Obedience to the Commandments also implies obligations in
matter which is, in itself, light. Thus abusive language is forbidden by the
fifth commandment, but would be a grave offense only as a result of
circumstances or the offender's intention.
"Apart from me you can do nothing"
2074 Jesus
says: "I am the vine, you are the branches. He who abides in me, and I in
him, he it is that bears much fruit, for apart from me you can do nothing."33
The fruit referred to in this saying is the holiness of a life made fruitful
by union with Christ. When we believe in Jesus Christ, partake of his
mysteries, and keep his commandments, the Savior himself comes to love, in
us, his Father and his brethren, our Father and our brethren. His person
becomes, through the Spirit, the living and interior rule of our activity.
"This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you."34
IN BRIEF
2075 "What good deed must I do, to have eternal life?" - "If you
would enter into life, keep the commandments" (Mt 19:16-17).
2076 By his life and by his preaching Jesus attested to the
permanent validity of the Decalogue.
2077 The gift of the Decalogue is bestowed from within the
covenant concluded by God with his people. God's commandments take on their
true meaning in and through this covenant.
2078 In fidelity to Scripture and in conformity with Jesus'
example, the tradition of the Church has always acknowledged the primordial
importance and significance of the Decalogue.
2079 The Decalogue forms an organic unity in which each "word" or
"commandment" refers to all the others taken together. To transgress one
commandment is to infringe the whole Law (cf. Jas 2:10-11).
2080 The Decalogue contains a privileged expression of the natural
law. It is made known to us by divine revelation and by human reason.
2081 The Ten Commandments, in their fundamental content, state
grave obligations. However, obedience to these precepts also implies
obligations in matter which is, in itself, light.
2082 What God commands he makes possible by his grace.
1 Mt 19:16-19.
2 Mt 19:21.
3 Cf. Mt 5:17.
4 Cf. Mt 19:6-12,21,23-29.
5 Mt 5:20.
6 Cf. Mt 5:46-47.
7 Mt 5:21-22.
8 Mt 22:36.
9 Mt 22:37-40; cf. Deut 6:5; Lev 19:18.
10 Rom 13:9-10.
11 Ex 34:28; Deut 4:13; 10:4.
12 Ex 31:18; Deut 5:22.
13 Cf. Deut 31:9-24.
14 Cf. 20:1-17.
15 Cf. Deut 5:6-22.
16 Cf. for example Hos 4:2; Jer 7:9; Ezek 18:5-9.
17 Deut 30:16.
18 Deut 5:15.
19 Deut 5:22.
20 Ex 25:16; 31:18; 32:15; 34:29; 40:1-2.
21 Deut 5:4.
22 Cf. Ex 19.
23 Cf. Ex 24:7.
24 Deut 5:2.
25 Origen, Hom. in Ex. 8,1:PG 12,350; cf. Ex 20:2; Deut
5:6.
26 St. Irenaeus, Adv. haeres., 4,16, 3-4:PG 7/1,1017-1018.
27 St. Augustine, Sermo 33,2,2:PL 38,208.
28 Cf. DS 1569-1570.
29 LG 24.
30 Cf. Jas 2:10-11.
31 St. Irenaeus, Adv. haeres. 4,15,1:PG 7/l,1012.
32 St. Bonaventure, Comm. sent. 4,37,1,3.
33 Jn 15:5.
34 Jn 15:12.
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