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  • No document in world history so changed the world for the better as did the Ten Commandments.

  • Western civilization -- the civilization that developed universal human rights,

  • created women's equality, ended slavery,

  • created parliamentary democracy among other unique achievements -- would not have developed without them.

  • As you will see when each of the Ten Commandments is explained,

  • these commandments are as relevant today as when they were given over 3,000 years ago.

  • In fact, they're so relevant that the Ten Commandments are all that is necessary

  • to make a good world, a world free of tyranny and cruelty.

  • Imagine for a moment a world in which there was no murder or theft. In such a world, there

  • would no need for armies, or police, or weapons. Men and women and children could walk anywhere,

  • at any time of day or night, without any fear of being killed or robbed.

  • Imagine further a world in which no one coveted what belonged to their neighbor; a world in which children

  • honored their mother and father and the family unit thrived; a world in which people obeyed

  • the injunction not to lie. The recipe for a good world is all there -- in these ten sublime commandments.

  • But there is a catch. The Ten Commandments are predicated on the belief that they were

  • given by an Authority higher than any man, any king, or any government.

  • That's why the sentence preceding the Ten Commandments asserts the following:

  • "God spoke all these words."

  • You see, if the Ten Commandments, as great as they are, were given by any human authority,

  • then any person could say: "Who is this man Moses, who is this king or queen; who is this

  • government to tell me how I should behave? Okay, so why is God indispensable to the Ten Commandments?

  • Because, to put it as directly as possible, if it isn't God who declares murder wrong,

  • murder isn't wrong.

  • Yes, this strikes many people today as incomprehensible, even absurd.

  • Many of you are thinking, "Is this guy saying you can't be a good person

  • if you don't believe in God?"

  • Let me respond as clearly as possible: I am not saying that.

  • Of course there are good people who don't believe in God, just as there are bad people who do.

  • And many of you are also thinking, "I believe murder is wrong. I don't need God to tell me."

  • Now that response is only half true. I have no doubt that if you're an atheist and you say you believe

  • murder is wrong, you believe murder is wrong. But, forgive me, you do need God to tell you.

  • We all need God to tell us. You see, even if you figured out murder is wrong on your own,

  • without God and the Ten Commandments, how do you know it's wrong?

  • Not believe it's wrong, I mean know it's wrong? The fact is that you can't.

  • Because without God, right and wrong are just personal beliefs. Personal opinions.

  • I think shoplifting is okay, you don't. Unless there is a God, all morality is just opinion and belief.

  • And virtually every atheist philosopher has acknowledged this.

  • Another problem with the view that you don't need God to believe that murder is wrong,

  • is that a lot of people haven't shared your view. And you don't have to go back very far

  • in history to prove this. In the twentieth century millions of people in Communist societies

  • and under Nazism killed about one hundred million people

  • -- and that doesn't count a single soldier killed in war.

  • So, don't get too confident about people's ability to figure out right from wrong without a Higher Authority.

  • It's all too easy to be swayed by a government or a demagogue or an

  • ideology or to rationalize that the wrong you are doing isn't really wrong.

  • And even if you do figure out what is right and wrong, God is still necessary. People who know the

  • difference between right and wrong do the wrong thing all the time. You know why?

  • Because they can. They can because they think no one is watching. But if you recognize that God

  • is the source of moral law, you believe that He is always watching.

  • So, even if you're an atheist, you would want people to live by the moral laws of the Ten Commandments.

  • And even an atheist has to admit that the more people who believe God gave them

  • -- and therefore they are not just opinion -- the better the world would be.

  • In 3,000 years no one has ever come up with a better system

  • than the God-based Ten Commandments for making a better world.

  • And no one ever will.

  • I'm Dennis Prager.

No document in world history so changed the world for the better as did the Ten Commandments.

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