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Is Observing the 7th day Sabbath a Requirement for Salvation?

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Dave-W

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Jesus was Jew, so first I need to convert to Judaism. Then, if I go to a Jewish Synagogue (which is what Jesus did!) and stand up and read, I'm good to go, right?
Were they all Jews in Corinth? In Ephesus?

BTW - I do attend a synagogue and have chanted from a Torah scroll. But I know that is not everyone's cup of tea. Or their divine calling.
 
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Dave-W

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Christianity was originally a sect of Judaism,
Still is ..... God didn't change that.
Men tried to change it, but of course you know that already.
But the issue in the early church was whether Gentiles had to become Jews order to be part of Judaism as a follower of Messiah, with the answer being that they didn't not have become Jews in order to become part of Judaism.
That is Acts 15.
Being a follower of Messiah means that we seek to follow his teachings and his example, However, doing that is not just for Jews, but for Gentiles too.
Indeed.
 
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GrammyJ

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Christianity was originally a sect of Judaism, so it was essentially a denomination of Judaism who followed Jesus as the Messiah of Judaism. But the issue in the early church was whether Gentiles had to become Jews order to be part of Judaism as a follower of Messiah, with the answer being that they didn't not have become Jews in order to become part of Judaism. Being a follower of Messiah means that we seek to follow his teachings and his example, However, doing that is not just for Jews, but for Gentiles too.
Please show us all of that in scripture. And by the way, Judaism has NEVER accepted Christ as their Messiah. Messianic Jews HAVE accepted Him; original Judaism HAS NOT.
 
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Soyeong

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Please show us all of that in scripture.

The issue in Acts 15:1 was not whether Gentiles should follow Messiah's example, but whether Gentiles had to become Jewish proselytes in order to do so.

And by the way, Judaism has NEVER accepted Christ as their Messiah. Messianic Jews HAVE accepted Him; original Judaism HAS NOT.

Judaism is a Messianic religion and Messiah did not come to start a new religion, but rather he came as the Messiah of Judaism, and there were many tens of thousands of Jews recognized him as their Messiah without changing their religion, who became zealous for the Torah (Acts 21:20). So originally there was no distinction, but over time time Judaism and Christianity have become more distinct, with Judaism teaching people to follow God's Torah, but not their Messiah, with Christianity teaching people to follow the Messiah, but not God's Torah, and with both only teaching half the truth. The Torah is the way (Jeremiah 6:16-19, Psalms 119:1, Exodus 18:20), the truth (Psalms 119:142), and the life (Proverbs 3:18, Matthew 19:17), Messiah is the way, the truth, and the life (John 14:6), the Torah is God's Word, and Messiah is God's Word made flesh.
 
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Bob S

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Nowhere in scripture are we commanded to worship on any specific day or time. We are told HOW to worship (in Spirit and in Truth), but we are never told WHEN. Me? I worship Him EVERY day, but I meet with fellow born-again believers at my church on Sundays to sing His praises, to fellowship, and to be taught from God's Word. It could be any old day, as far as I'm concerned, but Sunday is the day chosen by my church. It isn't about a day, it's about the Savior!! I do not "keep" Sunday or any other day. I spend a couple of hours in church on Sundays, but the remainder of the day is just like any other - restaurants, shopping, household chores, TV, etc. There is NOTHING special or holy about Sunday, and it is NOT my "substitute sabbath."

PS: I was a 3rd-generation SDA, and studied my way out of the church over 20 years ago, praise God!
Hi Grammy, you are right on the spot. I, too, studied my way out of Adventism and in the same time frame. Great people, but way off base. They allow their false prophet to lead them around by their noses all the while with blinders to keep them from seeing the real light. Welcome and please stay around to spread the Good News of real Grace without the works of the old covenant law.
 
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Bob S

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Really? Do you ONLY read the New Testament?

Do you think God did away with 3/4 of the bible on the day Our Lord rose from the dead?
Hi Dave Grammy is 100% correct. God has never ask anyone but Israel to observe the Sabbath. You can argue your point, but where is the meat. Show us where anyone else has ever been instructed to observe days by God. You can use the Bible or any recognized history of the World. You have been programmed to believe Christians must observe days, it sure didn't come from the Bible. Genesis account of creation and rest after creation only recognized God as being the one who rested. He didn't ask Adam and Eve nor the angels. If the Sabbath was so important why was it not mentioned until the Israelites crossed the Red Sea? God didn't stop them on their flight out of Egypt. It was not until they were on safe ground that He began to teach them observance. All the remainder of the World was and for the most part is oblivious to the keeping of days. I really do not know how you can dispute that.

The Torah was a law exclusively for Israel And that law ended when Jesus died for Israel and all the children on Earth. A new covenant ratified with Jesus blood took the place of the Sinai covenant at Calvary. Paul indicates that over and over and the most easy verses to understand are found in 2Cor 3:7-11. The 10 commandments with its ritual Sabbath law was temporary and used as a guide for only Israel has been replaced by the gift Jesus gave to mankind, the Holy Spirit. How much plainer does it get?
 
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GrammyJ

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Hi Grammy, you are right on the spot. I, too, studied my way out of Adventism and in the same time frame. Great people, but way off base. They allow their false prophet to lead them around by their noses all the while with blinders to keep them from seeing the real light. Welcome and please stay around to spread the Good News of real Grace without the works of the old covenant law.
AMEN, and thanks, Bob S. That's why I'm here, and on several Facebook forums for the same reason - to speak TRUTH! God gets all of the glory! Linking arms with you to share the Good News and take a stand against the errors of SDA teachings!!
 
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GrammyJ

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Hi Dave Grammy is 100% correct. God has never ask anyone but Israel to observe the Sabbath. You can argue your point, but where is the meat. Show us where anyone else has ever been instructed to observe days by God. You can use the Bible or any recognized history of the World. You have been programmed to believe Christians must observe days, it sure didn't come from the Bible. Genesis account of creation and rest after creation only recognized God as being the one who rested. He didn't ask Adam and Eve nor the angels. If the Sabbath was so important why was it not mentioned until the Israelites crossed the Red Sea? God didn't stop them on their flight out of Egypt. It was not until they were on safe ground that He began to teach them observance. All the remainder of the World was and for the most part is oblivious to the keeping of days. I really do not know how you can dispute that.

