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To whom and why God gave the Sabbaths?

1John2:4

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ה He
33 Teach me, O Lord, the way of Your statutes,
And I shall keep it to the end.
34 Give me understanding, and I shall keep Your law;
Indeed, I shall observe it with mywhole heart.
35 Make me walk in the path of Your commandments,
For I delight in it.
36 Incline my heart to Your testimonies,
And not to covetousness.
37 Turn away my eyes from looking at worthless things,
And revive me in Your way.
38 Establish Your word to Your servant,
Who is devoted to fearing You.
39 Turn away my reproach which I dread,
For Your judgments are good.
40 Behold, I long for Your precepts;
Revive me in Your righteousness
 
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Bob S

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When he returns. The mark of the new covenant, the law written on the minds and hearts, is not complete for if it were, there would be no sin and no division (not to mention no need to teach every man his brother for all will know the Lord... as the text states). This is a process Bob, you have not been perfected yet, made incorruptible... this is a PROCESS. It begins when you turn to him... that is when you get a DOWNPAYMENT toward the completed work in the form of the Holy Spirit (see 2 Corinthians 1:22 and 2 Corinthians 5:5) and when he returns, the work will be completed.

I am not interested in the physical Temple, we stand as the Temple of God but there will be a physical Temple and there is a reason for it. Since your questions and points have taken on a mocking and condescending tone, I won't both spending any time on this point since this is a Sabbath thread and you wouldn't receive it anyway. It would become fodder for any future point you'll try to make and seeing it comes from the Word of God, I don't desire to see it used that way. We don't have to agree, but we can remain brotherly for we are brothers, whether you like it or not. What Yeshua did binds us...
That is one way to avoid answering my questions.

If I were claiming to be Torah compliant I would be laying up brick and stone. Otherwise I would be pseudo complaint like I was when SDA.
 
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Bob S

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"Under the" is idiomatic, well understood in the day. We are not under the law, meaning, we are not guilty. We are now under un-merited favor, meaning, we have been declared innocent. But neither our lack of guilt or un-merited favor abrogate the commandments, God still expects us to walk in His ways. We SHOW our love for God by obeying, hence John saying, "This is the love of God, that we obey his commandments." The trouble you and others have, and I said this in one of my first posts, is that when somebody like me says "obey" or "law" or "commandments" you HEAR, "unto salvation." We are not saved by obedience, we are not saved by works, we are not saved by walking in commandments... but the saved (if you will) obey, work, or walk in the commandments. If you say, "I love God" and then don't obey I really don't know how you can stand in harmony with John's, "This is the love of God" comment.

Anyway... do as you are led, it is between you and God. I don't want you to follow me, I don't want you to do ANYTHING that stands against your understanding of Scripture and current relationship with God. Please remember these words the next time you make a "false testimony" against me about pushing falsehood. I am pushing nothing, I am answering your questions and you simply don't agree with the answers.
One thing for sure I am not led to comply with a bunch of rituals given to only one nation that failed to observe them and the whole system became defunct.

In other words Christians are not under ritual laws given only to Israel and are now obsolete. Obsolete because the covenant was broken and is nothing but history. The ritual laws of that covenant are not relative to any other nation. No other nation was God's chosen and did not receive the 10 commandments with its ritual Sabbath command.
 
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Ken Rank

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That is one way to avoid answering my questions.

If I were claiming to be Torah compliant I would be laying up brick and stone. Otherwise I would be pseudo complaint like I was when SDA.
You asked if I believe the new covenant was... what word did you use, ratified? I took that as "currently in place." You ended your question with, "if not, WHEN." My answer was, "when he returns." I directly answered your question.
 
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Ken Rank

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One thing for sure I am not led to comply with a bunch of rituals given to only one nation that failed to observe them and the whole system became defunct.

In other words Christians are not under ritual laws given only to Israel and are now obsolete. Obsolete because the covenant was broken and is nothing but history. The ritual laws of that covenant are not relative to any other nation. No other nation was God's chosen and did not receive the 10 commandments with its ritual Sabbath command.

The term "ritual laws" is not found in Scripture. Understand that... you continue, as do so many, to use words to describe God's word in terms HE DIDN'T choose to use. That aside, again, I don't care what you do. After a long time in prayer, after waiting for direction as best I could discern, I decided to walk on this path. It doesn't differ dramatically from yours. It differs only in that I don't eat animals that were not called "food" just as Yeshua himself refrained from such meals. Yeshua came to reverse the curse of sin not make a pig clean. Also, we take part in the feasts just as he did and find the process of taking part a HUGE blessing. Otherwise, we pretty much see things eye to eye. And Bob, I determined after said prayer to walk in this direction. I did NOT force my family, in fact, I threw my wife out as a fleece. I figured that if I indeed discerned this correctly that I would not have to convince her and that God would instead instill in her the same understanding He instilled in me. I didn't push, I even dodged questions... I wanted it to be God for how else would I gain such a second witness? It took two years and one day she came and asked why we weren't attending a certain congregation and I knew God had revealed to her what he revealed to me.

