Matthew 5:17-20; Galatians 3:15-29; Deuteronomy 6:4-9; Psalm 119:1-8
Washed in the Blood of the Lamb: The Ten Commandments and Confession & Absolution
The First Table: Commandments 1-3 – The Ten Commandments are God’s Holy Will
In the Name of the Father and of the + Son and of the Holy Spirit.
God created our first parents in His own image, in righteousness and holiness. God’s will was their will. Though they were free to choose otherwise, they had neither knowledge of evil nor desire for it. The serpent’s question, “Did God actually say…?” introduced something humanity had never known: a will set against God’s will. In that moment, everything changed.
By their fateful choice, they lost the image of God. They became unrighteous, unholy, and unclean, and their children after them. As we confess, we are conceived and born sinful, under the power of the devil, and would be lost forever unless delivered by Christ. There are now only two possibilities: the will of God, which is holy and life-giving, and every other will, which ends in death.
Even after the fall, Adam and Eve still knew God’s will, for His Law was written on their hearts. But now they feared it. They despised it. What was once their joy became their accusation. They regarded God’s holiness as a threat rather than a gift. And so they hid. They attempted to cover their shame. Yet such efforts are always futile. God is holy, and His holiness demands holiness. The alternative is death, not an injustice, but the wage of sin.
Yet God is holy, and God is merciful. The Lord did not destroy our first parents. He called them to repentance. He sought confession. But in their fear, they blamed one another, blamed creation, and even blamed God Himself. Still, instead of judgment, God spoke promise. The seed of the woman would crush the serpent’s head.
This promise sustained the faithful through the generations until the Lord established His covenant with Abraham. From him would come the heir through whom all nations would be blessed. Abraham believed the Lord, and it was counted to him as righteousness. Yet Isaac was not the fulfillment, only a shadow. So too were Jacob, Moses, and David. Each pointed forward to the One who was to come. In the fullness of time, God kept His promise in Jesus Christ, the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world.
Because the Law was given at Sinai centuries after Abraham, some are tempted to think of the Ten Commandments as secondary, perhaps even an afterthought. But this is not so. The Law did not begin at Sinai. It was written on human hearts from the beginning. The Commandments are not a later invention, but the eternal expression of God’s holy will. And that Law is perfect.
It is holy, righteous, and good. It defines goodness itself. When we keep it, we merely do what is required. When we fail, it condemns us. The Law cannot rescue us. It can only reveal our sin, showing us that we fall short in thought, word, and deed.
The Ten Commandments are God’s holy will. Before the fall, humanity lived in harmony with them. After the fall, they became both necessary and accusing. Humanity was divided between those who trusted the promise of a Savior and those who did not. Through Abraham, the promise was narrowed to a lineage. Through Israel, to a nation. Through prophecy, to a kingly line. And finally, to a humble household, Joseph and Mary.
St. Paul teaches that the Law served as a guardian until Christ came. It was given because of sin. It curbs outward evil. It reflects our corruption. It exposes the futility of self-justification. The Law silences every boast so that salvation may be received only by grace through faith in Christ.
The First Table of the Law, the first three Commandments, governs our relationship with God.
The First Commandment demands that we have no other gods. A god is anything we fear, love, or trust above all things, anything we rely upon for help or dread losing more than God Himself. The Commandment calls us to fear, love, and trust in God above all things.
The Second Commandment concerns God’s holy Name. If the First Commandment is kept, the Second naturally follows. But if the First is broken, the others collapse with it. God’s Name is not to be misused, but treated as holy — invoked in prayer, praise, and thanksgiving, and never used for deceit or falsehood.
The Third Commandment flows from the first two. To keep the Sabbath holy is not merely to rest, but to hold God’s Word sacred, and to gladly hear and learn it. To fear, love, and trust in God is to live from His Word, which sustains faith and gives life.
The Commandments are inseparable. The First Table governs our life before God. The Second governs our life with one another. But these cannot be divided. To fail in love for God produces failure in love for neighbor. Sin against neighbor reveals sin against God.
The Ten Commandments are God’s holy will. They answer the question: How then shall we live? Many imagine themselves to be “good people.” Yet goodness is not measured by comparison with others but by conformity to God’s will. To be truly good is to be godly. To be godly is to live in accord with God’s Commandments.
We do not keep them perfectly. But the Christian must desire to. Indeed, the new man created in Holy Baptism does desire this. Yet he is opposed by the flesh, the world, and the devil. Therefore, we must continually return to God’s Word, hearing it, learning it, meditating upon it. The Law accuses, but it also instructs. It teaches us what love looks like.
Let us, then, cling to God’s Word. Let us commit His Commandments to heart. Let us teach them diligently to our children. Let us speak of them in our homes, in our daily lives, in our rising and resting. For blessed are those whose way is blameless, who walk in the Law of the Lord, who seek Him with their whole heart.
And above all, let us cling to Christ, who alone has fulfilled God’s holy will for us.
In the + Name of Jesus. Amen.
