The Real Ten Commandments
By Richard Carrier

 I keep hearing this chant, variously phrased: "The Ten Commandments are the
foundation of Western morality and the American Constitution and government."
In saying this, people are essentially crediting Moses with the invention of
ethics, democracy and civil rights, a claim that is of course absurd. But its
absurdity is eclipsed by its injustice, for there is another lawmaker who is
far more important to us, whose ideas and actions lie far more at the
foundation of American government, and whose own Ten Commandments were
distributed at large and influencing the greatest civilizations of the
West--Greece and Rome--for well over half a millennia before the laws of
Moses were anything near a universal social influence. In fact, by the time
the Ten Commandments of Moses had any real chance of being the foundation of
anything in Western society, democracy and civil rights had all but died out,
never to rise again until the ideals of our true hero, the real man to whom
we owe all reverence, were rediscovered and implemented in what we now call
"modern democratic principles."

The man I am talking about is Solon the Athenian. Solon was born, we believe,
around 638 B.C.E., and lived until approximately 558, but the date in his
life of greatest importance to us is the year he was elected to create a
constitution for Athens, 594 B.C.E. How important is this man? Let's examine
what we owe to him, in comparison with the legendary author (or at last, in
legend, the transmitter) of the Judeo-Christian Ten Commandments. Solon is
the founder of Western democracy and the first man in history to articulate
ideas of equal rights for all citizens, and though he did not go nearly as
far in the latter as we have come today, Moses can claim no connection to
either. Solon was the first man in Western history to publicly record a civil
constitution in writing. No one in Hebrew history did anything of the kind,
least of all Moses. Solon advocated not only the right but even the duty of
every citizen to bear arms in the defense of the state--to him we owe the 2nd
Amendment. Nothing about that is to be found in the Ten Commandments of
Moses. Solon set up laws defending the principles and importance of private
property, state encouragement of economic trades and crafts, and a strong
middle class--the ideals which lie at the heart of American prosperity, yet
which cannot be credited at all to Moses.

Solon is the first man in history to eliminate birth as a basis for
government office, and to create democratic assemblies open to all male
citizens, such that no law could be passed without the majority vote of all.
The notion of letting women into full political rights would not arise in any
culture until that of modern Europe, but democracy never gets a single word
in the Bible. Solon invented the right of appeal and trial by jury, whereby
an assembly of citizens chosen at random, without regard for office or wealth
or birth, gave all legal verdicts. Moses can claim nothing as fundamental as
these developments, which are absolutely essential to modern society. The
concept of taking a government official to court for malfeasance we owe to
Solon. We read nothing of the kind about Moses. The idea of allowing
foreigners who have mastered a useful trade to immigrate and become citizens
is also an original invention of Solon--indeed, the modern concept of
citizenship itself is largely indebted to him. There is nothing like this in
the Bible. And like our own George Washington, Solon declined the offer to
become ruler in his country, giving it a Constitution instead--unlike Moses
who gave laws yet continued to reign. And Solon's selfless creation of the
Athenian constitution set the course which led to the rise of the first
universal democracy in the United States, and it was to Solon's Athens, not
the Bible, that our Founding Fathers looked for guidance in constructing a
new State. Moses can claim no responsibility for this. If we had Solon and no
Moses, we would very likely still be where we are today. But if we had Moses
and no Solon, democracy might never have existed at all.

So much for being the impetus behind our Constitution. The Ten Commandments
of Moses have no connection with that, while the Constitution of Solon has
everything to do with it. But what about ethics? Let us examine the Ten
Commandments offered by each of these men and compare their worth and
significance to Western society. Of course, neither man's list was unique to
him--Moses was merely borrowing ideas that had already been chiseled in stone
centuries before by Hammurabi, King of Babylon (and unlike the supposed
tablets of Moses, the Stone of Hammurabi still exists and is on display in
the Louvre). Likewise, Solon's Ten Ethical Dicta were a reflection and
refinement of wisdom that was already ancient in his day. And in both cases
the association of these men with their moral precepts is as likely legend as
fact, but the existence and reverence for their sayings in their respective
cultures was still real--and we can ask three questions: Which list of Ten
Commandments lies more at the heart of modern Western moral ideals? Which
contains concepts that are more responsible for our current social success
and humanity? And which is more profound and more fitting for a free society?

