If the law says...... Keep these commandment or die. There are two options to fulfill the law. The options are #1. keep all the commandments. #2. die.
So if Christ's death fulfills the law. The law has no longer power, if you're dead to it by the body of Christ.
Instead of interacting with my points, you pretty much just ignored them and reasserted your views. Jesus fulfilled the Law and the Prophets, so you should interpret "fulfilling the Law" in the same way that you interpret "fulfilling the Prophets". That of course leads to problems if prophecies in regard to his second coming would be done away with. As I also pointed out, the phrase "to fulfill the law" was a rabbinic term that means to explain or interpret law. In a synagogue, a rabbi take his place on the Moses Seat where he would read from one of the scrolls and then interpret it or clarify its meaning, thereby fulfilling the law.
From:
What Does It Mean to "Fulfill the Law"?
The translation of "to fulfill" is lekayem in Hebrew (le-KAI-yem), which means to uphold or establish, as well as to fulfill, complete or accomplish.2 David Bivin has pointed out that the phrase "fulfill the Law" is often used as an idiom to mean to properly interpret the Torah so that people can obey it as God really intends. The word "abolish" was likely either levatel, to nullify, or la'akor, to uproot, which meant to undermine the Torah by misinterpreting it. For example, the law against adultery could be interpreted as specifically against cheating on one's spouse, but not about pornography. When Jesus declared that lust also was a violation of the commandment, he was clarifying the true intent of that law, so in rabbinic parlance he was "fulfilling the Law." In contrast, if a pastor told his congregation that watching x-rated videos was fine, he would be "abolishing the Law" - causing them to not live as God wants them to live. Here are a couple examples of this usage from around Jesus' time:
If the Sanhedrin gives a decision to abolish (uproot, la'akor) a law, by saying for instance, that the Torah does not include the laws of Sabbath or idolatry, the members of the court are free from a sin offering if they obey them; but if the Sanhedrin abolishes (la'akor) only one part of a law but fulfills (lekayem) the other part, they are liable. 3
Go away to a place of study of the Torah, and do not suppose that it will come to you. For your fellow disciples will fulfill it (lekayem) in your hand. And on your own understanding do not rely. 4 (Here "fulfill" means to explain and interpret the Scripture.)
From:
Didn't Christ Fulfill the Law? | Biblically Kosher | Biblical Eating
Ancient rabbis frequently used the terms "abolish" and "fulfill" to describe a person's application of the law and its commandments. One who "abolishes" the law is one who neglects or disregards it. One who "fulfills" it is one who practices and upholds, and affirms it. For example, a famous collection of ancient rabbinic proverbs teaches:
Whoever fulfills the law in poverty will ultimately fulfill it in wealth, and whoever abolishes the law in wealth will ultimately abolish it in poverty. (Pirkei Avot 4:9)
From:
What do You Mean... Yeshua "Fulfilled the Law"? (Mt. 5:17) - Nazarene Space
To begin with it should be known that this reference to "fulfilling" the Torah vs. "destroying" the Torah is actually a common use of a Hebrew idiom still used by Rabbis today in the Yeshivas. To "fulfill" the Torah is an idiom meaning "to teach the meaning of the Torah and observe it correctly," that is to fulfill its true meaning. While to "destroy" the Torah is an idiom meaning "to incorrectly teach the meaning of the Torah and/or to violate the Toarh," That is to destroy the true meaning of the Torah. Even today in the Yeshivas and the Beit Midrashes Rabbis will get in heated debates with one another, poinding a fist on a table and declaring "you have destroyed the Torah", or give another Rabbi a compliment saying "you have fulfilled the Torah." It bears noting that in the next several verses Yeshua weighs in on controversies over the interpretation of various commandments in the Torah and gives us their true and correct meaning, so Yeshua's use of the term "fulfill the law" vs. "destroy" the Law is totally in keeping with the normal idim of the Hebrew language for these terms.
From:
Rabbi and Talmidim | Follow The Rabbi
Fulfilling the Torah was the task of a first century rabbi. The technical term for interpreting the Scripture so it would be obeyed correctly was "fulfill." To interpret Scripture incorrectly so it would not be obeyed as God intended was to "destroy" the Torah. Jesus uses these terms to describe his task as well (Matt. 5:17-19). Contrary to what some think Jesus did not come to do away with God's Torah or Old Testament. He came to complete it and to show how to correctly keep it. One of the ways Jesus interpreted the Torah was to stress the importance of the right attitude of heart as well as the right action (Matt. 5:27-28).
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So if the way that Jesus used the term is different from how you understand it, then you need to adjust your understanding rather than insert your understanding into Jesus' words. Like the other rabbis, Jesus filled the law in Matthew 5 by interpreting and explaining how it should be followed. The law had been perverted into a heavy burden by all of the Pharisaic traditions for how to keep it, so Jesus said he came to explain the right way to understand and obey it.
Law contains instructions for how to live rightly, practice righteousness, or avoid sin, it condemns sin, it provides a temporary remedy for sin, and it points to our need for one who can provide a permanent remedy. Jesus provided that and he paid for our penalty for sinning, but the instructions for how to live rightly in obedience to God are still valuable to know. It is incredible that through the Holy Spirit we can obey that and we don't have to sin any more!
Gal 2:19 For through the law I died to the law so that I might live for God.
Gal 2:20 I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.
Gal 2:21 I do not set aside the grace of God, for if righteousness could be gained through the law, Christ died for nothing! [fn]
Living by Faith means I'm dead to the law...(not to sin/forgiveness)
Righteousness is not gained by keeping the law.
The law is no longer the standard because the new covenant spells out righteousness apart from the law.
Ephesians 2:8-10 For it is by grace you have been saved, through faithand this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God 9 not by works, so that no one can boast. 10 For we are Gods handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
Indeed, we are declared righteous by grace through faith apart from the law, but then right after that he says we are created in Messiah for the purpose of doing righteous acts. If God could change His standard of righteous behavior, then he wouldn't have needed to send his Son to die for our sins when he could have just done that instead. So in the new covenant, those who are declared righteous are called to then live by faith by living a life marked by righteous acts. The whole point of sanctification is for God's Spirit to transform us to be like Christ in thought and in action.
What Paul is dying to is not the instructions for how to love your neighbor, but rather he is dying to that aspect of the law that would penalize or condemn him.