LoveGodsWord said:
↑ In fact according to the scriptures, Jesus taught us saying do not think I have come to destroy the law and the prophets in
Matthew 5:17-20.
Your response here...
I repeat a detailed argument to the effect that Jesus is not intending us to believe that the Law will persist until literally the end of time:
Then we have Gods Word that disagree with your words from the very words of Jesus that says; " For verily I say unto you, Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law, till all be fulfilled." - Matthew 5:18. Sounds like the end of time to me.
Jesus was a product of his times and culture and we in the modern west have been careless in understanding the implications. On a surface reading, Matthew 5:17-20 is indeed a challenge to those of us who think the Law of Moses has been retired. Those who hold the opposing view have their own challenges to face, such as
Ephesians 2:15 (and
Romans 7) which declare the abolition of the Law of Moses.
For me I think the key here is in seeking Jesus through His Word and claiming His promises to be our guide and teacher (see John 16:13: John 7:17; John 14:26; 1 John 2:27) which are conditional of course of continuing to believe and follow Jesus through His Word (see John 8:31-36). Many people do not seek Jesus through His Word to be their guide and teacher. They instead seek to know Jesus through the teachings and traditions of men outside of Gods' Word and praying that God will teach them His Word through His Spirit. Gods Word therefore should not be a challenge to us if we seek Jesus for His Spirit to guide us and teach us His Words. As shown in the post you are micro-quoting here. There is not a single scripture in all of Gods' Word that says God's 10 commandments have been abolished that is a teaching of lawlessness (without law).
According to the scriptures, According to the scriptures the purpose of God's 10 commandments (not 9, or 613) is to give us the knowledge of good (moral right doing) when obeyed and evil (moral wrong doing when disobeyed); sin (moral wrong doing when disobeyed) and righteousness (moral right doing when obeyed) *see
Romans 7:7;
James 2:10-11;
Romans 3:20 and
1 John 3:4 and to lead us to Christ that we might all be forgiven through faith (see
Galatians 3:22-25;
Matthew 9:12-13) so that we can be born again *
1 John 3:4-9 and made free to walk in Gods' Spirit *
Galatians 5:16;
Romans 8:1-4. This is Gods' new covenant promise to all those who believe and follow Gods Word according to
Hebrews 8:10-12 from
Jeremiah 31:31-34 and
Ezekiel 36:24-27.
So to claim that we know God while disregarding Gods' law is a teaching that is not biblical or stated anywhere in the scriptures. In fact in
Proverbs 28:9 we read
He that turns away his ear from hearing the law, even his prayer shall be abomination. We should also keep in mind that according to the scriptures, Jesus and all the Apostles upheld and taught Gods' law and everyone of Gods' 10 commandments are repeated in the new covenant as the standard of good and righteousness when obeyed and evil and sin when disobeyed (scripture support
here and
here linked).
How can one read Matt 5:17-20 and think that the Law of Moses has been set aside, given that heaven and earth are still here? There is a way to faithfully read this text and still claim that Law of Moses was retired 2000 years ago as Paul so forcefully argues (e.g. Eph 2:15): In Hebrew culture, “end of the world” language was commonly used metaphorically to invest commonplace events with theological significance.
As shown through the scripture context you are disregarding in Matthew 5 there is nowhere in all of Matthew 5 or the rest of the bible that says Gods law has been abolished. Your teaching of lawlessness (without law) is not supported in the scriptures. According to the scripture context your disregarding, Jesus says; For I say unto you, that except your righteousness shall exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, ye shall in no wise enter into the kingdom of heaven *
Matthew 5:20.
The scripture in
Isaiah 42:21 shows that Jesus came in fact to
magnify the law and to make it honorable and to teach the true meaning of God's Law and that it is to be applied from the inside out to our very thoughts and feelings. It is not therefore good enough to have an outward appearance before men of being obedient to Gods' law. God reads the heart and knows we are all sick with sin *
Matthew 15:19-20;
Matthew 12:34-35;
Jeremiah 13:23;
Jeremiah 17:9-10;
Matthew 15:19-20;
John 5:42 and in need of a new heart and of a Saviour to save us from sin. Many do not know the meaning here according to Jesus in
Matthew 9:12-13.
What your disregarding in Matthew 5 is that Jesus is not abolishing Gods' law as he has already stated in Matthew 5:17 where he tells us not to even think that is what he is doing but Jesus makes this very clear in the rest of the chapter where he then goes on to
magnify Gods' 10 commandments in
Matthew 5:21-28 where he talks about murdering your fellow man by being angry with them without reason or committing adultery in our thoughts by looking lustfully at a woman. Think it through dear friend. If Jesus was abolishing Gods' 10 commandments he would not be magnifying them and applying them to our very thoughts and feelings. Ephesians 2:15 has nothing to do with Gods' 10 commandments. It is to the laws in ordinances and Jesus breaking down the walls of separation between Jewish and Gentile believers.
This is not mere speculation – we have concrete evidence. Isaiah writes: 10For the stars of heaven and their constellations Will not flash forth their light; The sun will be dark when it rises And the moon will not shed its light What was going on? Babylon was being destroyed, never to be rebuilt. There are other examples of use of “end of the world” imagery to describe much more “mundane” events within the present space-time manifold. So it is possible that Jesus is not referring to the destruction of matter, space, and time as the criteria for the retirement of the Law. But what might He mean here? What is the real event for which “heaven and earth passing away” is an apocalyptic metaphor? It is Jesus’ death on the Cross where He proclaims “It is accomplished”. Note how this dovetails perfectly with the 5:18 declaration that the Law would remain until all is accomplished. Seeing things this way allows us to honour the established tradition of metaphorical end-of-the-world imagery and to take Paul at his word in his many statements which clearly denote the work of Jesus as the point in time at which Law of Moses was retired.
There is nothing that you have posted here that supports a view of lawlessness (without law). Heaven and earth have not passed away and all has not been fulfilled (e.g. second coming, judgement of the wicked and an end to sin and death).
Take Care.