The Ten Commandments of Moses (Deuteronomy 5:6-21, Exodus 20:3-16) run as
follows--and I am even going out of my way to leave out the bounteous and
blatantly-religious language that actually surrounds them in the original
text, as well as the tacit approval of slavery present in the fourth
commandment, none of which is even remotely suitable for political
endorsement by a free republic:

1. Have no other gods before me [the God of the Hebrews].
2. Make no images of anything in heaven, earth or the sea, and do not worship
or labor for them.
3. Do not vainly use the name of your God [the God of the Hebrews].
4. Do no work on the seventh day of the week.
5. Honor your parents.
6. Do not kill.
7. Do not commit adultery.
8. Do not steal.
9. Do not give false testimony against another.
10. Do not desire another's wife or anything that belongs to another.

Now, we can see at once that our society is entirely opposed to the first
four, and indeed the last of these ten. As a capitalist society, we scoff at
the idea of closing our shops on a choice market day. And our very goal in
life is to desire--desiring is what drives us toward success and prosperity.
The phrase "seeking the American Dream," which lies at the heart of our
social world, has at its heart the very idea of coveting the success of our
peers, goading us to match it with our own industry, and we owe all our
monumental national success to this. Finally, our ideals of religious liberty
and free speech, essential to any truly civil society, compel us to abhor the
first three commandments. Thus, already half of Moses' doctrines cannot be
the foundation of our modern society--to the contrary, they are anathema to
modern ideals.

Of the rest, it can be assured that shunning adultery has never contributed
to the rise of civil rights and democratic principles (despite much trying,
there is no Adultery Amendment). It is naturally regarded as immoral--but
then it always has been, by all societies, before and since the time of
Moses, for the simple reason that it, like lying, theft, and murder, does
harm to others, and thus these commandments are as redundant as they are
unprofound. They can be more usefully summed up with just three words: do no
harm. These words comprise the first commandment of another Greek moralist
whose contribution to society lies at the very heart of modern reality: the
founder of scientific medicine, Hippocrates.

Finally, we are left with only one commandment, to honor our parents. This of
course has been a foundational principle of every society ever since such
things as "societies" existed. Yet the greatest advances in civil rights and
civic moral consciousness in human history occurred precisely as the result
not of obeying, but of disobeying this very commandment: the social
revolutions of the sixties, naturally abhorred by conservatives and yet
spearheaded by rebellious teenagers and young adults, nevertheless secured
the moral rights of women and minorities--something unprecedented in human
history--and by opposing the Vietnam  war, our children displayed for the
first time a massive popular movement in defense of the very pacifism which
Christians boast of having introduced into the world, yet are usually the
last to actually stand up for. It can even be said that our entire moral
ethos is one of thinking for ourselves, of rebellion and moral autonomy, of
daring to stand up against even our elders when our conscience compels it.
Thus, it would seem that even this commandment does not lie at the heart of
our modern society--it is largely an anachronism, lacking the essential
nuances that a more profound ethic promotes.

Let us now turn to the Ten Commandments of Solon (Diogenes Laertius, Lives of
Eminent Philosophers, 1.60), which run as follows:

1. Trust good character more than promises.
2. Do not speak falsely.
3. Do good things.
4. Do not be hasty in making friends, but do not abandon them once made.
5. Learn to obey before you command.
6. When giving advice, do not recommend what is most pleasing, but what is
most useful.
7. Make reason your supreme commander.
8. Do not associate with people who do bad things.
9. Honor the gods.
10. Have regard for your parents.

Unlike the Commandments of Moses, none of these is outdated or antithetical
to modern moral or political thought. Every one could be taken up by anyone
today, of any creed--except perhaps only one. And indeed, there is something
much more profound in these commandments. They are far more useful as
precepts for living one's life. Can society, can government, prevail and
prosper if we fail to uphold the First Commandment of Moses? By our own
written declaration of religious liberty for all, we have staked our entire
national destiny on the belief that we not only can get by without it, but we
ought to abolish it entirely. Yet what if we were to fail to uphold Solon's
first commandment? The danger to society would be clear--indeed, doesn't this
commandment speak to the heart of what makes or breaks a democratic society?
Isn't it absolutely fundamental that we not trust the promises of politicians
and flatterers, but elect our leaders and choose our friends instead by
taking the trouble to evaluate the goodness of their character? This, then,
can truly be said to be an ideal that is fundamental to modern moral and
political thought.

