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Two Tables of the Ten Commandments

A traditional term used within TST.

Two Tables of the Ten Commandments.

The Two Tables of the Ten Commandments is borrowed from the writing of Roger Williams and used in TST as a needed floor of separation between church and state. The first table points toward one’s relationship with God, the sacred, the unknown, and the unknowable. The second table points toward one’s relationship with other people. In TST, this split helps protect freedom of conscience while preserving the common ground we all must coexist on.

The common floor is simple: governments should not enforce first-table religion. A state should not decide which God people must worship, which church they must join, which prayer they must say, or which sacred doctrine they must accept. Those questions belong to conscience, family, religious community, and voluntary tradition. The state’s role is to protect civil peace, public safety, equal rights, and the shared moral ground needed for people of many faiths and no faith to live together.

This also gives TST a hook into the three major Abrahamic branches: Judaism, Islam, and Christianity. Each tradition can explore the first table in its own way. Religious communities can teach, guide, worship, interpret, and define their members’ relationship with the unknown and unknowable. But they should not use the state to force that relationship onto everyone else. The first table belongs to conscience. The second table overlaps with public life.

That is why the Two Tables of the Ten Commandments matters for TST Ethics. It honors religion without handing religion the state. It protects unbelief without making the state anti-religious. It gives Abrahamic faiths room to flourish while protecting the civic floor everyone must share. In this way, church-state separation is not hostility toward religion. It is the public condition that lets freedom of conscience survive.

The End.

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