Commandment: Difference between revisions

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* ''[[Covenant]]'' establishes where commandment binds.
* ''[[Covenant]]'' establishes where commandment binds.
* ''[[Sin]]'' names the breaking of a commandment within covenant.
* ''[[Sin]]'' names the breaking of a commandment within covenant.
* ''[[Practice]]'' gives commandment concrete form over time.
* ''[[Prayer]]'' gives commandment concrete form over time.
* ''[[Grace]]'' sustains faithfulness where commandment is broken.
* ''[[Grace]]'' sustains faithfulness where commandment is broken.
* ''[[Jurisdiction]]'' limits who may name or appeal to commandment.
* ''[[Jurisdiction]]'' limits who may name or appeal to commandment.
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It governs faithful conduct within a [[covenant]] freely held, calling persons toward love of [[God]] and [[neighbor]] without granting authority to compel or punish.
It governs faithful conduct within a [[covenant]] freely held, calling persons toward love of [[God]] and [[neighbor]] without granting authority to compel or punish.
== See also ==
* [[Glossary]]

Latest revision as of 14:51, 24 June 2026

Commandment names a binding obligation given within a Covenant that governs faithful conduct rather than enforces behavior.

In the Church of Humans, commandments do not function as universal law, moral code, or instrument of control. They bind only those who freely hold the Covenant within which the commandment is given.

How This Term Is Used Here

A commandment is not a rule imposed from outside, nor a principle inferred by reason alone. It is a word addressed within relationship.

Because covenant is freely undertaken, commandment carries real weight without coercion. To receive a commandment is to accept responsibility for one’s conduct, not to submit to surveillance or punishment.

Commandments therefore:

  • govern conduct rather than belief,
  • call forth faithfulness rather than conformity,
  • depend on recognition rather than enforcement.

Commandment and Christ

Christ summarizes commandment rather than multiplying it.

He receives the law and brings it to its fulfillment by naming its center:

These commandments do not abolish prior covenantal obligations, nor do they extend them to those outside their scope. They gather the meaning of faithfulness into a form that can be lived without domination.

Christ gives commandments as invitation and call, not as legal statute. Where they are refused, he does not compel obedience.

Commandment and Love

Commandment and love are not opposed.

Love gives commandment its content and its limit. Where a commandment is obeyed without love, it becomes hollow. Where love is claimed without responsibility, it becomes sentiment.

Within covenant, commandment protects love from being dissolved into impulse, and love protects commandment from becoming cruelty.

Commandment and Law

Law enforces behavior through authority and sanction. Commandment binds conduct through relationship and trust.

When commandments are treated as law:

  • jurisdiction is exceeded,
  • obedience replaces faithfulness,
  • harm is justified in the name of righteousness.

For this reason, commandments are never imposed beyond covenantal bounds.

Relation to Other Terms

  • Covenant establishes where commandment binds.
  • Sin names the breaking of a commandment within covenant.
  • Prayer gives commandment concrete form over time.
  • Grace sustains faithfulness where commandment is broken.
  • Jurisdiction limits who may name or appeal to commandment.

Summary

A commandment is a word that binds without force.

It governs faithful conduct within a covenant freely held, calling persons toward love of God and neighbor without granting authority to compel or punish.

See also