I've heard of this before. Of the 42 in the rubik of the 125th chapter of the book of the dead you'd think that they'd be compleely inclusive of a generalized set of 10. I find strong similarities between "Thou shall not steal" and "I have not stolen" as well as lying and coveting another man's wife and murder. I see no correlation for having no other God before me, using God's name in vain, keeping the sabbath, or making likemesses of God. The former group being the basest of common sense regardless of what timeframe you've lived in. Collectively our own individual sense of right and wrong have agreed ,for long before popular religious inceptions, that these are bad things to do to each other. The latter finds no purpose unless you're forming a religion around a single diety. I can not comment on his motives, I wasn't there and I see nothing unethical about the commandments you're speaking about. Regardless of the initial reasoning are they not good personal rules to better your life?
To answer your question, Moses in some branches of Christianity is a pillar of their belief. The bible's OT foundaton rests a lot on his exploits. When speaking of Christianity generally though, I would say the only foundation of Christianity who's lived on this world would be Christ.
To answer your question, Moses in some branches of Christianity is a pillar of their belief. The bible's OT foundaton rests a lot on his exploits. When speaking of Christianity generally though, I would say the only foundation of Christianity who's lived on this world would be Christ.
"There ought to be a term that would designate those who actually follow the teachings of Jesus, since the word 'Christian' has been largely divorced from those teachings, and so polluted by fundamentalists that it has come to connote their polar opposite: intolerance, vindictive hatred, and bigotry." -- Philip Stater, Huffington Post
always working on cleaning my windows- me regarding Johari
always working on cleaning my windows- me regarding Johari