The Torah was a law exclusively for Israel And that law ended when Jesus died for Israel and all the children on Earth. A new covenant ratified with Jesus blood took the place of the Sinai covenant at Calvary. Paul indicates that over and over and the most easy verses to understand are found in 2Cor 3:7-11. The 10 commandments with its ritual Sabbath law was temporary and used as a guide for only Israel has been replaced by the gift Jesus gave to mankind, the Holy Spirit. How much plainer does it get?
Amen, amen, and A-MEN!!! Well said, my friend!
 
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GrammyJ

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The issue in Acts 15:1 was not whether Gentiles should follow Messiah's example, but whether Gentiles had to become Jewish proselytes in order to do so.



Judaism is a Messianic religion and Messiah did not come to start a new religion, but rather he came as the Messiah of Judaism, and there were many tens of thousands of Jews recognized him as their Messiah without changing their religion, who became zealous for the Torah (Acts 21:20). So originally there was no distinction, but over time time Judaism and Christianity have become more distinct, with Judaism teaching people to follow God's Torah, but not their Messiah, with Christianity teaching people to follow the Messiah, but not God's Torah, and with both only teaching half the truth. The Torah is the way (Jeremiah 6:16-19, Psalms 119:1, Exodus 18:20), the truth (Psalms 119:142), and the life (Proverbs 3:18, Matthew 19:17), Messiah is the way, the truth, and the life (John 14:6), the Torah is God's Word, and Messiah is God's Word made flesh.
No, Jesus absolutely DID NOT come to start a "new religion!" He came to live a perfect life, and bear my sins to the cross, shedding His blood in FULL payment of my sin debt. The chains are gone, I've been set free (in Him) - Hallelujah!! I can say with full assurance that I have been redeemed, and I AM SAVED, right here, right now! Ready and eagerly waiting for your return, Lord Jesus!
 
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Bob S

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The issue in Acts 15:1 was not whether Gentiles should follow Messiah's example, but whether Gentiles had to become Jewish proselytes in order to do so.
Jesus lived under the law of Moses. He never once told Gentiles to live like He lived. When a Messianic says "follow Messiah's example" you mean to keep Torah. Jesus ended Torah at Calvary. We are under the new covenant of Grace and love. Paul was correct in not demanding the keep the law of Moses. The law of Moses was defunct, it ended at the Cross.


Judaism is a Messianic religion
How can you say that? Messianics do not observe Torah. they pick and choose which laws from Torah that are convenient.

and Messiah did not come to start a new religion,
How do you know Jesus motives. That may not have been number one priority, but id did happen. If He didn't then just where did Paul get what he wrote?

but rather he came as the Messiah of Judaism, and there were many tens of thousands of Jews recognized him as their Messiah without changing their religion, who became zealous for the Torah (Acts 21:20). So originally there was no distinction, but over time time Judaism and Christianity have become more distinct, with Judaism teaching people to follow God's Torah, but not their Messiah, with Christianity teaching people to follow the Messiah, but not God's Torah, and with both only teaching half the truth. The Torah is the way (Jeremiah 6:16-19, Psalms 119:1, Exodus 18:20), the truth (Psalms 119:142), and the life (Proverbs 3:18, Matthew 19:17), Messiah is the way, the truth, and the life (John 14:6), the Torah is God's Word, and Messiah is God's Word made flesh.
Yes, Torah was God's word to Israel and no other nation. Jesus is Messiah to all mankind. Those who tried to kept Torah were not successful, if it had then Jesus would not have given His life.
 
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GrammyJ

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I know quite a bit about the mosaic law that was abolished but nothing about God's moral law, the Commandments, being abolished.

Let's see... the Decalogue was stored inside the ark whereas the mosaic law was kept on the outside. The Decalogue was written by God's own finger on permanent stone, whereas the mosaic law was written by a man on perishable parchment.

How do you read this passage?

Matt 5 16-19

Let your light so shine before men, that they may see your good works, and glorify your Father which is in heaven.

Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets: I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil.

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.

Whosoever therefore shall break one of these least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of heaven: but whosoever shall do and teach them, the same shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven.


Here, Jesus is teaching us that the good works we do out of the abundance of the heart, from love, glorify the Father. This would include the keeping of the Sabbath that was commanded at creation, what was understood before Sinai and what was done by Jesus himself to glorify His Father.



To my knowledge, the heavens and the earth are still in existence so I don't see how the Law could be done away with.


Why would Jesus say this do you suppose... maybe the same reason He thought to put the word REMEMBER in front of the fourth Commandment. Because He knew that Satan would cause the Sabbath Command to be done away with.
I knew it was just a matter of time till the "jots and tittles" verse would come out. The interesting thing is, the law is THE LAW - ALL of it, not just the ten commandments that you folks have cherrypicked out of the 613 commandments in The Law. You tossed out almost 90% of the "jots and tittles," and then you throw that verse of scripture at us. It makes absolutely NO sense!
 
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Soyeong

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I knew it was just a matter of time till the "jots and tittles" verse would come out. The interesting thing is, the law is THE LAW - ALL of it, not just the ten commandments that you folks have cherrypicked out of the 613 commandments in The Law. You tossed out almost 90% of the "jots and tittles," and then you throw that verse of scripture at us. It makes absolutely NO sense!

