Originally Posted by
Lulav
I don't understand this kind of reasoning. It doesn't match up with the definition of the new covenant if that is what you are speaking of and I think you must be. The written law will stand, just as Yeshua said it would until all things be fulfilled, which are far from done. We still don't understand all that the Torah contains, let alone having it done already. The New Covenant states:
This is the covenant I will make with the people of Israel
after that time, declares the LORD.
I will put my law in their minds
and write it on their hearts.
I will be their God,
and they will be my people.
Yes, I said that if you read my original post on this, and not just the summary (although it appears, there, too). As we study the law he will cause it to be written on our hearts, as he says in your quote, because we will be entirely open to it. Instead we have tried to ignore what he wishes us to study and, by extension, we have made his law a thing to be followed slavishly instead of willingly as our very lifeblood and joy.
Where did Yeshua say the written law would remain until everything is done? And I did not say it would cease to be, in any case.
The same as when He took us out of Egypt, he promises what He will do. This is not something we do, but allow Him to do.
Also the Torah does not bring death, the disobedience to it does.
Scripture does make this point
This conclusion makes G-d someone who can't get it right the first time, and one who changes his mind, as well as one who didn't know what would happen once he handed down his instructions. This belittles G-d. Following G-ds laws were to follow the right way to be his children. Nothing slavish about it, the problem came when it wasn't done out of love and that is why Yeshua said the greatest commandment was not one of the 10 but the Shema, To Love the L-RD with all your heart, strength and soul and then to love your neighbor as yourself. This is what it's all about, LOVE.
That is not what I said if you read it properly.
Sh'ma is the total aim of having the law engraved or embedded in our heart - we could do no other, as I have said already.
If you had his law in your heart and you allwed it to rule your life in all its fullness you would love him - don't see a problem with that.
Yeshua did not set us free from being obedient, he came to show how to be obedient with love. His love for his father made him do what he did. He was here to serve, not to do his own thing, nor to teach others to be free and do their own thing. He put up with everything he did because that is what the Father wanted from him, that was his purpose.
Neither did I say this if you read my whole argument and not just the brief summary
Yet you mention nothing about what Yeshua preached most on, Repentance. Turning away from your own will and following that of the Father.
Ah, we do have a role to play! Repentance was implied in the bit about grace; I was not writing a systematic theology paper! I was making the point that if the law is truly written on our hearts as being the way we live etc, as it was meant to be, then acts of repentance are going to be few and far between, as inferred in what I said when I wrote that the law will be life - we will know no other way of living.
Why have you twisted just about everything I have said? Can you not read plain English?
Last edited by Avodat; 9th December 2011 at 04:12 PM.