Now, two of the commandments of Solon are almost identical to those advocated
by Moses: do not speak falsely, and have regard for your parents. Of course,
Solon does not restrict his first injunction to false accusations or
testimony against others, as Moses does. Solon's commandment is more profound
and thus more fundamental, and is properly qualified by the other
commandments in just the way we believe is appropriate--for Solon's rules
allow one to lie if doing so is a good deed (no such prescription to do good
appears in the Ten Commandments of Moses). And whereas Moses calls us to
honor our parents (in the Hebrew, from kabed, "to honor, to glorify"),
Solon's choice of words is more appropriate--he only asks us to treat our
parents in a respectful way (in the Greek, from aideomai, "to show a sense of
regard for, to have compassion upon"), which we can do even if we disobey or
oppose them, and even if we disapprove of their character and thus have no
grounds to honor them.

In contrast with Moses, Solon wastes no words with legalisms--he sums up
everything in three words: do good things. This is an essential moral
principle, lacking from the commands of Moses, which allows one to qualify
all the others. And instead of simply commanding us to follow rules, Solon's
commandments involve significant social and political advice: temper our
readiness to rebel and to do our own thing (which Solon does not prohibit) by
learning first how to follow others; take care when making friends, and stick
by them; always give good advice--don't just say what people want to hear;
shun bad people. It can be said without doubt that this advice is exactly
what we need in order to be successful and secure--as individuals, as
communities, and even as a nation. The ideals represented by these
commandments really do rest at the foundation of modern American morality and
society, and would be far more useful for school children whose greatest
dangers are peer influence, rashness and naivete.

There is but one that might give a secularist pause: Solon's commandment to
honor the gods (in the Greek, timaô, "to honor, to revere, to pay due
regard"). Yet when we compare it to the similar First Three Commandments of
Moses, we see how much more Solon's single religious commandment can be made
to suit our society and our civic ideals: it does not have to restrict
religious freedom, for it does not demand that we believe in anyone's god or
follow anyone's religious rules. It remains in the appropriate plural. Solon
asks us to give the plethora of gods the regard that they are due, and we can
say that some gods are not due much--such as the racist gods and gods of
hellfire. In the end, it is good to be respectful of the gods of others,
which we can do even if we are criticizing them, even if we disbelieve in
them. This would remain true to our most prized American ethic of religious
liberty and civility. Though it might better be rendered now, "Respect the
religions of others," there is something fitting in admitting that there are
many gods, the many that people invent and hope for.

It is clear then, that if anyone's commandments ought to be posted on school
and courthouse walls, it should be Solon's. He has more right as the founder
of our civic ideals, and as a more profound and almost modern moral thinker.
His commandments are more befitting our civil society, more representative of
what we really believe and what we cherish in our laws and economy. And
indeed, in the end, they are essentially secular. Is it an accident that when
Solon's ideals reigned, there grew democracies and civil rights, and ideals
we now consider fundamental to modern Western society, yet when the ideals of
Moses replaced them, we had a thousand years of oppression, darkness, and
tyranny? Is it coincidence that when the ideals of Moses were replaced with
those of Solon, when men decided to fight and die not for the Ten
Commandments but for the resurrection of Athenian civil society, we ended up
with the great Democratic Revolutions and the social and legal structures
that we now take for granted as the height and glory of human achievement and
moral goodness? I think we owe our thanks to Solon. Moses did nothing for
us--his laws were neither original nor significant in comparison. When people
cry for the hanging of the Ten Commandments of Moses on school and court
walls, I am astonished. Solon's Ten Commandments have far more right to hang
in those places than those of Moses. The Athenian's Commandments are far more
noble and profound, and far more appropriate to a free society. Who would
have guessed this of a pagan? Maybe everyone of sense.

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