Even when the Law was given there was not a single person who was required to obey every single law. Not even Jesus was able to keep the laws in regard to a woman's period or giving birth. Some laws were for the King, High Priest, priests, judges, men, women, children, widows, people living in the land, strangers living among them, and for everyone. Many laws also have other conditions under which they apply, such laws in regard to Temple practice requiring them to be a temple in which to practice them, or the Sabbath that only applies when it is the 7th day, so if you wouldn't criticize someone for not keeping the Sabbath when it is not the 7th day, then you should be willing to grant that there is a difference between relaxing a law and saying that the conditions under which that law applies have not been met. Understanding which laws apply to us today and how they apply is a matter of careful study, prayer, and guidance of the Holy Spirit, but Jesus did mean what he said, so if someone is cherry picking, then you should quote James 2:1-10 at them to encourage them to do a better job of obeying the Law more consistently.
 
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GrammyJ

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Even when the Law was given there was not a single person who was required to obey every single law. Not even Jesus was able to keep the laws in regard to a woman's period or giving birth. Some laws were for the King, High Priest, priests, judges, men, women, children, widows, people living in the land, strangers living among them, and for everyone. Many laws also have other conditions under which they apply, such laws in regard to Temple practice requiring them to be a temple in which to practice them, or the Sabbath that only applies when it is the 7th day, so if you wouldn't criticize someone for not keeping the Sabbath when it is not the 7th day, then you should be willing to grant that there is a difference between relaxing a law and saying that the conditions under which that law applies have not been met. Understanding which laws apply to us today and how they apply is a matter of careful study, prayer, and guidance of the Holy Spirit, but Jesus did mean what he said, so if someone is cherry picking, then you should quote James 2:1-10 at them to encourage them to do a better job of obeying the Law more consistently.
Well... THAT was a whole lot of tapdancing to avoid the point. It was like saying I cannot obey traffic laws because I don't own a car. Duh!! If you have kept the laws that are applicable to you, you have kept the "whole" law. But again, the Torah was never meant for anyone but Israel. And Jesus fulfilled all of the law's requirements at the cross anyway, so your point is moot.
 
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Bob S

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Even when the Law was given there was not a single person who was required to obey every single law. Not even Jesus was able to keep the laws in regard to a woman's period or giving birth.
You are right, but if you are a woman and believe the way you do then where do you "camp" during period time?


Some laws were for the King, High Priest, priests, judges, men, women, children, widows, people living in the land, strangers living among them, and for everyone. Many laws also have other conditions under which they apply, such laws in regard to Temple practice requiring them to be a temple in which to practice them, or the Sabbath that only applies when it is the 7th day, so if you wouldn't criticize someone for not keeping the Sabbath when it is not the 7th day, then you should be willing to grant that there is a difference between relaxing a law and saying that the conditions under which that law applies have not been met. Understanding which laws apply to us today and how they apply is a matter of careful study, prayer, and guidance of the Holy Spirit, but Jesus did mean what he said, so if someone is cherry picking, then you should quote James 2:1-10 at them to encourage them to do a better job of obeying the Law more consistently.
As I have suggested to you before when you wrote that you could not do the sacrifices and other Temple requirements because there is no Temple. Go build one. After you get it built try to find some Levites someplace to try to run the thing.

One thing, of many, you will not respond to is the fact that Torah law was not given to you in the first place. Even if you are an Israelite
Torah ended at Calvary and before Calvary Jesus never ever asked a non Jew to do any of the requirements of Torah.

Why do you believe Paul wrote that the law (Torah) was until Christ Gal 3:19 and that the 10 commandments were (past tense) temporary and now mankind's guide is the Holy Spirit? It was because the law (Torah) was fulfilled at Calvary. If you hold to your present belief system then the jots and tittles are a thorn in your side. "one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law...." yet you make excuses for the many jots and tittles you say you cannot observe. That is your fault not anyone else. Could it be you are in the wrong belief system?
 
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Soyeong

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Jesus lived under the law of Moses. He never once told Gentiles to live like He lived. When a Messianic says "follow Messiah's example" you mean to keep Torah.

Jesus did not interact with Gentiles much, so an argument from silence is rather weak. However, in the Great Commission, he told his disciples to make disciples of all nations, which includes Gentiles. A disciple was someone who had to goal of learning act like their rabbi, of memorizing their rabbi's teaching, and of essentially becoming a copy of their rabbi. We find talk like this in places such as 1 Corinthians 11:1, where Paul told to be imitators of him as he is an imitator of Christ, in 1 John 2:3-6 where we are told those those of are in Christ ought to walk in the same way that he walked, and in 1 Peter 2:21-22 where we are told to follow Messiah's example. Jesus began his ministry with the Gospel message to repent for our sins for the Kingdom of God is at hand, and the Torah given to reveal what sin is, so repentance from our disobedience to the Torah is a central part of the Gospel message. Paul's Gospel message likewise involved bringing the Gentiles to full obedience in word and in deed (Romans 15:18-19). However, even if you were correct that Jesus never told Gentiles to follow him, there are nevertheless Gentiles who seek to follow him who should therefore follow him.

Jesus ended Torah at Calvary.

A cross was never used as a means of getting rid of laws. Rather, what was nailed to crosses in addition to the person was the charges that were against them (Matthew 27:27, Mark 15:26). So the charges that were against us, or the violations of the Mosaic Law that we have committed were nailed to Messiah's cross, and he died in our place to pay the penalty for our Lawlessness. In Titus 2:14, it not does not say that Jesus gave himself to redeem us from the Law, but to redeem us from all Lawlessness and to gather a people for himself who are zealous for doing good works. The Torah is God's instructions for doing good works and it is all about the Messiah, which is why the Jews in Acts 21:20 were becoming zealous for the Torah. Furthermore, the Torah is God's instructions for how to act according to is righteousness and holiness (Romans 7:12), so the Torah can't be ended without God's righteousness and holiness first ending, but they are eternal, and all of God's righteous Laws are likewise eternal (Psalms 119:160)

We are under the new covenant of Grace and love.

