Sorry if I don't take your word for it over the translation in Greek as shown written word for word
The History of the “Two Laws” Theory in Romans 3:20
The Pharisees were teachers of their own laws, not God's they kept their laws not God's Mat 15:1-14 Rom 2:21-23 which Jesus condemned harshly, following their path is not the way back to reconciliation. Mat 5:18-20 Rev 22:14-15
There is no Scripture that says the Ten Commandments are the same laws as the sacrificial laws that Moses wrote placed besides the ark of the Covenant. This goes against the very teaching of God. You quote you but does that trump what God said in His own written and spoken Testimony the Ten Commandments Deut 4:13 Exo 34:28 that
no more were added Deut 5:22 sorry if I choose to believe the Testimony of God Exo 31:18 over man. There was no Moses at creation according to God in His written and spoken Testimony, the Ten Commandments Exo 20:11. But you are free to believe what you wish
2 Chr 33:8 and I will not again remove the foot of Israel from the land which I have appointed for your fathers—only if they are careful to do
all that I (God) have commanded them, according to the whole law and (in addition to) the statutes and the ordinances
by the hand of Moses.”
God is not Moses. Moses is not God. Moses was a servant of God as are we to be.
James 2:10
For whoever shall keep the whole law, and yet stumble in one
point, he is guilty of all.
Which Law?
11
For He (God) who said,
“Do not commit adultery,” also said
, “Do not murder.” Now if you do not commit adultery, but you do murder,
you have become a transgressor of the law.
The Ten Commandments is the whole law of God, the only law that sits under His mercy seat. Not the edited version of man. His own Testimony, that God of the Universe wrote, not man. Where mercy and justice will come together soon. Rev 11:18-19 I personally would not want to remove a jot or tittle on what God covers under His mercy seat, but we are given free will, despite that never working out for anyone in Scripture. Eze 22:26 Eze 20:13 Neh 13:17 Exo 31:14 we were told not to follow the same path of disobedience Heb4:11
The law that describes what sin is can't be the same law that was
added as a prescription for sin. I pray one day you will see this.
I cannot see this because all that you're saying is an interpretation--not what was said.
1) The Scriptures do not say that the 10 Commandments are different from the entire body of Law that included sacrificial laws. They are different sets within the one Law, and are designated in places separately, but they all remain part of the Law of Moses. They are not "God's Laws" and "Moses' Laws."
2) The Scirptures do not say that the "words of the Covenant," sometimes called "the 10 Commandments," are restricted to just those 10 Commandments. We are informed that "Covenant Law" included the regulations on how the 10 Commandments were stored in the Ark and in the Tabernacle. In fact, the Tabernacle itself was called "the tabernacle of the covenant law."
Exo 38.These are the amounts of the materials used for the tabernacle, the tabernacle of the covenant law, which were recorded at Moses’ command by the Levites under the direction of Ithamar son of Aaron, the priest.
In reality, though the 10 Commandments were used as a symbol of the entire agreement between God and Israel, the totality of all of the laws were included in the covenant agreement...
Lev 26.14 “‘But if you will not listen to me and carry out all these commands, 15 and if you reject my decrees and abhor my laws and fail to carry out all my commands and so violate my covenant...
The Law, therefore, included "all these commands," "my decrees," and "my laws," as well as "all my commands." Doing any of these things--not just the 10 Commandments, "violated my covenant."
But the 10 Commandments, as symbolic of the whole Covenant, also represented more than just all of the laws governing the keeping of the 10 Commandments. They represented, symbolically, God's promise to Israel's ancestors, to maintain Israel as His People...
44 Yet in spite of this, when they are in the land of their enemies, I will not reject them or abhor them so as to destroy them completely, breaking my covenant with them. I am the Lord their God. 45 But for their sake I will remember the covenant with their ancestors whom I brought out of Egypt in the sight of the nations to be their God. I am the Lord.’”
46 These are the decrees, the laws and the regulations that the Lord established at Mount Sinai between himself and the Israelites through Moses.
At the heart of this argument you believe that the 10 Commandments alone represent God's "decrees, laws, and commands," and that violating them alone constitute violating God's "covenant." Well, I must admit that the 10 Commandments were used by God in His Law to represent Israel's ideal faithfulness to God with respect to those 10 Commandments, including the Sabbath Law.
One could keep many of the external ceremonial laws without really keeping the 10 Commandments from the heart. And that was, I think, the point.
And so, the 10 Commandments were the seal of true obedience among those who had genuine faith in God's mercy, though all of the external laws of sacrifice were also part of this covenant law. Much of the external laws were designed, in fact, to protect God's standard of true obedience to the Commandments from those kept separate by sin. It meant that the 10 Commandments, along with the regulations governing the keeping of them, could only truly be fulfilled by Christ, enabling the curtain of separation to come down.
As such, these 10 Commandments were symbols of a promise, and not the full text of the Law--all of their "decrees, laws, and regulations." Your error is, I think, in thinking their use as a symbol of the whole covenant meant that they were exclusive of the rest of the full body of laws.
The statutes given *by the hand of Moses* were included in this Law and Covenant. There is no distinction between these and the 10 Commandments given by God. Both statutes given by Moses and Commandments given by God were *from God.*
The fact that the 10 Commandments were used as a symbol of the Covenant in the ark indicated God's promise to Israel on behalf of their forefathers. The fact they were encased in an ark and in the Tabernacle indicated that the statutes governing this order were part of the entire set of decrees, laws, and regulations.
Your argument for the Sabbath regulation is as much part of the whole body of laws as it is a part of the 10 Commandments. And it all, both the 10 Commandments and the external regulations governing their separation, were designed to maintain a kind of separation between God's presence and Israel until Christ's work on the cross was finished.
Now that Christ has died, and the veil has been rent, we rely on Christ for our Salvation--not works done under the Law, which were eternally separated from God by sin. Christ did not have to keep the 10 Commandments because they were for Israel and not for a Messiah who knew no sin.
Jesus had no need to keep the Sabbath Law, nor any of the many other regulations, ceremonies, and requirements of the Law. His righteousness was the fulfillment of the Covenant and the fulfillment of the promise. If you are going to start requiring Sabbath observance of Jesus you will be requiring that God obey His own laws required for sinful Israel!
In fact, Jesus' righteousness was designed to be fulfilled apart from the Law for Israel. He became a distinct priest, temple, and sacrifice. He alone fulfilled a Law that was for a sinful people. And did so separate from Sabbath Law.