From Deseret News archives:
Thou shalt not ... underestimate impact of the Ten Commandments
"Word choice is really important," adds Richard Aaron, professor of law at the U. "There's absolutely no doubt that the Ten Commandments affected much of our laws, and no doubt that the Ten Commandments influenced our law and absolutely no doubt that the Ten Commandments were not at all the foundation of our legal system."
Assertions to the contrary continue to surface. Consider, for example, the notation at the bottom of postings of the Ten Commandments once required in every public school classroom in Kentucky: "Secular application of the Ten Commandments is clearly seen in its adoption as the fundamental legal code of Western civilization and the Common Law of the United States."
Why not just reduce and rewrite the Ten Commandments, argues writer Gregg Easterbrook, reprising them as six imperatives about murder, adultery, stealing, bearing false witness, honoring parents and loving your neighbor as yourself. "In these words are everything we need to ground a revival of public character, without the slightest worry of constitutional challenge," he says, so it would be OK to post this revision in schools and other government buildings.
But for many Ten Commandments proponents, and indeed for many people of faith, the first four of the original 10 are crucial. For these people, says the U.'s Crowe, "the foundation for the other commandments is God, so God has to be acknowledged or the other commandments have no support."
The difference comes down to a question of where morality originates: from God or from people.
Comments
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110
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