Indeed, but this is true of every covenant God has made with man. Grace was an attribute of God in both the OT and NT (Exodus 34:6-7) and he likewise showed His grace to people (Genesis 6:8). In Psalms 119:29, David asked God to be gracious to him by teaching him His Torah, and in Titus 2:11-14, our salvation involves being trained by grace to do what is godly, righteous, and good, which is essentially what the Torah was given to instruct us how to do. Jesus summarized the Law and the Prophets as being about how to love God and how to love your neighbor (Matthew 22:36-40), so the Mosaic Covenant was likewise a covenant of grace and love.

Paul was correct in not demanding the keep the law of Moses. The law of Moses was defunct, it ended at the Cross.

Paul continued to live in obedience to the Torah (Acts 21:24), so if we are to be imitators of Paul, then we are also to live in obedience to the Torah. He never tried to countermand any of God's commands, nor did he have the authority to not demand that Gentiles keep the Law of Moses, nor should we follow him instead of following God if he had tried to do so.

How can you say that? Messianics do not observe Torah. they pick and choose which laws from Torah that are convenient.

A Messianic religion is one that teaches about a Messiah, which is true of Judaism. Whether or not Messianics observe the Torah is a different issue than whether or not we should observe the Torah. I would of course disagree with your claim that Messianics do not observe the Torah, though if you are right that we just cherry pick which laws are convenient, then we should follow the advice in James 2:1-10 and do a more consistent job of obeying the Torah.

How do you know Jesus motives. That may not have been number one priority, but id did happen. If He didn't then just where did Paul get what he wrote?

According to John 5:46, Jesus said that Moses wrote about him, according to Luke 24:27, Jesus began with Moses and the Prophets interpreting to them all the things in Scripture concerning himself, according to Hebrews 10:7, the totality of the scroll was written about Messiah, and according to Romans 10:4, a relationship with Messiah is the goal of the Law for righteousness for everyone who believes. The reason why tens of thousands of Jews coming to faith in Messiah were becoming zealous for the Torah was that they could read about Jesus in it everywhere. Judaism prophecies about the Messiah, it it is how we know that we need a Messiah, how we know that there will be one, how we know what his character is, how we know how to have a relationship with him, how we know how to recognize him, and how we know what is said about him in the NT is true.

In Acts 17:11, the Bereans were praised because they diligently tested everything Paul said against OT Scriptures to see if what he said was true. The NT authors quoted or alluded to the OT thousands of times to show that it supported what they said and that they didn't deviate from it, so the OT and NT are a continuous whole that reveals God's plan of redemption to the world. Paul said he was an Apostle of God, so he didn't seek to start his own religion either, but if you find yourself in a different religion than the one Jesus followed and taught and that the Apostles followed and taught, then you might want to reconsider.

Yes, Torah was God's word to Israel and no other nation. Jesus is Messiah to all mankind. Those who tried to kept Torah were not successful, if it had then Jesus would not have given His life.

Indeed, the Torah was only given to Israel, but it was never meant only for Israel because Israel was meant to be a light to the other nations to teach them how to serve God and walk in His ways (Isaiah 2:2-3). Furthermore, Gentiles have been grafted into God's people, Israel (Romans 9:6-8, Ephesians 2:12-19, 1 Peter 2:9-10), so they should seek to follow commands that God gave to Israel. However, it not really an issue of what is required, but about what we get the privilege and the joy of doing now that Jesus gave himself to free us from sinning in disobedience to the Torah. God gave instructions for His people own good to prosper us and if we have faith in Him to guide us how we should live and we love God, then we will live obedience to those commands. The only way to not be successful at following the Torah is to stop repenting of our sins, which is something that we are all able to avoid doing.
 
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Soyeong

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Well... THAT was a whole lot of tapdancing to avoid the point. It was like saying I cannot obey traffic laws because I don't own a car. Duh!! If you have kept the laws that are applicable to you, you have kept the "whole" law. But again, the Torah was never meant for anyone but Israel. And Jesus fulfilled all of the law's requirements at the cross anyway, so your point is moot

You asked a question and I gave an obvious answer, so it is not clear to me why you think this is tapdancing to avoid the point. It would be silly to say that in order to keep the "whole" law that I need to obey laws given only to women or only to priests. The Torah was given only to Israel, but it was never meant only for Israel because Israel was meant to be a light to the nations to teach them how to serve God and walk in His ways (Isaiah 2:2-3). Furthermore, Israel is made up of those who have faith in Messiah (Romans 9:6-8). Jesus fulfilled the Law in the same sense that Romans 15:18-19 says that Paul fulfilled the Gospel, namely that he taught full obedience to it in word and in deed, not that he did away with it. Jesus summarized the Law and the Prophets as being about how to love God and how to love your neighbor (Matthew 22:36-40), so to say that Jesus met the requirements of the Law so that we don't have to is like saying that he loved God and our neighbor so that we don't have to, but rather he did that in part so that we would have an example to follow, and we are told to follow his example (1 Peter 2:21-22). According to Titus 2:14, it does not say that Jesus gave himself to redeem us from the Law, but to redeem us from all Lawlessness and to purify for himself a people who are zealous for doing good works, and the Law is God's instructions to equip us for doing every good work (2 Timothy 3:16-17).
 
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GrammyJ

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You asked a question and I gave an obvious answer, so it is not clear to me why you think this is tapdancing to avoid the point. It would be silly to say that in order to keep the "whole" law that I need to obey laws given only to women or only to priests. The Torah was given only to Israel, but it was never meant only for Israel because Israel was meant to be a light to the nations to teach them how to serve God and walk in His ways (Isaiah 2:2-3). Furthermore, Israel is made up of those who have faith in Messiah (Romans 9:6-8). Jesus fulfilled the Law in the same sense that Romans 15:18-19 says that Paul fulfilled the Gospel, namely that he taught full obedience to it in word and in deed, not that he did away with it. Jesus summarized the Law and the Prophets as being about how to love God and how to love your neighbor (Matthew 22:36-40), so to say that Jesus met the requirements of the Law so that we don't have to is like saying that he loved God and our neighbor so that we don't have to, but rather he did that in part so that we would have an example to follow, and we are told to follow his example (1 Peter 2:21-22). According to Titus 2:14, it does not say that Jesus gave himself to redeem us from the Law, but to redeem us from all Lawlessness and to purify for himself a people who are zealous for doing good works, and the Law is God's instructions to equip us for doing every good work (2 Timothy 3:16-17).
Jesus met the requirements of the law, because we humans are incapable of it! That's why He had to come to rescue and redeem us! As a born-again believer, I KNOW that I cannot be perfect, but I am compelled to give Him my very best. I have the covering of His perfect imputed righteousness in place of my failed filthy-rags efforts. God sees only the perfection of His Son when He looks at me - Hallelujah!!!
 
