Episode 1379: Choose Life
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The Sixth Commandment’s prohibition of murder is the bedrock of a much larger "culture of life" that God invited Israel to build. This vision, famously summarized in Moses’ valedictory address in Deuteronomy, presents life and death not as abstract concepts, but as a concrete choice in how a community is organized. To "choose life" is to affirm that because every human bears the divine image, no one is disposable. This requires a proactive commitment to structuring society in a way that protects the weak from the strong and ensures that the inherent dignity of every person is upheld through specific, enforceable guidelines.
This commitment to life is woven into the very fabric of Israel’s secondary laws, which prioritize human flourishing over maximum productivity or economic gain. For example, the Sabbath provides mandatory rest for even the lowest-ranking servants, and gleaning laws transform the corners of harvest fields into a social safety net for the poor and the immigrant. By mandates that protected hired workers from wage theft and ensured the eventual release of debt-slaves, the covenant prevents the reduction of human beings to mere commodities. These laws demonstrate that choosing life means creating practical, economic, and social systems where the vulnerable—the widow, the orphan, and the foreigner—have a recognized right to protection and provision.
The engine behind this culture of life is collective memory. Israel is repeatedly commanded to "remember" their own history of slavery and alienage in Egypt as the primary motivation for their ethics. Because they have experienced the crushing weight of oppression and the liberating mercy of God, they are expected to internalize a natural orientation toward compassion. This memory ensures that protecting life is not a reluctant external obligation, but a grateful response to the redemption they once received. Ultimately, the Sixth Commandment challenges us to ask whether our own modern structures—in our workplaces, families, and churches—actively nurture life or subtly exploit it, calling us to choose life in every small, daily decision.