Moses — "You shall not let any of your children pass through the fire to Molech."
You shall not let any of your children pass through the fire to Molech.
You shall not let any of your children pass through the fire to Molech.
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"You shall not round off the hair on your temples or mar the edges of your beard."
"I am not able to bear all this people alone, because it is too heavy for me."
"For the Lord your God is a consuming fire, a jealous God."
"Let my people go."
"You shall open wide your hand to your brother, to the needy and to the poor, in your land."
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This is a direct prohibition against sacrificing children by burning them as offerings to the god Molech. The command forbids participating in one of the most extreme religious practices of the surrounding cultures, where parents would give up their children to flames believing it secured divine favor, fertility, or protection. It draws an absolute moral line: human life, especially a child's, can never be used as a bargaining chip with any deity.
Moses delivered this law as part of the Sinai covenant that defined Israel as a people set apart from the pagan nations around them. As the lawgiver who led former slaves toward a homeland surrounded by Canaanite religion, he repeatedly warned against imitating neighboring rituals. Protecting children from ritual death fit his broader mission: establishing a legal code grounded in the sanctity of life, justice, and loyalty to one God rather than the bloody bargains of regional cults.
During the Late Bronze Age, child sacrifice was a known practice among Canaanite, Phoenician, and Ammonite peoples, with Molech worship involving infants placed on heated bronze arms or in fire pits. Archaeological evidence from Carthage and Levantine sites confirms the ritual. Israel was entering a land saturated with such cults, where fertility, harvest, and war outcomes were believed to depend on costly offerings. Banning the practice was both a moral rupture and a cultural declaration of independence.
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