I am also not a biblical scholar or someone who claims to be an expert on matters of faith/religion. I have my own struggles with my faith and how to practice it in everyday life.
However, with the issue at hand, I am highly skeptical that there is any contradiction on what profane usage of God's name entails in any book of the Bible.
I would be hard pressed to find any serious theologians or church leaders that would find it permissible to use the Lord's name in a crass manner.
ThI point of it is that these texts can and are interpreted and reinterpreted in many ways to promote different worldviews across different sects at different times. In this case, even different religions.
The 3rd commandment is, obviously, Hebrew in origin. It had a very specific meaning: Don’t make a promise in God’s name your ass isn’t prepared to keep. It was totally accepted practice across Judaism at the time to make such promises.
That changed for a large swath of Jews (still pre-Jesus) for whom saying the name aloud became verboten.
Christianity didn’t take on that rule, and originally and for most of Christianity’s existence, that commandment was reinterpreted to mean to not proclaim to be a follower of Jesus and then behave in a manner contradictory to the teachings.
I don’t mean to hurt your feelings, but that long-time understanding of this commandment is problematic for a lot of modern, American Christianity. That is not a particularly controversial statement.
This notion that the 3rd commandment is about saying the name aloud (particularly in a “profane”) manner is a very modern invention, peculiar to a subset of Christian sects predominantly (solely?) emanating from the US.
Again, I’m not a bible scholar. I don’t read Hebrew, Aramaic, or Greek (languages used in most of the source texts for the bibles). I’m just regurgitating the scholarly consensus as I understand it as a layperson.
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