Moses — "Observe the Sabbath day by keeping it holy, as the Lord your God has commanded y…"
Observe the Sabbath day by keeping it holy, as the Lord your God has commanded you.
Observe the Sabbath day by keeping it holy, as the Lord your God has commanded you.
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"Whoever takes a human life shall surely be put to death."
"I am not able to bear all this people alone, because it is too heavy for me."
"I beseech thee, shew me thy glory."
"Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom."
"The Lord your God is with you wherever you go."
The Fourth Commandment (Deuteronomy 5:12).
Date: c. 13th Century BCE (Traditional)
PhilosophicalFound in 1 providers: gemini
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Set aside one day each week as sacred, distinct from ordinary work and routine. Treat it as a dedicated pause, not an optional break. The instruction carries weight because it comes from a higher authority, not personal preference. It commands active observance—deliberate rest, reflection, and reverence—rather than passive leisure. The day itself becomes holy through how you choose to spend it, marked off from the other six.
Moses delivered this as part of the Ten Commandments received at Sinai, making it central to the legal code he gave Israel. As lawgiver, he framed rest as a binding ordinance, not a suggestion. Having led enslaved Hebrews out of Egypt, where labor was relentless, he institutionalized weekly rest as both worship and liberation. The Sabbath became a defining marker of Israelite identity, tying the people he shepherded directly to their covenant with God.
In the ancient Near East around the 13th century BCE, most societies had no concept of a fixed weekly rest day. Laborers, servants, and livestock worked continuously under agricultural and imperial demands. Egypt, from which the Israelites had escaped, relied on ceaseless forced labor. Mandating a communal day off—extended even to slaves, foreigners, and animals—was a radical social innovation. It carved sacred time into the calendar and set the Israelites visibly apart from surrounding polytheistic cultures.
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