QUOTE="BobRyan, post: 68699883, member: 235244"]
Christ did not attack Lev 11 - regarding the prohibition of eating cats, rats, dogs, bats... etc.
Rather in Mark 7 Christ deals with the subject of church bogus traditions related to eating 'bread'' - So also in Mark 2 "eating wheat" -- there was nothing in Lev 11 against eating bread or wheat.
I say this because "details matter" and false speculation does not survive the details in the text.
In Acts 10 Peter points out that to that very day - years after the cross... Peter was still not eating rats, cats, dogs, bats etc.[/QUOTE]
On the subject of dietary requirements, the Council of Jerusalem in Acts 15 expressly states that Christians are solely required to abstain from foods offered to idols and things strangled.
28 “For it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us to lay upon you no greater burden than these essentials: 29 that you abstain from
things sacrificed to idols and from blood and from
things strangled and from
fornication; if you keep yourselves free from such things, you will do well. Farewell.”
Peter points out in Acts 10 - that he is sticking with the Bible in Lev 11.
Acts 15 does not say it is ok to eat - rats, cats, dogs, bats etc - it does not even address it.
Acts 15 also does not say "Love your neighbor as yourself"
or "Love God with all your heart"
or "Do not take God's name in vain".
Acts 15 does not claim to be a new "downsized Bible" rather it deals with the subject of whether Gentile Christians need to become Jews. James argues that this is not needed because Christians are
"hearing Moses preached in the synagogues every Sabbath" just as we see in the case of BOTH gentiles AND Jews in Acts 13, Acts 17 and Acts 18.
in Christ,
Bob