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Bob S

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Jesus did not interact with Gentiles much, so an argument from silence is rather weak. However, in the Great Commission, he told his disciples to make disciples of all nations, which includes Gentiles. A disciple was someone who had to goal of learning act like their rabbi, of memorizing their rabbi's teaching, and of essentially becoming a copy of their rabbi.
How do you know they were to be a "copy" of a rabbi? Your references below are not congruent with your claim.

We find talk like this in places such as 1 Corinthians 11:1, where Paul told to be imitators of him as he is an imitator of Christ, in 1 John 2:3-6 where we are told those those of are in Christ ought to walk in the same way that he walked, and in 1 Peter 2:21-22 where we are told to follow Messiah's example. Jesus began his ministry with the Gospel message to repent for our sins for the Kingdom of God is at hand, and the Torah given to reveal what sin is,
No my friend Torah was given to reveal to Israel what sin was. Since Christians are not under Torah sin is not keeping Jesus commandments. You know because I repeatedly quote it. This is how we KNOW we belong to the truth........believe in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ, and to love one another as he commanded us. 24 The one who keeps God’s commands lives in him, and he in them. 1Jn3:19-24

so repentance from our disobedience to the Torah is a central part of the Gospel message.
Christian's disobedience to God is when we fail to believe in Jesus and or failure to love others as he loves us. Torah was (past tense) for Israel only.

Paul's Gospel message likewise involved bringing the Gentiles to full obedience in word and in deed (Romans 15:18-19). However, even if you were correct that Jesus never told Gentiles to follow him, there are nevertheless Gentiles who seek to follow him who should therefore follow him.
Hold on there partner I wrote "He never once told Gentiles to live like He lived." Yes, I am a follower that knows Torah ended at Calvary where the new covenant was given birth and ratified with Jesus own blood.



A cross was never used as a means of getting rid of laws. Rather, what was nailed to crosses in addition to the person was the charges that were against them (Matthew 27:27, Mark 15:26).
Did I write that the Torah was nailed to the Cross? I thought I wrote that it ended when the new one began. That is how covenants work. Name one instance where they overlap.


So the charges that were against us, or the violations of the Mosaic Law that we have committed were nailed to Messiah's cross, and he died in our place to pay the penalty for our Lawlessness. In Titus 2:14, it not does not say that Jesus gave himself to redeem us from the Law, but to redeem us from all Lawlessness and to gather a people for himself who are zealous for doing good works. The Torah is God's instructions for doing good works and it is all about the Messiah, which is why the Jews in Acts 21:20 were becoming zealous for the Torah. Furthermore, the Torah is God's instructions for how to act according to is righteousness and holiness (Romans 7:12), so the Torah can't be ended without God's righteousness and holiness first ending, but they are eternal, and all of God's righteous Laws are likewise eternal (Psalms 119:160)
Tell all that to Paul who said the law ended with Jesus Gal 3:19 and
24 Wherefore the law was (past tense) our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith. 25 But after that faith is come, we are no longer under a schoolmaster.



Indeed, but this is true of every covenant God has made with man. Grace was an attribute of God in both the OT and NT (Exodus 34:6-7)
The difference is the old one was a covenant of laws and the new is a covenant of grace

and he likewise showed His grace to people (Genesis 6:8). In Psalms 119:29, David asked God to be gracious to him by teaching him His Torah, and in Titus 2:11-14, our salvation involves being trained by grace to do what is godly, righteous, and good,
But the covenant was not a grace filled covenant it was an if you obey my laws I will...

which is essentially what the Torah was given to instruct us how to do.
Instructed Israel by giving them a bunch of thou shalt nots. There wasn't much grace shown by God or the Israelites in the Old Testament.

Jesus summarized the Law and the Prophets as being about how to love God and how to love your neighbor (Matthew 22:36-40), so the Mosaic Covenant was likewise a covenant of grace and love.
Actually the covenant was not about grace it was about law. Did God show grace? Yes He did and many times but to try to tell us the covenant was a covenant of grace is not true. As far as love is concerned the 10 great commands didn't include loving the neighbor. It was stuck back in the book of the law. It was law until Jesus gave us a new love law, one that tells us to love others as He loves us. That is heavy my friend. That is BIG law. Jesus laid down His life for us think about it, we are to love others like He loves us.



Paul continued to live in obedience to the Torah (Acts 21:24), so if we are to be imitators of Paul, then we are also to live in obedience to the Torah.
We do not have any evidence that Paul was fully Torah observant. He said:
1 Corinthians 9:22
To the weak I became weak, to win the weak. I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.

He never asked or suggested that Gentiles become observant to Torah.


He never tried to countermand any of God's commands, nor did he have the authority to not demand that Gentiles keep the Law of Moses,
Is that what you meant to write? It appears that you do not take Paul seriously. I think you are tellin me Paul's writings could be wrong. The ambassador for Jesus is wrong? How could you?
nor should we follow him instead of following God if he had tried to do so.
When we follow his writings we are following God. Why do you belittle Paul?



A Messianic religion is one that teaches about a Messiah, which is true of Judaism. Whether or not Messianics observe the Torah is a different issue than whether or not we should observe the Torah. I would of course disagree with your claim that Messianics do not observe the Torah, though if you are right that we just cherry pick which laws are convenient, then we should follow the advice in James 2:1-10 and do a more consistent job of obeying the Torah.
I guess the axe falls on you to tell us if i am correct. I only know what you and other Messianics tell me.


