What is your understanding on this commandment?
No, as the second person of the trinity---The Word (made flesh), He would have been quite obviously aware that there was only one God.
Apparently, the primary locus of any deviousness is in those who try to catch God with His own words.
To what purposes, I wonder---I can guess, but I won't list any.
“I have no interest in convincing you of anything.” is your statement of what your nature is, and things like, “See, there's your main problem.” and “Like them [atheists], you are comfortable in another type of small world.” are examples of your presumptions.
“The truth stands on its own.” indeed and that you “share it [your concept of truth] on a take it or leave it basis” is not unique to you. I have outlined the criteria I use to take or leave what I come across. On the essentials of the Jesus story I admit only what is consistent with the reported sayings of God and Jesus himself in the Bible, what is consistent with common sense and with verified facts at our disposal. That you admit into your criteria or make them subject to what the Holy Spirit is telling you is your choice.
“the world God created is greater than the ones that either you are they [atheists] live in” if that presumption has resulted from the dimensions opened to you by the Holy Spirit then unless it satisfies my criteria for acceptance you’re welcome to that “privilege” However, don’t think that your claim to “live in a larger one [world] ---the one that I find more wondrous every day” is unique to you. I’m sure many find the world “more wondrous every day” in their own way without any help from the Holy Spirit.
At various points the author calls attention to the penalty incurred by those who refuse to accept any of the articles therein set down.
The Father Incomprehensible, the Son Incomprehensible, and the Holy Ghost Incomprehensible
So likewise the Father is Almighty, the Son Almighty, and the Holy Ghost Almighty. And yet they are not Three Almighties but One Almighty.
So there is One Father, not Three Fathers; one Son, not Three Sons; One Holy Ghost, not Three Holy Ghosts. And in this Trinity none is afore or after Other, None is greater or less than Another, but the whole Three Persons are Co-eternal together, and Co-equal
Who, then, is the author? The results of recent inquiry make it highly probable that the Creed first saw the light in the fourth century, during the life of the great Eastern patriarch, or shortly after his death
The "damnatory", or "minatory clauses", are the pronouncements contained in the symbol, of the penalties which follow the rejection of what is there proposed for our belief. It opens with one of them: "Whosoever will be saved, before all things it is necessary that he hold the Catholic Faith". The same is expressed in the verses beginning: "Furthermore, it is necessary" etc., and "For the right Faith is" etc., and finally in the concluding verse: "This is the Catholic Faith, which except a man believe faithfully and firmly, he cannot be saved". Just as the Creed states in a very plain and precise way what the Catholic Faith is concerning the important doctrines of the Trinity and the Incarnation, so it asserts with equal plainness and precision what will happen to those who do not faithfully and steadfastly believe in these revealed truths..
.From a dogmatic standpoint, the merely historical question of the authorship of the Creed, or of the time it made its appearance, is of secondary consideration. The fact alone that it is approved by the Church as expressing its mind on the fundamental truths with which it deals, is all we need to know.
Who, then, is the author? The results of recent inquiry make it highly probable that the Creed first saw the light in the fourth century, during the life of the great Eastern patriarch, or shortly after his death
The "damnatory", or "minatory clauses", are the pronouncements contained in the symbol, of the penalties which follow the rejection of what is there proposed for our belief. It opens with one of them: "Whosoever will be saved, before all things it is necessary that he hold the Catholic Faith". The same is expressed in the verses beginning: "Furthermore, it is necessary" etc., and "For the right Faith is" etc., and finally in the concluding verse: "This is the Catholic Faith, which except a man believe faithfully and firmly, he cannot be saved". Just as the Creed states in a very plain and precise way what the Catholic Faith is concerning the important doctrines of the Trinity and the Incarnation, so it asserts with equal plainness and precision what will happen to those who do not faithfully and steadfastly believe in these revealed truths..
.From a dogmatic standpoint, the merely historical question of the authorship of the Creed, or of the time it made its appearance, is of secondary consideration. The fact alone that it is approved by the Church as expressing its mind on the fundamental truths with which it deals, is all we need to know.
To say it means "you shouldn't place anything more important than me" is to say that God can't say what He means.
If God MEANT "don't place money or power or {whatever} above me", He would have said that.
Nope ... It means what it says.
There were many gods worshiped at the time, and the Hebrews were converting to a single god from a pantheon.
So they were being told they couldn't worship any of those other gods, anymore.
Besides which ... God didn't care about anyone other than the Israelites.
So if you are Gentile, that commandment didn't apply to you ... because He wasn't your god.