Therefore, such an approach lacks the essential element of binding to G-d's will,19 and, as the world has seen from tragic experiences, the person who follows that approach will be at increased risk of rationalizing an actual transgression.
19 In the Torah, there are statements by G-d to Moses, prohibiting Jews to do specific things that are prohibited in a general way for Gentiles. We cite such verses as sources or explanations for details of the Noahide commandments, but these are not intended to imply that Gentiles are commanded about any prohibition that G-d commanded to the Jews. Thus, particular prohibitions or directives, derived from an explanation on a Torah verse, can be understood as relating to Gentiles as G-d's will in general. This is the intention in this book - to cite verses from the Hebrew Bible as sources for Torah concepts and to provide their authentic explanations. This is a general point throughout the book, but there are exceptions when a verse actually relates directly to a commandment for Gentiles. Usually in these cases, the author explains in the main text that this is an explicit scriptural commandment for Gentiles (the Divine Code by Rabbi Moshe Weiner, Ask Noah International, 2018, p 31-32).