Paul said he was an Apostle of God,
He not only said it he meant it.
so he didn't seek to start his own religion either, but if you find yourself in a different religion than the one Jesus followed and taught and that the Apostles followed and taught, then you might want to reconsider.
How do you know he didn't seek to start a new religion? I do follow a different religion than Jesus did and I am so thankful that Jesus gave us a new covenant with different laws than the ones He followed as a Jew.



Indeed, the Torah was only given to Israel, but it was never meant only for Israel because Israel was meant to be a light to the other nations to teach them how to serve God and walk in His ways (Isaiah 2:2-3).
Notice that fact was not revealed to Israel until Isaiah mentioned it. Being a light to the World didn't mean that they were to teach the World Torah. Torah was especially designed for Israel only.

Furthermore, Gentiles have been grafted into God's people, Israel (Romans 9:6-8, Ephesians 2:12-19, 1 Peter 2:9-10), so they should seek to follow commands that God gave to Israel.
Absolutely untrue. we have been over the grafting thing a dozen times. Israel was no example worthy to be grafted into.
 
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GrammyJ

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How do you know they were to be a "copy" of a rabbi? Your references below are not congruent with your claim.


No my friend Torah was given to reveal to Israel what sin was. Since Christians are not under Torah sin is not keeping Jesus commandments. You know because I repeatedly quote it. This is how we KNOW we belong to the truth........believe in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ, and to love one another as he commanded us. 24 The one who keeps God’s commands lives in him, and he in them. 1Jn3:19-24


Christian's disobedience to God is when we fail to believe in Jesus and or failure to love others as he loves us. Torah was (past tense) for Israel only.


Hold on there partner I wrote "He never once told Gentiles to live like He lived." Yes, I am a follower that knows Torah ended at Calvary where the new covenant was given birth and ratified with Jesus own blood.




Did I write that the Torah was nailed to the Cross? I thought I wrote that it ended when the new one began. That is how covenants work. Name one instance where they overlap.



Tell all that to Paul who said the law ended with Jesus Gal 3:19 and
24 Wherefore the law was (past tense) our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith. 25 But after that faith is come, we are no longer under a schoolmaster.




The difference is the old one was a covenant of laws and the new is a covenant of grace

But the covenant was not a grace filled covenant it was an if you obey my laws I will...


Instructed Israel by giving them a bunch of thou shalt nots. There wasn't much grace shown by God or the Israelites in the Old Testament.

Actually the covenant was not about grace it was about law. Did God show grace? Yes He did and many times but to try to tell us the covenant was a covenant of grace is not true. As far as love is concerned the 10 great commands didn't include loving the neighbor. It was stuck back in the book of the law. It was law until Jesus gave us a new love law, one that tells us to love others as He loves us. That is heavy my friend. That is BIG law. Jesus laid down His life for us think about it, we are to love others like He loves us.




We do not have any evidence that Paul was fully Torah observant. He said:
1 Corinthians 9:22
To the weak I became weak, to win the weak. I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.

He never asked or suggested that Gentiles become observant to Torah.



Is that what you meant to write? It appears that you do not take Paul seriously. I think you are tellin me Paul's writings could be wrong. The ambassador for Jesus is wrong? How could you?

When we follow his writings we are following God. Why do you belittle Paul?




I guess the axe falls on you to tell us if i am correct. I only know what you and other Messianics tell me.



He not only said it he meant it.

How do you know he didn't seek to start a new religion? I do follow a different religion than Jesus did and I am so thankful that Jesus gave us a new covenant with different laws than the ones He followed as a Jew.




Notice that fact was not revealed to Israel until Isaiah mentioned it. Being a light to the World didn't mean that they were to teach the World Torah. Torah was especially designed for Israel only.


Absolutely untrue. we have been over the grafting thing a dozen times. Israel was no example worthy to be grafted into.
I can only speak for myself, but I am grafted directly into Christ (He is the Vine, we are the branches), NOT into a rebellious nation of people who refused to accept the Son of God as the promised Messiah. No, thank you!
 
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Soyeong

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How do you know they were to be a "copy" of a rabbi? Your references below are not congruent with your claim.

I know because I've researched what it meant to be a disciple in the 1st century, and 1 Corinthians 11:1 could easily be translated as saying that we should become a copy of him for he is a copy of Christ. You'll have to explain what you mean by my references below not being congruent with my claim.

No my friend Torah was given to reveal to Israel what sin was. Since Christians are not under Torah sin is not keeping Jesus commandments. You know because I repeatedly quote it. This is how we KNOW we belong to the truth........believe in the name of his Son, Jesus Christ, and to love one another as he commanded us. 24 The one who keeps God’s commands lives in him, and he in them. 1Jn3:19-24

God's righteousness is eternal, so the way to do what is unrighteous or sinful is likewise eternal. Jesus was not in disagreement with the Father about what commands we should obey, but rather he said that his teaching was not his own but that of the Father (John 7:16), so his commands were the same as the Mosaic Law. Likewise, if you believe that Jesus was sinless, that he practiced what he preached, and that he preached what he practiced, then you should believe that he taught obedience to the Mosaic Law by word, and that even if he had said nothing that he would have still taught obedience to it by example. In 1 John 2:3-6, it associates saying that we ought to obey his commands with saying that we ought to walk in the same way that he walked, so again, his commands are the same as the Mosaic Law that he walked out. Jesus summarized the Law and the Prophets as being instructions for how to love God and how to love your neighbor (Matthew 22:36-40), so if you fully understand what his command to love means for us to do, then you will live in obedience to the Mosaic Law.

Christian's disobedience to God is when we fail to believe in Jesus and or failure to love others as he loves us.

