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I strive to be perfect, as evidenced by my avatar. I doubt very, very much that I will achieve perfection while I am on earth.If you hope to be perfect on the day of your death, you're engaging in wishful thinking. It's best to simply be found pursuing God the best you can. The small things will not prevent you from being saved.
Paul said his mind is ever on the Law of God, even while knowing he cannot achieve its perfection. And so, we pursue Christ as the basis of our righteousness, which is called "Grace."
Paul did not mean his mind was on doing the requirements of the Old Covenant. Rather, he meant that the Law pointed to Christ's perfection.
"For all their generations" ended when Jesus ratified his new and everlasting covenant by his bloody, sacrificial death on the cross.I know that God told Israel they were given a Law to keep "for all their generations. And I know that Christ indicated that the universe would have to pass away before the standards of the Law were relaxed. I also know that Paul said he made himself a slave to God's Law. And I know that the Apostle John said that the OT Law was still a relevant commandment.
At the same time we know that the OT temple was destroyed permanently, indicating that the OT Law could no longer be followed. The veil had been torn from the top down, indicating that God Himself had torn it asunder. And the writer of Hebrews made it clear that the OT Law was part of an old covenant, now being replaced by the New Covenant of Christ. How are we to make sense of all these things?
Yes, and I would add to that the concern some have that we are *only* to fulfill the Law by being "merciful." It isn't just that "love is the fulfillment of the Law" but that true genuine divine love means that we are loving all of the time without an ounce of insincerity.I strive to be perfect, as evidenced by my avatar. I doubt very, very much that I will achieve perfection while I am on earth.
To be "perfect" means to be merciful to others like God is merciful to us. We must forgive those who have harmed us.
I agree that Paul did not mean that his mind was on doing the requirements of the Old Covenant.
Jesus was the fulfilment of the Law of Moses. He completed it and ended it by his perfect sacrificial death on the cross. This perfect sacrificial blood offering of himself on the cross also ratified his new and everlasting New Covenant. Romans 10:4
Some excellent points there that I agree completely with. About the only thing I would question is your interpretation of the universe passing away being the temple passing away. There may be something to that, as you say, but the description itself is not of the temple superstructure but of the universe itself."For all their generations" ended when Jesus ratified his new and everlasting covenant by his bloody, sacrificial death on the cross.
Now, there is no religious distinction between Jewish Christians and Greek/Gentile Christians. Galatians 3:28
There was about a 40-year (one generation) transition period allowed by God for all Jews to convert to Christianity. That is why the apostles were told to go preach to their whole known world, which they did within that same time period. Mark 16:14-16, Colossians 1:6, Romans 1:8, 1 Peter 5:9, Acts 2:5
Paul made himself a slave to Christ's Law. Galatians 6:2, Romans 8:2, 1 Corinthians 9:20-22
John meant that the "spirit" of the Law of Moses is always relevant. The "written" Law of Moses is no longer valid. Romans 10:4, Galatians 3:13
The "spirit" of the Law of Moses is what is important. God's Natural (moral) Law was put into force when God created the universe with angels and humans. For example, murder was evil from the beginning of time, not just for the Israelites. Genesis 4:8
All the written laws and statutes of the Law of Moses were required only for the Israelites/Jews and the converts to Judaism. Jesus completed the first covenant (Law of Moses). It is no longer in force. Unfortunately, those practicing Judaism today do not believe this!
The "heaven and earth" of the Jews did pass away just as Jesus prophesied.
"In ancient Hebrew thought, the Jewish temple was seen as a microcosm of creation, representing heaven and earth. It had three compartments that symbolized heaven, earth, and the deep, serving as a model of the cosmos and a place of mediation between God and man.23The courtyard of the temple represented the cosmic spheres outside the organized cosmos, while the antechamber held representations of lights and food. The veil separated the earthly sphere from the heavenly sphere, where God dwelled.3Moreover, the temple was considered the epitome of the world, a concentrated form of its essence, and a miniature of the cosmos. It was not just a place where heaven and earth met but was thought to correspond to, represent, or in some sense, be "heaven and earth" in its totality.3In Jewish tradition, the seventh heaven, known as Araboth, is considered the holiest of the seven heavens because it houses the Throne of God and serves as the realm where God dwells." AI generatedJesus prophesies that the temple (heaven and earth) of the Jews will be destroyed. Matthew 24:1-2Jesus prophesies that this heaven and earth will pass away within that very generation. It did, in 70 AD. Matthew 23:36, Matthew 24:34-35
Thank you for your thoughts on this topic. I appreciate them.Some excellent points there that I agree completely with. About the only thing I would question is your interpretation of the universe passing away being the temple passing away. There may be something to that, as you say, but the description itself is not of the temple superstructure but of the universe itself.
Christ's righteousness is perfected in us by way of our relationship to one another in Christ, as a functioning body.Yes, our position with Christ in heaven is, as I see it, "in grace." We have legal standing with Christ who is in heaven. We are not in heaven with him, obviously, but we are with him positionally, or legally, because he sits there upholding the stand he took for us on the cross in forgiving us of our sins.
For me, it is not so much imputation of righteousness, which is not understandable for me, but God recognizing that He doesn't hold our imperfections against us, and sees, instead, an example of our operating together with Christ's righteousness within us, through the Spirit.
So I suppose it is a acceptable to state that Christ is imputing to us the righteousness of Christ because he acknowledges that his righteousness in us is being generated along with a dispensation of grace, to cover our imperfections. It may just be the semantics of the thing, but I can't actually see Christ's perfect righteousness, which is sinless, imputed to us in any practical sense because once it is in us, through the Spirit, it comes to be tainted with our flawed ways of handling it.
Well, God is certainly interested in bringing us into maturity and into a unity with one another. But I doubt very seriously that our relationships will be perfect, as you also suggested.Christ's righteousness is perfected in us by way of our relationship to one another in Christ, as a functioning body.
The Holy Spirit is not trying to make perfect individuals in this life. He is trying to perfect our relationship to one another, in preparation for an eternity, together.
Indeed this brings us from glory to glory as our character begins to reflect "Christ in us". Our final perfection is hidden with God in Christ until He gathers us all unto Himself and brings us into the "age to come", with "a new heaven and earth, where righteousness reigns".