Archive for the Law Category

Don Carson reflects on Moses and the Law

Posted in * Favorites, Law, Old Testament on May 12, 2010 by Harry

There are few passages in the Pentateuch which on first reading are more discouraging than the outcome of Numbers 20:1–13.
Yet the account carries some subtle complexities. It begins with more of the usual griping. The need of the people is real: they are thirsty (20:2). But instead of humbly seeking the Lord in joyous confidence that he would provide for his own people, they quarrel with Moses and charge him with the usual: they were better off in slavery, their current life in the desert is unbearable, and so forth.
Moses and Aaron seek the Lord’s face. The glory of God appears to them (20:6). God specifically says, “Speak to that rock before their eyes and it will pour out its water” (20:8). But Moses has had it. He assembles the crowd and cries, “Listen, you rebels, must we bring you water out of this rock?” (20:10)—which rhetorical question, at its face value, is more than a little pretentious. Then he strikes the rock twice, and water gushes out. But the Lord tells Moses and Aaron, “Because you did not trust in me enough to honor me as holy in the sight of the Israelites, you will not bring this community into the land I give them” (20:12).
Three observations:
(1) God does not say, “Because you did not obey me enough …” but “Because you did not trust in me enough to honor me as holy.…” There was, of course, formal disobedience: God said to speak, and Moses struck the rock. But God perceives that the problem is deeper yet. The people have worn Moses down, and Moses responds in kind. His response is not only the striking of the rock, it is the answer of a man who under pressure has become bitter and pretentious (which is certainly not to say that any of us would have done any better!). What has evaporated is transparent trust in God: God is not being honored as holy.
(2) Read the Pentateuch as a whole: the final point is that Moses does not enter the land. Read the first seven books of the Old Testament: one cannot fail to see that the old covenant had not transformed the people. Canonically, that is an important lesson: the Law was never adequate to save and transform.
(3) In light of 1 Corinthians 10:4, which shows Christ to be the antitype of the rock, it is hard to resist the conclusion that the reason God had insisted the rock be struck in Exodus 17:1–7, and forbids it here, is that he perceives a wonderful opportunity to make a symbol-laden point: the ultimate Rock, from whom life-giving streams flow, is struck once, and no more.

  • Carson, D. A. (1998). For the love of God : A daily companion for discovering the riches of God’s Word. Volume 1. Wheaton, Ill.: Crossway Books.

Law and Grace – Leviticus 18:5, Galatians 3:12, Luke 10:28

Posted in * Favorites, Galations, Law, Leviticus, Luke with tags on April 18, 2010 by Harry

“5 You shall therefore keep my statutes and my rules; if a person does them, he shall live by them: I am the LORD.”

  • Verse 5 is quoted three times in Ezekiel (20:11, 13, 21), once in Nehemiah 9:29), and three times in the NT (Luke 10:28; Rom 10:5; Gal 3:12).

Luke 10:28: Jesus said to him, Go and keep on doing likewise, meaning, That manner of life should from now on be yours.
It may be asked, “Does this answer of our Lord shed any light on the law-expert’s original question, ‘What must I do to inherit everlasting life?’ ” The answer would have to be, “Yes, it does.” Not as if “being a good neighbor” would all by itself assure salvation. But proving oneself to be a neighbor, and doing this to perfection, and besides, loving God with a love that is also perfect, would indeed result in everlasting life.
We hasten to add, however, that such perfection is impossible on this sinful earth. Yet, the demand of God’s law is not abrogated. The solution of this problem has been furnished by God himself. Jesus Christ, by the substitutionary sacrifice of himself and by his life of perfect obedience, has done for us what we ourselves would never have been able to do. See Rom. 8:1–3; II Cor. 5:21; Gal. 3:13. Therefore:
a. We must sincerely confess that it is forever impossible for us, by our own action, to fulfill the demands of God’s law: “By the works of the law shall no flesh be justified” (Gal. 2:16).
b. We must, by God’s grace and the power of his Spirit, place our trust in Christ (John 3:16, 36).
c. Out of gratitude for the salvation which, because of Christ’s merits, we have received as a free gift, we must now, guided and empowered by the Holy Spirit, live a life to the glory of God Triune. This means that even though while on earth we cannot love God and the neighbor perfectly, yet in principle we will begin to live in accordance with his law. The law of love has not been abrogated.
See Rom. 13:8–10.

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God’s Law and the Gospel

Posted in Grace, Law with tags , on July 16, 2009 by Harry

John CalvinROMANS 3:21-31 “But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law… the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe”.