In Romans 10:5-10, it quotes Deuteronomy 30:11-14 in regard to what it means to submit to Jesus as Lord, and you can't believe that he is Lord while refusing to submit to him as Lord, so a failure to practice obedience to the Torah by faith is a failure to believe in Jesus. Jesus showed his love for us through his obedience to the Torah, so not live in obedience to the Torah by faith is likewise a failure to love others as he loved us.

Torah was (past tense) for Israel only.

The Torah is the way (Deuteronomy 8:6, Jeremiah 6:16-19, Psalms 119:1), the truth (Psalms 119:142), and the life (Proverbs 3:18, Matthew 19:17), Jesus is the way, the truth, and the life (John 14:6), the Torah is God's Word, and Jesus is God's Word made flesh, so Jesus is the living embodiment of the Torah, it is impossible to follow Jesus without following the Torah, and to do away with the Torah is to do away with Jesus. However, God's Word is eternal so it can not come to an end.

Hold on there partner I wrote "He never once told Gentiles to live like He lived." Yes, I am a follower that knows Torah ended at Calvary where the new covenant was given birth and ratified with Jesus own blood.

Messiah's goal in making disciples was to make imitations of himself and when he told his disciples to make their own disciples, he was telling them to make more imitations of him. We are to be like Christ, to reflect Christ to the world, and to teach the world to follow Christ. When he was inviting people to be his followers he was inviting them to live as he lived and someone can not be his follower while refusing to follow his example.

The Law teaches us how to live according to God's holiness, righteousness, and goodness, so if the Law ended at Calvary, then so did God's eternal holiness, righteousness, and goodness. While I completly agree that we are under a New Covenant and not the Mosaic Covenant, we are still under the same God, whose character is eternal, so the way to act according to His character is likewise eternal. God has always been righteous, so there has always existed an unchanging way to act according to His righteousness, which is not dependent on any particular covenant, though it was revealed through God's covenants.

Did I write that the Torah was nailed to the Cross? I thought I wrote that it ended when the new one began. That is how covenants work. Name one instance where they overlap.

Normally that is the verse that people use to say that it ended at Calvary, so my mistake. According to Galatians 3:17, the later covenants do not set aside the previous covenants established by God, but rather they incorporate them. There is a difference between a set of instructions for how to act according to God's holiness, righteousness, and goodness, and a covenant agreement to abide by those instructions. Anyone who wants to find out how to act according to God's character can do so by reading the Mosaic Law regardless of what covenant, if any, they are under, but as part of the New Covenant, we are told to do what God has revealed to be holy, righteous, and good (1 Peter 1:13-16, 1 John 3:10, Ephesians 2:10).

Tell all that to Paul who said the law ended with Jesus Gal 3:19 and
24 Wherefore the law was (past tense) our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith. 25 But after that faith is come, we are no longer under a schoolmaster.

Having no more need for a tutor is not at all the same thing as having no more need to live according to what the tutor taught you. When a student moves on to 2nd grade, their new teacher doesn't tell them to forget everything they previously were taught, but rather they incorporate and build upon what they previously were taught. Likewise, someone can't move on to algebra by forgetting everything they learned about addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division, and if they did forget, then they would need to go back for a remedial education. Now that Christ has come, we have a better teacher of how to obey the Torah, we have a better example to follow, and we have the Spirit to guide us in obedience to it (Ezekiel 36:26-27).

The difference is the old one was a covenant of laws and the new is a covenant of grace

There are 613 commands in the OT while there are 1,050 commands in the NT, so it is correct that the Old Covenant was a covenant of laws, but it is incorrect to imply there the New Covenant is not one of laws, just as it is incorrect to imply that God did not show His grace to people under the Old Covenant.

But the covenant was not a grace filled covenant it was an if you obey my laws I will...

It is completely false to think of God grace as being opposed to God's Law, as though a house divided against itself could stand. According to Psalms 119:29, David asked God to be gracious to him by teaching him His Law, According to Romans 1:5, we have received grace to bring about the obedience that faith requires. According to John 1:16-17, grace was added upon grace, so the grace of Christ was added to the grace of the Law. According to Ephesians 2:8-10, we have been saved by grace through faith, not by doing good works, but for the purpose of doing good works. According to Titus 2:11-14, our salvation involves being trained by grace to do what is Lawful and to renounce doing what is Lawless. According to Jude 1:4, ungodly people pervert God's grace as a licence for Lawlessness. According to Strong's, "grace" as defined as "the divine influence upon the heart, and its reflection in the life" and when God's will is reflected in our lives, it takes the form of obedience to His commands. According to the blessing before the Shema, "With an abundant love have you loved us, God. For the sake of our ancestors whom You taught the laws for living, may You also be gracious to us and teach us, too" so Jews have anciently understood God as being gracious to them by teaching them His Law. So it is by grace that God teaches how to rightly live and through faith that we are to trust God to guide us in how to rightly live.

Instructed Israel by giving them a bunch of thou shalt nots. There wasn't much grace shown by God or the Israelites in the Old Testament.

About half the commands are negative thou shalt nots while the other half are positive mitzvots, but negative commands can also be taken as commanding the opposite, such the command not to steal can also be taken as the command to be generous. However, even if it was just a bunch of thou shalt nots, it would be an example of God grace through faith in Him to guide in how to avoid doing what is ungodly and sinful (Titus 2:11-14).

Actually the covenant was not about grace it was about law. Did God show grace? Yes He did and many times but to try to tell us the covenant was a covenant of grace is not true. As far as love is concerned the 10 great commands didn't include loving the neighbor. It was stuck back in the book of the law. It was law until Jesus gave us a new love law, one that tells us to love others as He loves us. That is heavy my friend. That is BIG law. Jesus laid down His life for us think about it, we are to love others like He loves us.

Jesus summarized the Law and the Prophets as being God's instructions for how to love him and how to love our neighbor, so all the 613 commands of the OT and 1,050 commands of the NT can be put into those two categories. Jesus said that all of the other commands hang on the greatest two, so they are all examples or the explanation for how to correctly obey the greatest two commands (Matthew 22:36-40). According to Galatians 5:14, loving your neighbor fulfills the entire Law, which is true because that is what the entire Law is essentially about how to do.

