Understanding the First Commandment begins with understanding what God actually said. When God declared, “You shall have no other gods before Me,” the key phrase “before Me” (Strong’s Exhaustive Concordance #5921 plus 6440) comes from the Hebrew expression that literally means “in front of Me,” “in My presence” or “in My sight.” Because God is omnipresent, everything is in His presence. This means the command is not about ranking God above other deities; it is a command to have no other gods at all. The wording itself rules out the idea of “lesser gods” being acceptable.

The grammar reinforces this. The Hebrew phrase for “other gods” refers to any gods besides Yahweh, without qualification or hierarchy. It means “no gods besides Me in any category.” If God had meant “no gods higher than Me,” Hebrew has clear ways to express that idea, but none of those forms appear here. Instead, the construction is absolute: no other gods in any category, in any capacity, under any circumstances.

The context of the passage also makes the meaning unmistakable. Immediately after the First Commandment in verse 3, God forbids making images, bowing down to anything or serving anything besides Him. These commands only make sense if God is prohibiting all forms of worship directed toward anything else. If “lesser gods” were allowed, the next verses would contradict the very system God was establishing. This is a blanket prohibition, not a ranking system. The flow of the text shows a complete rejection of the polytheistic worldview Israel had just left behind.

This matters because the ancient world was filled with ranked pantheons. Egypt, Canaan and Mesopotamia all believed in hierarchies of gods. Some were more powerful than others, some less, each tied to specific regions or specialty functions. Israel’s God was radically different. He was not a local deity or a member of a divine council. He was the Creator, the Sovereign, the One who brought them out of Egypt by His own power. The First Commandment was a declaration of His uniqueness and exclusivity, not His position within a larger spiritual ecosystem. It is “I am the only God,” not “I am the highest God.”

The rest of Scripture consistently interprets the First Commandment this way:

Deuteronomy 6:4: “The LORD is one.” 
Isaiah 45: Isaiah repeatedly declares, “There is no God besides Me.” 
Hosea 13:4: “You shall know no God but Me.” 
1 Corinthians 8:4: Paul writes, “There is no God but one.” 

Nowhere does the Bible treat the First Commandment as a ranking system. It always presents it as a call to exclusive allegiance.

Jesus reinforces this understanding. When asked about the greatest commandment (see Mark 12:28-21, Matthew 22:36-38 and Luke 10:27), he quotes Deuteronomy 6:4-5 and says we must love God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength. That is not a command to love God most; it is a command to love God entirely. Jesus does not leave room for divided loyalty or secondary deities. He reveals the heart behind the First Commandment: wholehearted devotion to the one true God. Love God with everything.

Finally, the First Commandment is an internal instruction. It begins in the heart, where loyalty is formed long before actions are visible. Internal loyalty cannot be shared or ranked. If God is first in the heart, nothing else can occupy that place. The command is about giving God the exclusion devotion He alone deserves. 

Taken together, (Hebrew grammar, ancient context, scripture interpreting scripture, and Jesus’ own teaching) the meaning is clear. The First Commandment does not allow for multiple gods with God at the top. It calls for one God, one loyalty and one devotion.