The priest's service on this occasion ... meant to be carried out every year ... is described in detail in Leviticus; start at Chapter 16.
It means that if you are able to obey the first commandment, "thou shall not kill" then you should be able to obey the other nine.
The fourth 'commandment' is to keep Shabbat which Jews most definitely do.
Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy.
In the Torah, there is a commandment not to take God's name in vain. One simple way to keep such a commandment is to avoid pronouncing the name at all. This can be seen as an example of "making a fence around the Torah," that is, avoiding doing things that are permitted in order to make the decision about what is and is not permitted easy and eliminate the risk of accidentally violating some commandment. When the second Temple still stood in Jerusalem, the Talmud relates that the only person who ever pronounced God's name was the High Priest, who pronounced it only once per year, on Yom Kippur.
There is no such commandment. The reason for this notion is a tradition that started with the commandment "Keep Holy the Sabbath Day." It was interpreted to mean that people should not labor gainfully on the Sabbath. Sunday is, however, not the Sabbath. The fact that Sunday is the holy day of the week is a Christian tradition.
Yes. Exodus 20:8, " Remember the Sabbath day and keep it holy" (Wikipedia)
because a society cant continue to operate if a person cannot keep that which he earned.
The Second Commandment forbids idolatry. The worship of any object or creation is both a distraction from and an affront to God. This was important to keep the Israelites from being influenced by the religious of the people around them.
Protestants, Jews and Catholics number the commandments differently. To Protestants and Jews, the second commandment deals mostly with idolatry and has no effect of vows. To Catholics, the second commandment forbids taking God's name in vain, which can be interpreted as forbidding taking a vow in God's name with the intent not to keep it.
Yes, in Elie Wiesel's Night, Chlomo urges his son not to fast on Yom Kippur because he believes they need to keep up their strength in order to survive. Chlomo emphasizes the importance of self-preservation given their dire circumstances in the concentration camp.
Because when you believe in Jesus, you get the power from the Holy Spirit to obey commandments. Commandments are eternal moral law. You must keep it to get eternal life. People forget the Sabbath commandment. Only Seventh Day Adventists keep it, I think. Catholic Church is antichrist in the Bible because it changed that commandment, sabbath-saturday to sunday. In Book of Daniel Vatican is the "small horn".
I ask if anyone dropped it and if no one claimed it i would keep it.