According to Deuteronomy 4:2, it is a sin to add or subtract from what God had commanded them, and Jesus was born under the Law, so if he had added a new law, then he would have sinned and could not be our Savior. However, there is nothing new with the command to love our neighbor because that can be found in Leviticus 19:17. What is new is not the command, but the quality of the example by which we are to obey the command, and this is reflected by that fact that the Greek word used in John 13:34 refers to newness with respect to quality rather than newness with respect to time.

We do not have any evidence that Paul was fully Torah observant. He said:
1 Corinthians 9:22
To the weak I became weak, to win the weak. I have become all things to all people so that by all possible means I might save some.

The fact that Paul sought to disprove false rumors that he was teaching Jews against obeying the Torah and that he continued to live in obedience to the Torah is evidence that he was fully Torah observant, but that even in his day people were misunderstanding him as teaching against the Torah. In 2 Peter 3:15-17, it says that Paul is difficult to understand, but those who are ignorant and unstable twist his teachings to their own destruction and fall into the error of Lawlessness, so any interpretation of Paul teaching against the Law is wrong. Even in 1 Corinthians 9:21 Paul said in a parallel statement that he was not free from the Torah, but under the Law of Christ, so they are the same thing. In the surrounding verses, Paul was not saying that he was a great deceiver, teaching different things to different people, and lying about what he was teaching to other people and he was not saying that he was willing to become a murderer in order to reach murderers, and adulterer in order to reach adulterers, etc. Sinning to reach sinners would have completely undermined his message, but rather he was speaking about giving up his rights to meet people where they were at in order to win them for Christ.

He never asked or suggested that Gentiles become observant to Torah.

If Paul had wanted to communicate that Gentiles should be Torah observant, he could have simply said that Gentiles should not do what God has revealed to be sin (Romans 6:15), or he could say that we should not present ourselves as slaves to impurity and lawlessness, but as slaves of righteousness (Romans 6:16-19), or he could say that we should be imitator of him as he is an imitator of Christ (1 Corinthians 11:1), or he could say that all OT Scripture is God-breathed and profitable for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the servant of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work (2 Timothy 3:16-17), or he could say that we have been made new creations in Christ for the purpose of doing good works (Ephesians 2:10), or that Christ gave himself to redeem us from Lawlessness and to purify for himself a people who are zealous for doing good works (Titus 2:14, Acts 21:20).

Is that what you meant to write? It appears that you do not take Paul seriously. I think you are tellin me Paul's writings could be wrong. The ambassador for Jesus is wrong? How could you?

When we follow his writings we are following God. Why do you belittle Paul?

You misunderstand me. I take Paul seriously, I have great respect for him, and consider him to be an Apostle of God, but I do not consider him to have more authority than God. So for example, when God said not to eat certain things and you think that Paul said that we are free to eat those things, then there is a conflict between the two and following Paul would not be following God, so you need to decide who has the greater authority and who you should follow. It is your interpretation of Paul speaking against obeying the Torah where you should therefore consider him to be a false prophet who was not speaking for God. I think Paul was fully Torah observant and taught others to obey it, so it is not my interpretation that puts him in conflict with God. In Acts 17:11, the Bereans were praised because they diligently tested everything that Paul said against OT Scripture to see if what he said was true, so if Paul had tried to tell them something like that the Torah had ended, then they would have tested what he said against OT Scripture and rightfully rejected it. We should let no man keep us from obeying God.

He not only said it he meant it.

I believe it is true and that he meant it, but if he spoke against obeying God's Torah, then he was not God's Apostle and we are instructed by Scripture to recognize him as a false prophet instead.

How do you know he didn't seek to start a new religion? I do follow a different religion than Jesus did and I am so thankful that Jesus gave us a new covenant with different laws than the ones He followed as a Jew.

New Covenant, same God, same laws. The Bible is a continuous whole that reveals God's plan of redemption, it is not God saying and now for something completely different and doing away with 80% of His revealed plan. What of saying that we need to follow Christ's example, to walk in the same way that he walk, and to imitate him implies that we need to disregard his example and do something completely different? David loved God's Law and delighted in obeying it it, as did Paul (Romans 7:22), and Jesus gave himself to redeem you from Torah-lessness, so you should instead be thankful that you get the delight and privilege of living in obedience to the Torah by grace through faith.

Notice that fact was not revealed to Israel until Isaiah mentioned it. Being a light to the World didn't mean that they were to teach the World Torah. Torah was especially designed for Israel only.

In Deuteronomy 4:5-8, they were to be a light to the nations, but even they didn't have that role until Isaiah mentioned it, they still had that role from that point onward. I don't see any reason to think that being a light to the nations did involve teaching them to follow God's commands other than your instance that the Torah was only meant for Israel, but that is exactly the assertion that I am seeking to challenge by pointing out that they were meant to be a light to the nations.

There are many instances in the Bible where it talks about following the Torah as followings God's ways, and not one instance where it talks about it as following Israel's ways, so it is particular to God, not to Israel. In Isaiah 2:2-3, it speaks about the Torah going out from Zion and teaching Gentiles to follow God's ways, so I am not seeing any wiggle room whatsoever to think that does not involve teaching them to follow the Torah.

Absolutely untrue. we have been over the grafting thing a dozen times. Israel was no example worthy to be grafted into.

It is beyond me how you can deny the straightforward reading of those verses. In Romans 9:6-8, it refers to Israel as the children of God, so if you don't consider Israel to be worthy to be grafted into, then you don't consider it to be worthy to be a child of God. It says that not all who are descended from Israel belong to Israel, but those who are have faith in the promise are counted as offspring. In Ephesians 2:19, Gentiles were once alienated from Israel, but now are fellow citizens. In 1 Peter 2:9-10, Gentiles are now part of God's chosen people, and Israel is God's chosen people. If that's not what these verses say, then what do you think they say?
 
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