WHATEVER HAPPENED
TO THE TEN COMMANDMENTS?
By
Professor David Golinkin, Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies
The Torah reading for Shavuot is
the Ten Commandments. This is based on
the opinion of one of the tannaim (early Sages) found in three places in
rabbinic literature (Tosefta Megillah 3:5, ed. Lieberman p. 354; Yerushalmi
Megillah 3:7, fol. 74b; and Bavli Megillah 31a). This is, without a doubt, the result of the
rabbinic belief that the Torah was given on
Even so, it is very surprising
that we only read the Ten Commandments in public on Shavuot and
as part of the weekly portions of Yitro (Exodus 20) and Va'ethanan
(Deut.5). After all, the Bible itself
considered the Ten Commandments of seminal importance to the covenant between
God and the people of
Furthermore, Philo of Alexandria (first century C.E.) considered the Ten Commandments the essence of the entire Torah, which elaborates in detail what the Ten Commandments say in condensed form. A similar idea is found in the Talmud Yerushalmi (Shekalim 6:1, fol. 49d): Just as at sea there are huge waves with a host of little waves between them; so are there Ten Commandments, with a host of refinements and particular commandments of the Torah between them.
Five hundred years later, Rav Sa'adia Gaon (888-942) wrote azharot or liturgical hymns for Shavuot, in which all 613 commandments are distributed under the headings of each of the Ten Commandments (Siddur Rav Sa'adia Gaon, 1941).
A similar idea is found in Numbers Rabbah (13:15-16, ed. Mirkin, p. 71), edited in the twelfth century. That midrash states that there are 620 letters in the Ten Commandments; 613 letters refer to the 613 commandments and the other 7 refer to the seven days of Creation. "This comes to teach you that the entire world was created for the sake of the Torah."
Furthermore, Rabbi Levi claimed that the Ten Commandments are included in other central biblical passages such as the Shema (Yerushalmi Berakhot, Chapter 1, fol. 3c) and Leviticus Chapter 19, the beginning of Kedoshim (Leviticus Rabbah 24:5, ed. Margaliot, p. 557).
Therefore, given their centrality, why not read the Ten Commandments every day just as we read the Shema (Deut. 6 and 11 and Numbers 15) and The Song at the Sea (Exodus 15)?
The answer is that in the
Furthermore, the Dead Sea Scrolls discovered in 1947 include at least three small scrolls, which contain the Ten Commandments, the Shema (Deut. 6 and 11) and other selected passages from Deuteronomy and Exodus.
A more explicit reference is found in Mishnah Tamid 5:1, which states that the priests in the Temple used to recite every morning "The Ten Commandments, Shema (Deut. 6), V'haya im shamoa (Deut. 11) … Emet V'yatziv (the blessing after the Shema), the Avodah blessing (found today in the Amidah), and the Priestly Blessing."
Similarly, in Sifrei Devarim
(Piska 35, ed. Finkelstein, p. 63) the sages discussed the possibility of
including the Ten Commandments in the tefillin. Furthermore, seven tefillin fragments
discovered at
Which heretics did they have in mind? Theories include the early Christians or Philo or Gnostics or Samaritans or a group of Jews in the third century. In any case, the abolishment of the recitation stemmed from the fact that certain groups claimed that only the Ten Commandments were given to Moses at Sinai. Indeed, when Maimonides wanted to prevent the custom of standing when reading the Ten Commandments in public, he used a similar argument: "…and they think that the Torah contains different levels and some parts are better than others, and this is very bad…" In other words, standing for the reading of the Ten Commandments gives the impression that certain parts of the Torah are holier than others.
Despite this opposition, there were attempts to maintain the original custom or to renew it. Some Babylonian Amoraim tried to renew the custom in Sura and Nehardea, but other Amoraim objected (Bavli Berakhot 12a).
Rabbi Shlomo ben Adret, the
Rashba (
One generation
later, R. Jacob ben Asher (
Rabbi Shlomo Luria (
Indeed, some modern prayer books include the Ten Commandments. Yitzhak Baer printed them in his classic Avodat Yisrael (Rodelheim 1868) at the end of Shaharit after the Psalm for the Day as did the ArtScroll Siddur in our day (Ashkenazi version). In the Reform Gates of Prayer (New York, 1975), the Ten Commandments appear in the special themes section in the back.
It is difficult to choose sides
in this debate. On the one hand, the Ten
Commandments are very important to Judaism and it is good for Jews to recite
them daily and to know them by heart. On
the other hand, there is indeed a danger that people will think "there are
different levels in the Torah"; they will ignore the entire halakhic
system and observe only the Ten Commandments.
Therefore, it is good that our ancestors only required the reading of
the Ten Commandments in public three times a year, but encouraged their
recitation in private all year long. In
this fashion, we emphasize their importance without turning them into the only
important mitzvot.