I don't care if you accept my practices or not. I don't! You need to follow YOUR PATH. Somebody asked the question, "To whom and why did God give the Sabbath." I answered, "to all humans as He set that day aside at Creation, long before there were Jews." People like you take that as me trying to push my view on you. Not the case, do as you feel led. I simply shared a view... you share yours, others share theirs, and then people can take all the possibilities and pray about them and weigh them out and see where God leads them... end of story. There doesn't need to be the back and forth like this. If you have no interest in God's Torah, don't ask me and I will move on to another thread and talk about something else. Quite frankly, this discussion doesn't do a thing for me. I don't want you to follow me... I want you to follow what God wants you to do. If that means next Sukkot you are out building a sukkah with us in KENtucky, great... if that means you continue to view this as something you need not do? Great... just do as you are led, as will I. :) Shalom and brakhot... Peace and blessings.
 
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Bob S

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You asked if I believe the new covenant was... what word did you use, ratified? I took that as "currently in place." You ended your question with, "if not, WHEN." My answer was, "when he returns." I directly answered your question.

Ken, do you also believe the new covenant is yet to be ratified? If not please explain when Jesus will once again shed His blood to ratify the covenant. And please explain why you are not rebuilding the Temple which was the focal point of Torah. How can you be Torah compliant without the Temple?
Maybe you would have understood all the content of my post if I had used more than one paragraph, As it is I asked you several questions, one you partially answered and I am waiting to find out if you believe Jesus will once again have to shed His blood to ratify the covenant when it finally becomes the new one. Thank you for your partial answer.

The other two: ("please explain why you are not rebuilding the Temple which was the focal point of Torah. How can you be Torah compliant without the Temple?") were avoided and you made an accusation towards me. I believe I have asked you legitimate questions concerning the belief system you observe. You have presented what you believe are the positive aspects of your beliefs which I respect you for doing. However, when I ask you to clarify where your beliefs part from Torah you waver in answering and accuse me of gathering that information for further fodder. I assure you I am not trying to be divisive, however I am very leery about adding to the current beliefs given to me by the Holy Spirit which is my guide.

If you cannot answer the just be honest and tell us you have no answer. And if you don't have an answer maybe the belief system you have is one you might want to reconsider.
 
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Ken Rank

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Maybe you would have understood all the content of my post if I had used more than one paragraph, As it is I asked you several questions, one you partially answered and I am waiting to find out if you believe Jesus will once again have to shed His blood to ratify the covenant when it finally becomes the new one. Thank you for your partial answer.

The other two: ("please explain why you are not rebuilding the Temple which was the focal point of Torah. How can you be Torah compliant without the Temple?") were avoided and you made an accusation towards me. I believe I have asked you legitimate questions concerning the belief system you observe. You have presented what you believe are the positive aspects of your beliefs which I respect you for doing. However, when I ask you to clarify where your beliefs part from Torah you waver in answering and accuse me of gathering that information for further fodder. I assure you I am not trying to be divisive, however I am very leery about adding to the current beliefs given to me by the Holy Spirit which is my guide.

If you cannot answer the just be honest and tell us you have no answer. And if you don't have an answer maybe the belief system you have is one you might want to reconsider.
Please cease acting like this. I didn't answer that part because you don't care what my answer is... I said this in my post! However, here is my answer...

We view the Torah differently. I see it as the compilation of commandments. Most simply do not apply today because either the Temple is not in place, we are not in the land, there is no king, etc. etc. etc. I am living in the nations under secular rule and have no desire to have a Temple in place. Even if there were one... the reason to do any sacrifices, should we ever do them which I don't think WE will, do not carry the meaning YOU THINK they carry. If you are serious about this... then please take the time to read this.....

The sacrifices NEVER appeased God. He is not some angry ogre god who loves the smell of burning animal flesh. That is a PAGAN idea imposed on a very non-pagan God by a group of people who think the mere mention of the words "works" or "obedience" something secretly means "unto salvation." The "sweet aroma" was the HEART CONDITION of the Israelite who was making a sacrifice KNOWING that their sin caused the death of an animal. That is why God said in the Psalms, "the sacrifices of God are a broken spirit and a contrite heart." When the heart of the Israelite was broken BECAUSE his actions were why the sacrifice of the animal had to take place... that rose up to God as a sweet aroma because it has ALWAYS BEEN ABOUT THE HEART OF HIS PEOPLE.

