The giving of the law
to Israel through Moses at Sinai was a truly spectacular event, attended by “blazing fire and darkness and gloom and a tempest and the sound of a trumpet and a voice whose words made
the hearers beg that no further messages be spoken to them,” as the writer to
the Hebrews so eloquently puts it.
The law that God gave
on that grand occasion is described in glowing terms by the psalmist: wondrous,
delightful, sufficient for all sorts of situations, sweeter than honey, perfect, sure, right and true. Of all legal codes by which men have ordered their
societies down through the centuries, the law of Sinai was the very best.
But law itself did not
originate at Sinai. Laws were no new thing.