The Biblical God would have a history reaching into the past and to be considered in the case of a Tiberian Masoretic base text, namely the distinction between the voice of this God and an alleged word of that God that guys claim, which runs through the entire Bible like a red thread (see footnote below) including the Gospel of Jesus.
The Decalogue was spoken to the Israelites by God himself so they would know a difference and everything else Moses was to present to the Israelites (Exodus 21:1)
Mixing these two different things, as was the Israelites' response in Exodus 24:3 (biblehub.com unfortunately is wrong again!) ...
**** ויספר לעם את כל דברי = and he told to the people all words (not the words) of The LORD
**** ויאמרו כל הדברים אשר דבר = and they answered all these words that had been spoken The LORD
... would not be a homage to the Biblical God, nor would it be a homage to a God of Mount Sinai, but it would be a homage to Moses as a God—and we are not people like those who let themselves be called Muslims: Of course a human being can and also may be God (Exodus 7:1) the Torah brings its own ground for understanding and explanation.
FOOTNOTE: 1 Kings 13 – this time just an alleged prophet without a divine mandate. It is a story to better understand God's voice as the alternative to Moses' claims, whose binding prophethood was of limited duration, e.g. Exodus 3:12 & 15:25.26 & Joshua 24:24 etc. but unfortunately, most authors and publishers of the Bible lie in these or relevant passages out of consideration for Jewish and Christian philosophies.