Additionally... the sacrifices pointed FORWARD to work Messiah would do. When Peter said, "thou art the Christ, the son of the Living God," how did he know? Was it because Yeshua TOLD HIM? No... there were MANY people running around claiming to be messiah. Peter KNEW because only Yeshua fit the descriptions as found in the Torah. And, Yeshua said, "they testify of ME." So... the sacrifices pointed FORWARD to work he would do and when he returns we will have been perfected so there won't be a need to sacrifice because we won't be sinning. Why then does Ezekiel speak of another Temple? Because we will be alive and perfected but we won't be the only ones alive. The NATIONS will also be alive and they will be subservient to him as King and they will come and worship just as Zechariah 14:16-18 plainly state. So IF THERE ARE future sacrifices, they will be used to teach the nations about messiah and will be pointing BACK at work already completed. They pointed forward before he came, and they will point back after he returns IF they take place again as it seems some prophet have suggested.

Until then... which is ALL in the hands of God... I do whatever part of Torah I can living under the conditions I am. Of the 613 +/- commandments, about 80 can be kept by me at this time. Why 80 (ish)? Because I am not a Levite, so commandments directed to them are not for me. I am not a woman, so the same in terms of any commandments to them not applying to me. I am not land, I am not an animal, I am outside of the promised land... you end up with between 70-120 commandments that apply based on who you ask. I think the number is "about" 80.

Again, this isn't unto salvation. It is simply my interpretation of God's will for those who come to Him in faith.
 
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Ken Rank

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Bob... when Adam sinned he had to begin choosing between right and wrong, good and bad, holy and profane. We all have been choosing since that day. When we come to the Lord in faith, and we profess him as Lord... we are to cease choosing between good and evil and allow our LORD to determine for his servants, what is holy and profane, good and evil. The Torah simply defines this for us... what is good? Honoring parents is good. Serving only YHWH is good. If I dig a hole and don't block it off and somebody falls in and gets hurt and I pay for their medical bills because I didn't block it off... that is good and that is Torah. If I kill or steal, that is bad. If I don't care for the orphans or take the wife of another man... or take a MAN.... that is bad and against the Torah.... and against the character of God.

We have a very skewed understanding of Torah that comes from a religious culture that has distanced itself and demeaned anything that might look too Jewish. This is the mindset we are born into... and I have simply found that when I read Scripture from outside of THAT lens, it says some things that differ from how I was raised to understand it.

But again, that is me and does not have to be you. Do as you feel led. Shalom!
 
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Steve Petersen

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Maybe you would have understood all the content of my post if I had used more than one paragraph, As it is I asked you several questions, one you partially answered and I am waiting to find out if you believe Jesus will once again have to shed His blood to ratify the covenant when it finally becomes the new one. Thank you for your partial answer.

The other two: ("please explain why you are not rebuilding the Temple which was the focal point of Torah. How can you be Torah compliant without the Temple?") were avoided and you made an accusation towards me. I believe I have asked you legitimate questions concerning the belief system you observe. You have presented what you believe are the positive aspects of your beliefs which I respect you for doing. However, when I ask you to clarify where your beliefs part from Torah you waver in answering and accuse me of gathering that information for further fodder. I assure you I am not trying to be divisive, however I am very leery about adding to the current beliefs given to me by the Holy Spirit which is my guide.

If you cannot answer the just be honest and tell us you have no answer. And if you don't have an answer maybe the belief system you have is one you might want to reconsider.

One of the commandments was the Israel was not to bring sacrifices anywhere but the Temple. They are not, so they are compliant with the Torah.
 
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klutedavid

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Hello Ken.

Thanks for your reply, sorry for the delay I have been away for a week.
There is no doubt that some Jews began to keep Sunday immediately.
I agree, after all Ken, the first day (Sunday) was the day that Jesus, was witnessed by the disciples to have risen from the grave. Also, Jesus broke the bread with the disciples on that first day. Let's just call the first day, the Lord's day from now on.
However, as stated, you won't find a mandate in Scripture to do so.
I think I can show that the practice of Sunday gathering, to break the bread,
was fully in place from the text in Acts 20. I implore you to read the text very carefully, Ken.

Acts 20
6 We sailed from Philippi after the days of Unleavened Bread, and came to them at Troas within five days; and there we stayed seven days.

Paul and the disciples stayed in Troas for seven days, lock that time duration in, Ken.

