The Noachide Laws - the covenant with the Sons of Noah - is DERIVED FROM Torah but not exactly IN it. Judaism sees God's covenants as building upon previous covenants. The first known covenant was with Adam and Eve, and the commandments for Adam and Eve were pretty simple: grow stuff, have babies...Letmethink wrote:Got time for a few more?
Noachide Laws: I had only recently heard of these, and as I understand, according to Jewish teaching, and Gentile to adheres to these laws is considered a righteous gentile, and has a place in the world to come.
The next time God deals with humans is during the Noah story, so the next covenant is the one with Noah - I think the early compilers of the Torah could not imagine (or did not consider) that God might interact with humans WITHOUT a covenant type thing: that was their context. So what 'laws' or commandments of God would be binding on all humans?
Also seven is a very lucky or significant number.
They aren't so much 'laws for the non-Jew' as they are 'ways to recognize which non-Jews are righteous (i.e., good, reliable, decent) people. Different sages came up with slightly different laws, but there are always seven, and they are really judged pretty leniently. By that way - like all previous covenants (that is, the one with Adam), the Noachide one is incumbent on everyone, including Jews.
So they define, minimally, what a good society (or good citizens) look like: honest, moral, just. The requirement to 'worship God', as I said, is viewed very leniently. Polytheists are typically okay, if a bit weird - as long as their culture follows the rest of those rules. Most of them are normal to human societies, right? Not an anarchy, trustworthy in business (interpersonal relations), just court systems. Not 'eating the limb of the living' is usually considered as a form of kindness/good treatment of animals.
When Jews say that we have 613 commandments, the Noachide laws are 7 of them.