The Third Commandment states that we cannot take God’s name in vain. This means that we cannot commit a sin in God’s name. That we can do the right thing for the wrong reason but never the wrong thing for the right reason.
Quick D’var Torah – “Do Not Take God’s Name in Vain”
This week, once again, we encounter the Ten Commandments, and the third one is often misunderstood: “Do not take God’s name in vain.”
Most people assume this just means not using God’s name casually or in profanity—but that’s not what the Torah is really getting at.
The deeper meaning is far more serious: doing something wrong and claiming you’re doing it in God’s name.
That is real blasphemy.
When someone commits a crime, causes harm, or acts immorally while invoking God—that is taking God’s name in vain. Murder, theft, or oppression justified by “holy” intentions is exactly what this commandment forbids.
And this isn’t only a Jewish obligation. Among the Seven Noahide Laws, non-Jews are also commanded not to blaspheme. Why? Because the Torah does not accept the excuse, “He meant well.”
Judaism makes a critical distinction:
- You may sometimes do the right thing for the wrong reason.
- But you may never do the wrong thing for the right reason.
Our society often celebrates the opposite. We love the anti-hero—the outlaw with a good heart. Think of Robin Hood, stealing from the rich to give to the poor. Or the Blues Brothers claiming they’re “on a mission from God” while breaking every law along the way.
But according to the Torah, that doesn’t work.
You cannot steal from one person to help another—no matter how noble the cause.
This principle even applies in court. When a rich person and a poor person stand before a judge, the judge cannot favor the rich for gain, and cannot favor the poor out of compassion. Justice must be based only on the facts and the law, not intentions or emotions.
That is the core message of this commandment:
It’s not enough to believe the right things or mean well. God demands that we act rightly.
Good intentions do not sanctify bad actions.
Holiness comes from doing what is right—the right way.
Something to think about.