Acts 20
7 On the first day of the week, when we were gathered together to break bread, Paul began talking to them, intending to leave the next day.

Paul is leaving the next day, so Paul must have already been in Troas for six days. Also please note, the disciples gathered to break bread on the first day. The text does not say, the disciples had gathered to listen to Paul and to break the bread. Paul waits until they gather on the first day and then talks to them.
In your first attempt to show my error, you didn't share any Scripture that states that Sunday would be set-apart for the Christian, you showed the Epistle of Barnabas which is neither canon nor 100% trustworthy.
I don't think anyone really knows whether the epistle of Barnabas, is a trustworthy letter or not. The author of this epistle is not mentioned in the epistle, nor does this letter make any claim to have been written by an apostle. So it cannot be a forgery. It is simply a letter written by some Christian
with an axe to grind, regarding the Jewish law. The date of writing is in the range, 70 A.D. to 132 A.D.

This is a double edged sword, the Gentiles were never instructed to keep the 'ten commandments', either Ken. Even in Acts 15, which is the first formal council held by the apostles and the elders. To look into the issue of whether the Gentiles should be under the law. This formal council returned the result, the Gentiles do not need to be under the law of Moses. There we have the commandment of God to the Gentiles, Gentiles are not under the law of Moses.
A very small number of Jews began to observe Sunday at that time because of the spiritual significance of that day as they perceived it. This practice was in strict minority until a much later time.
Correct Ken, the old ways do not die easily.

Matthew 9
17 Nor do people put new wine into old wineskins; otherwise the wineskins burst, and the wine pours out and the wineskins are ruined; but they put new wine into fresh wineskins, and both are preserved.
There are two events that did come later that really define the course of the church. The first was the death of James (who was the head of the church at Jerusalem) and the destruction of the Temple (they happened close in time so I count them as one)... and this event was something that many Jews believed was Yeshua's warning (Matthew 24:15-16) and thus as many as half of the Jewish Christians fled to the mountains.
Very good Ken, Matthew compresses the Jewish and Gentile prophecies together, Luke separates them. You saw through Matthew 24, you recognized the fulfillment of the prophecy that Jesus gave.

I disagree that the death of James and the destruction of the temple. Defined
the direction of the church, the Gentile church was isolated from events in
Jerusalem. These two events affected the Jewish church.
From that point on, within just 20 years (by 150AD...ish), the face of Christianity, the visible open face, was more Greek than Jewish. Animosity that began with the actions of the Pharisees, took on a fever pitch by the Greek Christians and the Jews began to be called "Christ-Killers" (Justin Martyr around 150AD in “Dialogue with Trypho”) and were maligned in other ways as seen in the homily Peri Pascha, Melito of Sardis (circa middle of the second century) where it was stated, “God was murdered” by the Jews, of course.
Even in the scripture it is clear that the Gentiles were never required to become Jews. I disagree with your dating (150 A.D.), the Gentiles from the time of
(Acts 15) were already separating from the Jewish law. The Gentiles are not Jews, hence, the Gentiles were never told that they were UNDER the law.
Justin Martyr and Melito were commenting on a trend that began way before
150 A.D.
this becomes the mindset of Christians and is what we are “born into” which shapes how we view Scripture as we read it. That is really important but rarely considered...
You could not be more correct, Ken. We are all deeply conditioned into a method of interpretation of the scripture. To be able to read the scripture freely and without a theological bias, is one very difficult task.

It is a rare event for someone to see through what they have been taught for so long. Especially when there are key verses and ideas, that are often repeated in the church they attend.
So, we are NOW "born into" a religious culture that has no Jewish connection at all EVEN IF Christianity was considered a sect of Judaism in the first century.
Rejoice Ken, we are not under the yoke of the law.

God's judgement of Israel was final, the nation disappeared for two thousand years. Not sure that Christianity was ever a Jewish sect, after all Ken, we
are a new creation in Christ. There is no Jew or Gentile in this new creation.

Away with the Old Covenant and in with the New Covenant. If you can understand what the new creation represents, then you will see through it all, Ken.
Anyway... back to 150AD...ish..... the Greeks who were becoming Christians had already been keeping Sunday (they were sun worshipers).
I reject the date of 150 A.D., I accept the formal date of Acts 15.
And, since the Greeks tended to look for ways to spiritualize reality, the idea of setting Sunday aside because Yeshua was raised (really Saturday night).
Ken, the scripture is silent about the time that Jesus rose from the grave. Why did you say Saturday night? To say Saturday night is beyond what the scripture states, the apostles witnessed the risen Christ on the first day (Jewish time).

