expos4ever
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- Oct 22, 2008
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Here is some thought-provoking stuff from prominent theologian NT Wright on Jesus' view of the Law (https://www.sbl-site.org/assets/pdfs/TBv4i1_WrightMosaicLaw.pdf):
Like many Jews of his day, Jesus saw the Mosaic Law not simply as a list of commands to be obeyed, but as a program and prophecy to be worked out and fulfilled. He saw the Exodus (the central drama of the Mosaic Law) as a foretaste of the upcoming ‘new exodus’ through which not only Israel but the whole world would be liberated from slavery, not just political but personal.
Jesus put eschatology rather than ethics at the center of his program: “the time is fulfilled,” he said (Mark 1:15). This meant that several existing aspects of the Law, like the food and purity regulations, were declared redundant (Mark 7)—not because they were stupid or irrational, but because they were part of the first main stage of God’s saving plan, and Jesus believed he was launching the final stage, the time of fulfillment.
If Wright is correct, and I believe that He is, the "retiring" of the Law of Moses makes perfect sense - the Law was not timeless but rather a participant in an evolving plan of redemption.
Like many Jews of his day, Jesus saw the Mosaic Law not simply as a list of commands to be obeyed, but as a program and prophecy to be worked out and fulfilled. He saw the Exodus (the central drama of the Mosaic Law) as a foretaste of the upcoming ‘new exodus’ through which not only Israel but the whole world would be liberated from slavery, not just political but personal.
Jesus put eschatology rather than ethics at the center of his program: “the time is fulfilled,” he said (Mark 1:15). This meant that several existing aspects of the Law, like the food and purity regulations, were declared redundant (Mark 7)—not because they were stupid or irrational, but because they were part of the first main stage of God’s saving plan, and Jesus believed he was launching the final stage, the time of fulfillment.
If Wright is correct, and I believe that He is, the "retiring" of the Law of Moses makes perfect sense - the Law was not timeless but rather a participant in an evolving plan of redemption.
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