two...watch the film
2006-10-18 01:22:12
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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2 each time
but four stone tablets in all
it took 2 stone tablets for all of the ten commandments. To make it short, God's people got Moses ticked and he threw the tabet on the ground, then he had to re-do everything
2006-10-18 08:23:40
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answer #2
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answered by Jesus Freak!!! 3
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there were two different sets. the first one was written by the FINGER OF GOD and when Moses came down from the mountain seeing the people who had sinned a great sin he destroyed them thus breaking the covenant between the people and GOD. then a second set of tablets were written so the covenant would be restored and renewed
2006-10-18 08:27:55
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answer #3
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answered by Marvin R 7
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hi,
it was 2 stone tablets. i hope this has helped, it had 5 commandments on each
2006-10-18 08:24:47
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answer #4
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answered by Dolly_pink 2
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Four. The First Two Were Broken.
2006-10-18 08:41:02
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answer #5
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answered by Minister 4
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Four actually, the first two were destroyed by Moses when he saw the people praying to the calf, then another set was done.
2006-10-18 08:24:36
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answer #6
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answered by ShadowWalkerZA 1
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Only two, the mormans also claim to have been given them but theirs were on tablets of gold. oddly, nobody ever saw either.
2006-10-18 08:23:46
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answer #7
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answered by tucksie 6
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Three, five laws on each. Moses dropped one of them on the way down the mountain, so went with what he had left.
2006-10-18 08:49:18
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answer #8
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answered by iknowtruthismine 7
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God gave Moses two tables of testimony, tables of stone, written with the finger of God, written on both their sides, on the one side and on the other were they written. And the tables were the work of God and the writing was the writing of God graven upon the tables. Which writing we all have imprinted in our hearts as the image of God, no matter how so faint. As writing on stone.
But he broke them for the sin of the people - as we have all broken them, even in our hearts - and offered himself to God for the forgiveness of the people, foreshadowing that Prophet that should arise like unto Moses, Jesus Christ, who did in fact offer himself up to God for our sins.
God did not accept Moses's offering of himself and told him "Whosoever has sinned against me, him will I blot out of my book " for although Moses's offering was pleasing to God it was not perfect being only according to the law of a carnel commandment and not according to the power of an endless life.
Whereas God accepted Christ's sacrifice, for he, being eternal, has an unchangeable priesthood and is able to save to the uttermost those that come unto him seeing he ever lives to make intercession for them. He being holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from sinners and made higher than the heavens only needed to offer once and for all. God therefore punished Christ in our place that we may be forgiven and spared.
Subsequently Moses hewed two tables of stone and took them to God and they replaced the two that were broken. Subsequently also God writes his law in our hearts anew when we bring our hearts to Him, written not with ink but with the Spirit of the living God, not in tables of stone(which our hearts were before conversion) but in fleshly tables of the heart.
2006-10-18 09:34:19
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answer #9
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answered by Iain C 3
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10 but thay are a bit hard to swalow so why is the world run on fairy tail rules
2006-10-18 09:07:06
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answer #10
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answered by andrew w 7
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