Jesus rose some time before dawn or even at dawn, on the first day (Sunday).
There is no mention of a Sabbath evening (Saturday night) in the Gospel accounts of the resurrection.
By the time The Council of Laodicea (canon 29) is made that prohibits resting on the “Jewish Sabbath,” it was already pretty much a foregone conclusion and the practice of the day. But we are now talking about
more than 300 YEARS since the ascension.
The Gentiles were never told to honor the Sabbath, that is pure inference. To even hint that the Gentiles were under the law, is heresy Ken.
 
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Bob S

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Why?
That would start a tradition not in YHWH'S WORD,
and contrary to the Lord's day in YHWH's WORD.
I agree and lets not put Christians under laws given only to Israel. Israel and the covenant ended at the cross.

We know we are doing right if we follow John's instructions in 1Jn3:19-14. Read it in green below.
 
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Bob S

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To tell Christians that we are not yet under the New Covenant is probably the lamest thing I have ever read on a forum. That defies some of what Jesus came to Earth to accomplish. Paul tells Christians we are not under the law. The law was until Jesus. Gal 3.. Those who claim we are still under Torah are spreading heresy and are denying Paul, John and the book of Hebrews and even more, Jesus Himself.

Ken tries to tell us he is not here to persuade others. Well, read his posts and and his denials then decide for yourselves. Why else would any of us be here? I fully admit I am here to spread the real truth of the new Testament. Jews are free from the yoke of the law. Why would anyone want to put Christians where Jews once were?
 
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Steve Petersen

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To tell Christians that we are not yet under the New Covenant is probably the lamest thing I have ever read on a forum. That defies some of what Jesus came to Earth to accomplish. Paul tells Christians we are not under the law. The law was until Jesus. Gal 3.. Those who claim this heresy deny Paul, John and the book of Hebrews and even more, Jesus Himself.

Ken tries to tell us he is not here to persuade others. Well, read his posts and and those denials decide for yourselves. Why else would any of us be here? I fully admit I am here to spread the real truth of the new Testament. Jews are free from the yoke of the law. Why would anyone want to put Christians where Jews once were?

You have clearly delineated Christian misconceptions about the role of the Law. Well done!
 
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Ken Rank

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Hello Ken.

Thanks for your reply, sorry for the delay I have been away for a week.

I agree, after all Ken, the first day (Sunday) was the day that Jesus, was witnessed by the disciples to have risen from the grave. Also, Jesus broke the bread with the disciples on that first day. Let's just call the first day, the Lord's day from now on.

I appreciate your position but can't follow with you. Whether one says, "the house is red" or "red is the house" the point is the same. The "Day of the Lord" and "The Lord's day" are not a day of the week but an event as recorded in the Prophets. John was not sitting there in the spirit on a Sunday, well, he may have been but that isn't what he was speaking about. He was watching end time events unfold, thus he was in the spirit on the Lord's day, the day of the Lord as recorded in places like Joel 2:31.

I think I can show that the practice of Sunday gathering, to break the bread,
was fully in place from the text in Acts 20. I implore you to read the text very carefully, Ken.

Acts 20
6 We sailed from Philippi after the days of Unleavened Bread, and came to them at Troas within five days; and there we stayed seven days.

Paul and the disciples stayed in Troas for seven days, lock that time duration in, Ken.

Acts 20
7 On the first day of the week, when we were gathered together to break bread, Paul began talking to them, intending to leave the next day.

Paul is leaving the next day, so Paul must have already been in Troas for six days. Also please note, the disciples gathered to break bread on the first day. The text does not say, the disciples had gathered to listen to Paul and to break the bread. Paul waits until they gather on the first day and then talks to them.

I think you are forcing a little too much western understanding on the text. "Gathering to break bread" is a well understood Hebraic idiom that refers to eating a meal. It isn't "day"specific brother, it is simply a meal.

Also... a biblical day begins and ends at sundown. If they gathered to break bread (eat dinner) on the first day of the week and he was leaving "the next DAY," then this gathering of brothers for a meal takes place in the evening. This means they were gathered for havdalah, the close of Shabbat meal and then Paul taught. This isn't a mandate to keep Sunday... no Scripture supports a Sunday Sabbath.

I don't think anyone really knows whether the epistle of Barnabas, is a trustworthy letter or not. The author of this epistle is not mentioned in the epistle, nor does this letter make any claim to have been written by an apostle. So it cannot be a forgery. It is simply a letter written by some Christian with an axe to grind, regarding the Jewish law. The date of writing is in the range, 70 A.D. to 132 A.D.

I would like to see the context... is it Halacha, Jewish law OR God's law. You see, a mainstream Christian will look at the feasts and say, "Feasts of the Jews." Yet Leviticus calls them "the Feasts of the LORD," and He calls them, "My feasts." So it would be interesting to see the context, I have not read that book in some time.

