“The   42 Principles of Ma’at, the Goddess who personified the ideals of  Truth and Righteousness,   were known to all the ancient Egyptians. They have been rephrased here  in   Biblical Commandment form to make them more intelligible and familiar  to   moderns. In the original form they were preceded with “I have not”   as in “I have not stolen.” The Egyptians believed that when they   died, their souls would be judged by these principles. Moses and the   Israelites, who were originally Egyptians, would have been familiar  with   these principles, but after wandering for forty years they seem to  have only   remembered 8 of them (those highlighted in orange). Moses added three  new   non-secular commandments; the one about not honoring the other gods,  the honoring of their parents, and the one that included their  neighbor’s wives and slaves as coveted chattel. The remarkable thing  about the principles of Ma’at is   not only how much more advanced they are in comparison with the Hebrew  Commandments,   but how most of them are strikingly relevant to this day.”
(via aerobiologicalengineering)

The 42 Principles of Ma’at, the Goddess who personified the ideals of Truth and Righteousness, were known to all the ancient Egyptians. They have been rephrased here in Biblical Commandment form to make them more intelligible and familiar to moderns. In the original form they were preceded with “I have not” as in “I have not stolen.” The Egyptians believed that when they died, their souls would be judged by these principles. Moses and the Israelites, who were originally Egyptians, would have been familiar with these principles, but after wandering for forty years they seem to have only remembered 8 of them (those highlighted in orange). Moses added three new non-secular commandments; the one about not honoring the other gods, the honoring of their parents, and the one that included their neighbor’s wives and slaves as coveted chattel. The remarkable thing about the principles of Ma’at is not only how much more advanced they are in comparison with the Hebrew Commandments, but how most of them are strikingly relevant to this day.”

(via aerobiologicalengineering)