How do you figure?
Do you think that YHWH has a double standard?
No, I believe that the Law served as a tutor, as St. Paul says in Galatians. Having attained majority, through the New Covenant of Christ, the situation has changed.
Forgive me, I am not trying to be vexatious here, but if you are going to dismiss an extremely widely held interpretation of Acts 15 which I repeated, as erroneous, it would be helpful if you could expound upon your rationale. If you just say “Wrong”, that doesn’t help me understand your position. And I do believe humility requires us to be willing to change our views in response to evidence and reason. Earlier today, I was mistaken about a matter concerning the history of the Coptic Orthodox Church, having forgotten about the particulars of a scandal which my friend
@Andrewn remembered; he, like me, is extremely agreeable, and suggested we agree to disagree, which I suppose would have been very Wesleyan of me, but I, realizing my memory was fallible, decided to disagree to disagree and asked him to expound upon what he was discussing; he did, my memory was refreshed, on an important matter, by the way, and we had a mutually edifying discussion which happened to involve ecumenical politics and homicidal monks. It was actually a bit Godfather Part III (or The Godfather: Coda, if you prefer the re-edited version); I am amazed the
Internazionale Immobiliare consortium did not come up in the discussion.
Jokes aside, my point is that I am willing to learn from you and give your views a hearing, even though I have beliefs that I hold. I might come to believe some of your doctrinal positions even if I do not embrace them entirely. This is the beauty of ecumenical discourse.
YHWH said forever. YHWH doesn't lie.
Indeed, but the means of grace, via sacrifices to atone for sins and to support the priests and Levites, according to Second Temple Judaism, are not extant. Now, on the other hand, the Beta Israel (Ethiopian Jews) continue those sacrifices and have never used a Temple, and the Karaites and Rabinnical Jews have theological explanations for what to do in the absence of a Temple, I just don’t understand them.
Forgive me, I was not suggesting you were.
Yahshua recited the Shema as the foremost precept. Baptism is nothing; and circumcision is nothing, but keeping the Torah.
Where does the Torah direct us to baptize all nations in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost? Or is this a supplementary commandment to enhance Torah observance?
I remember Yahshua, not only every time that I have bread and wine together, but at every meal. However, observing Leviticus 19:18 is far more important. I try to remember Yahshua all throughout my day; but abstaining from bread and wine, altogether, is fine; so there is no requirement to make a mass ritual out of it.
Most Christians believe that our Lord instituted two or more sacraments or ordinances, Baptism and the Eucharist, and Christians, including churches which are comprised heavily or exclusively of Jewish converts, such as the Syriac Orthodox, an endogamous group within the Indian dioceses of the Syriac Orthodox that have their own parishes and are of pure Jewish descent, whose ancestors were shipwrecked and converted to Christianity, and the Ethiopian Orthodox.
Now, by the way, given your knowledge of Judaism, and my interest in Jewish liturgy, even if we cannot reach an agreement on some of these theological issues, I would love to know what you know about Jewish worship. For example, which Siddur and which Nusach do you follow? Are there legitimate regional variations, for example, between Sephardim, Ashkenazim and Romaniote Jews? What do you think of the Karaite Jews and the Beta Israel and how they worship?
I would love to be able to pray in the recently rebuilt Hurva Synagogue in the Jewish Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem, which is one of the most beautiful houses of worship I have seen.