This is a double edged sword, the Gentiles were never instructed to keep the 'ten commandments', either Ken. Even in Acts 15, which is the first formal council held by the apostles and the elders. To look into the issue of whether the Gentiles should be under the law. This formal council returned the result, the Gentiles do not need to be under the law of Moses. There we have the commandment of God to the Gentiles, Gentiles are not under the law of Moses.

Respectfully, you lack some historical understanding here. 50 years before the Council in Acts 15, there was a debate between the two school of Pharisaical thought. Hillel (Beit or School of Hillel which taught the "spirit of the law") debated Shamai (Beit Shamai, which taught the "letter of the law") about what should be expected of a Jewish proselyte. Hillel essentially listed the 4 things we see in Acts 15 and said that the new convert would learn the rest as they go. Shamai agreed on the 4 things but added that one needed to recite ALL 613 commandments AND.... be circumcised. Hillel opposed this because he knew that the commandment to be circumcised was not given to the newborn child, after all, an 8 day old male isn't performing his own bris. The commandment was given to the child's father. Anyway.... the people accepted the ruling of Shamai and that was the law of the land. Fast forward 50 years and we see a couple of followers of Shamai claim that new Christians (Christianity was a sect of Judaism in the first century) needed to be circumcised in order to be part of the sect. Paul RIGHTLY disagreed and we get the Council of Jerusalem. What happened there? A BAD 50 year old decision was reversed. New converts into the faith should not have too much put on them at first just as Naaman was told to "go in peace" by Elisha when he had his fill for that day. So 4 things were listed... NOT an exhaustive list... after all, loving God and neighbor aren't on that list, not stealing or having homosexual sex... not on the list. What was on the list as a "starting point," and the NEXT VERSE states that Moses (an idiomatic reference to the Torah) is read in the synagogues each Sabbath. In other words, this is a marathon and here is a place to start... now go and get discipled and learn the rest.

I disagree that the death of James and the destruction of the temple. Defined
the direction of the church, the Gentile church was isolated from events in
Jerusalem. These two events affected the Jewish church.

That's fine, we don't need to agree on every detail. However, we have historical evidence that half the Jewish believers in Yeshua left for the mountains when the temple was destroyed. We KNOW that... so I believe it played a roll. Ultimately, it was what happened later... but I will address this in a second.

Even in the scripture it is clear that the Gentiles were never required to become Jews. I disagree with your dating (150 A.D.), the Gentiles from the time of
(Acts 15) were already separating from the Jewish law. The Gentiles are not Jews, hence, the Gentiles were never told that they were UNDER the law.
Justin Martyr and Melito were commenting on a trend that began way before
150 A.D.

Jewish law or God's law? Not all of Israel is Jewish my new friend. And while I agree that we are NOT to become Jewish, we ARE supposed to follow Yeshua. And if it was ok and acceptable to the Father that he refrained from unclean meat, or kept the feasts, then why is it ok for him and not for us? If I were doing this thinking it saved me, that would be wrong... but if I am doing this because I love God ( 1 John 5:3 ) then it is acceptable before Him.

Brother... I don't expect you to accept this, but it is true and if you search it out and just let the truth fall where it may, you will see this. A gentile Christian is an oxymoron. In the early English bibles, ethnos was translated as nations or gentiles. Specifically, that is any nation NOT Israel or pagans. Proof? The Webster's 1828 defines gentiles as, "pagans, heathens, anyone who is not a Jew >>OR<< or Christian." Today, we define a gentile as, "any believer in Jesus who is not Jewish." Here is the problem... ethnos means pagan, heathen, a nation that is not Israel and in 1611 that is why the word "gentile" was chosen as the word to translate it into. However, the definition has changed and now we read the MODERN definition into a word that when first used meant something else. You are not a gentile... Paul said you WERE a gentile but you are NOW a fellowcitizen of the Commonwealth of Israel. We are a part of Israel... which must be the case because you will not find a covenant made with gentiles. Hebrews 8:8-11 (which quotes Jeremiah 31:31-34) is tied to the work of Yeshua and is clearly what we are apart of... AND... is no made with gentiles but rather with Judah (the Jews) and Israel (us).

Rejoice Ken, we are not under the yoke of the law.

What you see as a yoke I see as a blessing. However, I want to be clear... I am NOT looking for you to walk or think or act like me. Just follow your own convictions and in the end we will ALL stand corrected for many things.

