“Let us have no strange gods before him” [Exodus 20:2–3, cf. Vg.]
Having founded and established the authority of his law, he sets forth the First Commandment, “Let us have no strange gods before him” [Exodus 20:3 p.]. The purpose of this commandment is that the Lord wills alone to be pre-eminent among his people, and to exercise complete authority over them. To effect this, he enjoins us to put far from us all impiety and superstition, which either diminish or obscure the glory of his divinity. For the same reason he commands us to worship and adore him with true and zealous godliness. The very simplicity of the words well-nigh expresses this. For we cannot “have” God without at the same time embracing the things that are his. Therefore, in forbidding us to have strange gods, he means that we are not to transfer to another what belongs to him. (Institutes, 2.8.16)
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