Synopses & Reviews
Synopsis
An insightful and fresh perspective of the Ten Commandments reveals how this ancient text is the underpinning for social justice, equality, and the foundation of society.Each commandment is expanded beyond interpersonal morality to encompass the global economy and our hyper-connected age. Stealing, for example, is recast as the difference between the fair trade price of a commodity and what we pay. Keeping the Sabbath is recast as resistance to consumer culture, having enough.
The Ten Commandments are a resource for everyone, from the spiritual-but-not-religious to the deeply observant, who wants to resist injustice, heal our earth, and find personal dignity amid the free-for-alls of modern life.
We don't have to invent a bunch of new practices to meaningfully integrate our spirituality and politics. There is already a perfectly good set of ten of them, with as much progressive firepower as any of us can handle, that has existed for some 3000 years.
- Introduction: The Ten Commandments Are Practices of Liberation
- The First Commandment: You Shall Have No Other Gods Besides Me
- Dethrone the Modern Deities of Political, Social, and Corporate Power
- The Second Commandment: Do Not Make for Yourself a Sculpted Image; Do Not Bow to Them, Do Not Serve Them
- Accept No Substitutes for God's Power of Liberation
- The Third Commandment: Do Not Take the Name of God in Vain
- Defend the Goodness of God; Take Responsibility for Resistance and Change
- The Fourth Commandment: Observe the Sabbath Day and Keep it Holy
- Squander One Day Every Week
- The Fifth Commandment: Honor Your Father and Your Mother
- Stay Accountable to Where You Came From
- The Sixth Commandment: Do Not Kill
- Renounce Human and Ecological Violence
- The Seventh Commandment: Do Not Commit Adultery
- Stay In for the Long Run, Reject Throw-Away Culture
- The Eighth Commandment: Do Not Steal
- Pay What Stuff Really Costs in Fair Wages and the Planet's Resources
- The Ninth Commandment: Do Not Testify Against Your Neighbor As a Lying Witness
- Speak and Demand Truth in Every Sphere - Home, Corporations, Government
- The Tenth Commandment: Do Not Covet
- Practice Your Liberation--You Have Enough, You Are Enough
Synopsis
Ana Levy-Lyons, a public theologian who is equally at home in secular and religious worlds, offers a deeply perceptive reinterpretation of the Ten Commandments for our modern lives. The Ten Commandments are a spiritual resource for social justice. A politically and spiritually brazen prescription for living, the Ten Commandments would turn our world upside down if we actually followed them. Far from being only ethical norms on which everyone already agrees or a remnant of a bygone oppressive era, the Commandments are actually countercultural practices.
Today the Ten Commandments are a divisive part of American culture. Religious conservatives champion them, even if they don't always practice them. Religious liberals and the nonreligious may bristle at what they perceive as antiquated moral restrictions. But, this ancient code still has vital contemporary relevance. Rev. Levy-Lyons explores ways the Commandments bring us meaning, illuminate our values, and help us navigate through the turbulent waters of social injustice, environmental crises, and societal inequity.
No Other Gods looks at each Commandment in new ways, moving beyond interpersonal morality to the global economy and our hyper-connected age. From the first, You Shall Have No Other Gods Besides Me (Dethrone the Modern Deities of Political, Social, and Corporate Power), to the tenth Do Not Covet (Practice Your Liberation-You Have Enough, You Are Enough)-and all those in between-she underscores how the Commandments can produce a bold spiritual consciousness.
Whether you are deeply religious or spiritual-but-not-religious, learn how the Ten Commandments can guide you to resist injustice, heal our earth, and find personal dignity amid the free-for-alls of modern life. "We don't have to invent a bunch of new practices for a meaningful way to live out our spirituality and social justice politics," says Levy-Lyons. "There is a perfectly good set of ten of them, all ready to go, with as much progressive firepower as any of us can handle, that has existed for some three thousand years."