God's judgement of Israel was final, the nation disappeared for two thousand years. Not sure that Christianity was ever a Jewish sect, after all Ken, we
are a new creation in Christ. There is no Jew or Gentile in this new creation.

If you went to a theater for a 2 hour movie and managed to only catch the last 1/2 hour.. you might get hooked in and enjoy what you did see... but the context and relationships and many things that went into making the last 1/2 what it is, was missed, if you did not see the first hour and a half. The OT is 75% of the bible and without it you can find the Lord in the NT, discern some of God's will, but you are leaving food on the table that God desires us to eat. I am saying this because the modern Christian interpretation has Israel cut off and that is that... no longer a people of God. But Deuteronomy 30:1-6, all of Hosea (especially chapter 1) and so many more places speak of repeated promises to bring Israel back from their punishment. "In the place where I said you that you are not my people, there will I call you sons of the Living God." We have Israel cut off and done, God doesn't.

Away with the Old Covenant and in with the New Covenant. If you can understand what the new creation represents, then you will see through it all, Ken.
I reject the date of 150 A.D., I accept the formal date of Acts 15.

Jeremiah 31 has the words "new covenant." The word for "new" is chadasha which is the adjective form of a verb that means 'to renew.' In Hebrews 8 we see the same and where we see "new" we see kainos. Kainos means "new in regards to freshness, renew" whereas "nehos" (or neos) means "new in regards to AGE." It isn't a brand new covenant, it is the everlasting covenant (see Psalm 105:8-10) renewed through the blood of Yeshua.

Ken, the scripture is silent about the time that Jesus rose from the grave. Why did you say Saturday night? To say Saturday night is beyond what the scripture states, the apostles witnessed the risen Christ on the first day (Jewish time).

Not at all.... He was killed at the 9th hour on Passover, the 14th of Nisan. The 9th hour is 3:00PM and when Passover ends at sundown you have a High Sabbath, the first day of Unleavened bread. We know he was dead for 3 DAYS >>AND<< NIGHTS.... so it is simple math from there....

Thursday - day 1 (Passover, the 14th of Nisan)
Thursday night - night 1 (begin High Sabbath)
Friday - day 2 (High Sabbath all day)
Friday night - night 2 (end High Sabbath, begin weekly Sabbath)
Saturday - day 3 (weekly Sabbath all day)
Saturday night - night 3 (end weekly Sabbath)

Mat 28:1 Now after the Sabbath, as the first day of the week began to dawn, Mary Magdalene and the other Mary came to see the tomb.

If he was in the tomb on Sunday after sunrise, that would mark day 4... he was dead 3 days and nights. So, sometime before dawn, after the weekly Sabbath he rose and the empty tomb was found at sunrise Sunday morning.

Jesus rose some time before dawn or even at dawn, on the first day (Sunday).
There is no mention of a Sabbath evening (Saturday night) in the Gospel accounts of the resurrection.

Again, Matthew 28:1 is very clear. Also, there is a language variation between a weekly Sabbath and a High Sabbath which is why my chart above contains the High Sabbath and the weekly Sabbath.

The Gentiles were never told to honor the Sabbath, that is pure inference. To even hint that the Gentiles were under the law, is heresy Ken.

"Under the law" is an idiomatic reference to one's guilt... we are no longer under the law, no longer guilty. We are under grace... forgiven, declared innocent. The idea that God gave Torah and called it everlasting and then nailed it to the cross and did away with it causes all kinds of issues that you may, or may not, be ready to deal with. I don't mean that in a condescending way, but if God calls something everlasting it is.... and if our theology causes us to make the everlasting go away, it isn't the Scripture that has the issue, it is our theology. I have this discussion all the time brother. Usually when I make the comment I just did I get the Hebrews 8 priesthood "change" thrown at me. Instead of taking the time to consider the words, WAIT on God and ask Him, "is there anything here for me Father?" and then WAIT for Him to answer... we go on defense, call names, malign brothers, cause division... for what? Because of a difference in understanding? Sad... and I am not saying you have done anything like that. We don't agree but you have been respectful and I appreciate that so much!

By the way, "heresy" is another word that has changed in meaning. Look it up in Thayer or Liddle-Scott. :)

Blessings.
Ken
 
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Ken Rank

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To tell Christians that we are not yet under the New Covenant is probably the lamest thing I have ever read on a forum. That defies some of what Jesus came to Earth to accomplish. Paul tells Christians we are not under the law. The law was until Jesus. Gal 3.. Those who claim we are still under Torah are spreading heresy and are denying Paul, John and the book of Hebrews and even more, Jesus Himself.

