The tenth
commandment, for example, has altered the Biblical “thou
shalt not covet thy neighbour's house, thou shalt not
covet thy neighbour's wife, nor his manservant, nor his
maidservant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing that
is thy neighbour's” to just “find contentment.”
“Thou shalt not
commit adultery” have been edited to “affair-proof your
relationships”, and “honour thy father and thy mother”
has altered to “keep the peace with your parents”.
Updates
said to make everyone understand and connect with the
Ten Commandments positively
J John claims his
commandments enable "everyone to understand God's
timeless principles on how we should live" and said he
was inspired to write them by last summer’s riots.
He said: "Along
with a lot of people I think about the way that we live
nowadays and what leads people to do the sort of things
that happened in the riots - whether or not we have
forgotten something about a good way of living."
The Reverend Paul
Roberts, 54, vicar of St John the Evangelist in Old
Coulsdon, Surrey, which dates back to 1210 AD, is among
those using the new commandments.
He said: "It's
basically a way of presenting the Ten Commandments to
help people connect with them in a positive way.
"Rather than just seeing them as a list of things you
shouldn't do, it is meant to help people live as God
intended for our good.
"Unlike the dos
and don'ts most people imagine when quizzed about the
maker's instructions, the message is meant to be both
a challenge and an encouragement."
Wayne Dulson, 40,
minister of Loughton Baptist Church, Essex said: "People
really engaged with the Ten Commandments in a new and
fresh way.
"People now see
these commandments not as a set of rules but as a
template for living so that we experience God's best for
our lives.
"All ten
commandments were extremely challenging, especially as
the series helped us see them in the context of modern
day living.
"People keep
telling me how just10 has made them think much more
about how they live their lives and also how much they
have learnt about the commandments as they found out
things they never knew before."
"A modern
take for a modern audience..."
Steve Jenkins,
spokesman for the Church of England, said they supported
new ways of communicating and added: "The Book Of Common
Prayer is very clear that the faith needs to be taught
afresh in every generation."
Even former
Conservative Shadow Home Secretary Ann Widdecombe, who
left the Church of England after objecting to women
priests, has backed J John's rules. "I'd say it's not a
patch on Moses but not a bad set of rules really," she
said.
"What he's trying
to do is offer a modern take on the original to explain
it to a modern audience, which is fine as long as he
doesn't dispense with the original."