Leaf473
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- Jul 17, 2020
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(I was hoping to make faster progress, but it looks like this may take a while. Thank you for your patience.)Jesus spent his ministry teaching his followers how to obey the Law of Moses by word and by example and he did not establish the New Covenant for the purpose of undermining anything that he spent his ministry teaching, but rather the New Covenant still involves following it (Jremiah 31:33)
It is possible that Paul went to synagogue because he wanted to continue to obey what God has commanded in accordance with the example that Christ set for us to follow? In 1 Corinthians 11:1, we are instructed to be imitators of Paul as he is an imitator of Christ. In Acts 21:0-24, Paul rejoiced that tens of thousands of Jews were coming to faith who were all zealous for doing good works in obedience to the Torah, which was in accordance with believing in what Christ gave himself to accomplish on the cross (Titus 2:14), and he planned to take steps to disprove false rumors that he was teaching against the Torah and to show that he continued to live in obedience to it. In Acts 23:6, Paul claimed to be a Pharisee, and Pharisees are Torah observant. Acts 24:14, Paul testified that he continued to believe everything in the Torah and the Prophets.
In 1 John 5:3, to love God is to obey His commandments, which are not burdensome. In regard to Matthew 11:28-30, Jesus set a sinless example of how to walk in obedience to the Torah, and he was inviting people to come to him for rest and to learn from him, and said that his yoke was easy and his burden light. By Jesus saying that we will find rest for our souls, he was referencing Jeremiah 6:16-19, where the Torah is described as the good way where we will find rest for our souls. In Acts 2:38, when Peter instructed His audience to repent and be baptized for the forgiveness of sins, the Torah was how they knew what sin is (Romans 3:20), so that would include repenting from breaking the Sabbath.
I agree that there has been a much longer period of time after the destruction of the 2nd temple, though all of God's laws are eternal, so that is for a much longer period of time.
Wisdom that has no practical application is not wisdom, but is useless clutter of no value to know, so wisdom can't be extracted from the law apart from practical application. The Bible does not teach us wisdom for its own sake, but for the sake of doing.
While we should seek to do whatever it is that God instructs us to do through His law, there can be different understandings of how to correctly do what God has instructed, so if we see thinks like Moabites and eunuchs being accepted into the general assembly, then we should question whether it is correct to understand Deuteronomy 23:1-3
Their marriage would not have been sanctioned if she has not been a follower of God who was welcomed into the congregation of Israel (1 Kings 11:1-2, Ezra 9:1-2, 2 Corinthians 6:14)
Yes, it's possible Paul was going to the synagogue because he was keeping the Sabbath. In that case, you would have been instructing the, say, Corinthians to do the same. But it looks like the Corinthians are having their own service.
Yes, Paul said to imitate him. But this brings us back to the question of whether Paul was keeping the law, or wanted the gentiles to keep it in the same way that he did.
I'm not seeing in Acts 21 that Paul is rejoicing about Jews keeping the law. I see that James and the elders rejoice and praise God for what is happening among the gentiles.
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