Ken tries to tell us he is not here to persuade others. Well, read his posts and and his denials then decide for yourselves. Why else would any of us be here? I fully admit I am here to spread the real truth of the new Testament. Jews are free from the yoke of the law. Why would anyone want to put Christians where Jews once were?

It is, respectfully, your lack of understanding in relation to what I am saying and what Scripture is saying Bob. What does the BIBLE say about the new covenant?

Heb 8:8 Because finding fault with them, He says: "Behold, the days are coming, says the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah--
Heb 8:9 not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day when I took them by the hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt; because they did not continue in My covenant, and I disregarded them, says the Lord.
Heb 8:10 For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: I will put My laws in their mind and write them on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people.
Heb 8:11 None of them shall teach his neighbor, and none his brother, saying, 'Know the Lord,' for all shall know Me, from the least of them to the greatest of them.

The bold parts are key. Is the writing of the law on our minds and hearts complete? The answer is no.... 2 Corinthians 1:22 and 2 Corinthians 5:5 tell us that the Spirit was given to us as a "down payment" or a "deposit" toward more to come. Once the writing is complete, we won't be able to sin because God's instructions will be part of who and what we are. Since right now we might not WANT to sin but still can... and since we still need to reach out and teach our neighbor because not all know the LORD.... then this work is NOT DONE. You can malign me all you want Bob, call what I said lame... whatever makes you happy. In the end, the MARK OF THE NEW COVENANT according to the text that speaks about the new covenant is telling us that the work isn't done. We DO BELONG TO GOD, I am not questioning that. You are a child of the Most High... praise Him for that!!!!!! But the new covenant is not in effect yet because the stipulations that God placed around it clearly have not been completed yet.

Blessings.
Ken
 
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I agree and lets not put Christians under laws given only to Israel. Israel and the covenant ended at the cross.

We know we are doing right if we follow John's instructions in 1Jn3:19-14. Read it in green below.

God told Israel, "in the place where it was said you that you are not my people, there I will say to you that you are sons of the Living God." Bob, God did not do away with Israel, Christian theology did. God was very plain about Him NOT being done with Israel in Deut. 30:1-6 and all of Hosea 1 (to name 2 of many places). Don't not read the verses because you don't like me... just go read the references I just shared and let the truth be whatever it is.

Put your mouse over this verse Hosea 1:10
 
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It is, respectfully, your lack of understanding in relation to what I am saying and what Scripture is saying Bob. What does the BIBLE say about the new covenant?

Heb 8:8 Because finding fault with them, He says: "Behold, the days are coming, says the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah--
Heb 8:9 not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day when I took them by the hand to lead them out of the land of Egypt; because they did not continue in My covenant, and I disregarded them, says the Lord.
Heb 8:10 For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, says the Lord: I will put My laws in their mind and write them on their hearts; and I will be their God, and they shall be My people.
Heb 8:11 None of them shall teach his neighbor, and none his brother, saying, 'Know the Lord,' for all shall know Me, from the least of them to the greatest of them.

The bold parts are key. Is the writing of the law on our minds and hearts complete? The answer is no.... 2 Corinthians 1:22 and 2 Corinthians 5:5 tell us that the Spirit was given to us as a "down payment" or a "deposit" toward more to come. Once the writing is complete, we won't be able to sin because God's instructions will be part of who and what we are. Since right now we might not WANT to sin but still can... and since we still need to reach out and teach our neighbor because not all know the LORD.... then this work is NOT DONE. You can malign me all you want Bob, call what I said lame... whatever makes you happy. In the end, the MARK OF THE NEW COVENANT according to the text that speaks about the new covenant is telling us that the work isn't done. We DO BELONG TO GOD, I am not questioning that. You are a child of the Most High... praise Him for that!!!!!! But the new covenant is not in effect yet because the stipulations that God placed around it clearly have not been completed yet.

Blessings.
Ken
Yes, the Bible says the following: Heb8:6 But in fact the ministry Jesus has received is as superior to theirs as the covenant of which he is mediator is superior to the old one, since the new covenant is established on better promises. 13 By calling this covenant “new,” he has made the first one obsolete; and what is obsolete and outdated will soon disappear.

I suppose, like Bill Clinton, we could debate what the meaning of "is" is. I take it that the writer believed that the new covenant is now in force. He has not will made the first one obsolete. AD 70 pretty much made the first one completely obsolete. The Temple and the priesthood were the focal points of Torah. Ad 70 marked the date of the beginning of the worldwide spread of Judaism. The old covenant was completely defunct. Nothing can ever bring it back.

By the way, the writer of Hebrews was, of course, quoting Jeremiah. Of course Jeremiah would be pointing to the future. Your comments clearly do not hold water. We are clearly in "the days are coming".
 
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