i get what your'e saying, but love the Lord with all of your being also looks like this:
You shall not hand over to his master a slave who has escaped from his master to you. He shall live with you in your midst, in the place which he shall choose in one of your towns where it pleases him; you shall not mistreat him.
(Deuteronomy 23:15-16)
where do i get this from the 10 commandments?
and is this the least commandment?
while i'm in this chapter, what about -
You shall also have a place outside the camp and go out there, and you shall have a spade among your tools, and it shall be when you sit down outside, you shall dig with it and shall turn to cover up your excrement.
(Deuteronomy 23:12-13)
is this the least commandment?
can i derive this exclusively from one or a combination of the famous 10 commandments? would it be 'bearing false witness against my neighbor' if i didn't bury my dung, or . . ?
I'm more inclined to think that's the second commandment -- love your neighbor, as you love yourself. And I think that because it deals with people, not God. (People = neighbor. God = God.)
And I see that first one clarifying the "don't steal" commandment. What would you do if you came across a runaway slave? Who are you obligated to -- the master or the slave? Which one is your neighbor? (Both are.)
And do remember, most slaves became slaves in ways that don't happen anymore. Most slaves were either from war or from poor and slaves for seven years, (or Year of Jubilee, whichever came first), unless the slave chooses to stay. POWs became slaves, but most slaves usually came from family. If I lost everything my family had to bring me in, take care of me, and I had to contribute to the family income. There was one other kind of slave. If I stole your goat and ate it, but couldn't afford to pay you what I was supposed to pay for it, (I can't remember if it was two times or four times the price of the animal), then I became your slave for seven years.
Which makes me wonder why a slave would run away. If I were a POW, it is likely I'm running away to go back home. Why would I ask you to help me? You're of the people I was fighting. I'd rather go home. If I owed you a goat, I'd feel obliged to pay you back whichever way works. If you're family and I'm running away, what did you do to me that I wanted to run away from family? Which makes me think of the laws about slavery, where it was okay to beat them in certain ways, but not too much. I would run away, if I'm beaten, in hope that the next person won't beat me.
So, yes, all that out of how to love a neighbor. Which comes under loving a person, not loving God.
As for covering excrement? Also how to love your neighbor. It sounds like it would fit in Emily Post's Book of Etiquette circa 15th century BC. "Clean up your poo." I'd put it under Don't murder, since leaving human poo exposed in vast quantities would be an environmental disaster.
I do understand you want to figure out the difference between greatest and least. I have no idea about that. All I know is it doesn't matter too much, because I've broken every single commandment. Haven't we all?