Lutheran theology is well-known for the sharp antithesis it draws between law and gospel. This finds its root to some degree in the teaching of Luther who emphasized what is often called the “pedagogical” use of the Mosaic law, its use as a schoolmaster to accuse us of sin that we might look to Jesus to save us. Christians in the Reformed tradition typically see more continuity between the covenants, but this use of the Law is biblical and a major part of the Reformed heritage.
Often this use is based on Galatians 3:19-29. This use of the Law can certainly be derived from this passage, although it is more of a secondary application when it comes to the Law’s use among Gentiles, since the apostle is talking chiefly about Israel’s experience with the oracles of God. Perhaps a better place to go are the first few chapters of Romans wherein Paul discusses the role of natural law in condemning Gentiles alongside Jews who face the same condemnation at the hands of the Mosaic law (1:18-3:20). In any case, the Lord’s commandments serve both to make the non-Christian aware of his sin that he might trust in Jesus and to convict the Christian of his remaining sin that he might return to the cross repeatedly for cleansing, reaffirming his utter inability to save himself.
That such a use of the old covenant law is defensible is found in Paul’s statement in Romans 3:21-31 that the only way the sinner convicted by God’s law can be justified is through the imputation of the righteousness of Christ. Consequently, the proclamation of God’s law should be a regular part of the preaching, for by hearing the Law the believer will be reminded of his need for the gospel, and any non-Christian present for the sermon will learn that he is under the righteous judgment of the Creator and must therefore trust in Jesus.

But God’s law must never be preached apart from the gospel. If this is done, we end up reducing Christianity to moralism, giving the message that people can by their own efforts do the right thing. We must never forget that the grace of God sets us free to love and serve him (Gal. 5:1), and so this grace must always be preached as well. Without the gospel, the Law is an impossible burden.

Our relativistic age does not like to hear that there is an eternal, unchangeable law that convicts all people. But the central message of the gospel is that we have broken this law and need to be reconciled to God, the great Lawgiver. If we do not know His law, however, we cannot tell people the bad news that they are estranged from God, and if we cannot preach the bad news, how can we preach the good news of salvation?

  • From Tabletalk Magazine, July 2009

Alistair Begg on Legalism vs. Grace vs. Obedience

Posted in * Favorites, Grace, Law with tags , , on April 23, 2009 by Harry
  • From: Favoritism, Part Three, A
  • The abiding rule of God’s law is whereby we find the basis for what we are doing and that is not legalism
  • Legalism is an application of the law whereby we use it to put ourselves in right standing with God – we know we cannot do that
  • It needs to be recognized that God requires us to honor His law and to be lawful is not the same as being legalistic

J.I. Packer on the Law and Antinomianism

Posted in Law with tags on April 23, 2009 by Harry

Once a person is saved, he no longer needs concern himself with the law. Since he has been forgiven and justified, he no longer needs worry about sin — right? Orthodox Christianity has always replied, “wrong!” But why is that? If we are indeed freed from the law, what part does obedience play in our lives?

Many have found it hard to see what claim the law can have on the Christian. We are free from the law, they say; our salvation does not depend on law-keeping; we are justified through the blood and righteousness of Jesus Christ. How, then, can it matter, or make any difference to anything, whether we keep the law henceforth or not? And since justification means the pardon of all sin, past, present and future, and complete acceptance for all eternity, why should we be concerned whether we sin or not? Why should we think God is concerned? Does it not show an imperfect grasp of justification when a Christian makes an issue of his daily sins, and spends time mourning over them and seeking forgiveness for them? Is not a refusal to look to the law for instruction, or to be concerned about one’s daily shortcomings, part of the true boldness of justifying faith?

The Puritans had to face these “antinomian” ideas, and sometimes made heavy weather of answering them. If one allows it to be assumed that justification is the be-all and end-all of the gift of salvation, one will always make heavy weather of answering such arguments. The truth is that these ideas must be answered in terms not of justification but of adoption—a reality which the Puritans never highlighted quite enough*. Once the distinction is drawn between these two elements in the gift of salvation, the correct reply becomes plain.

What is that reply? It is this: that, while it is certainly true that justification frees one forever from the need to keep the law, or try to, as means of earning life, it is equally true that adoption lays on one the abiding obligation to keep the law, as the means of pleasing one’s newfound father. Law-keeping is the family likeness of God’s children; Jesus fulfilled all righteousness, and God calls us to do likewise. Adoption puts law-keeping on a new footing: as children of God, we acknowledge the law’s authority as a rule for our lives, because we know that this is what our Father wants. If we sin, we confess our fault and ask our Father’s forgiveness on the basis of the family relationship, as Jesus taught us to do—“Father . . . forgive us our sins” (Lk 11:2, 4). The sins of God’s children do not destroy their justification or nullify their adoption, but they mar the children’s fellowship with their Father. “Be holy, for I am holy” is our Father’s word to us, and it is no part of justifying faith to lose sight of the fact that God, the King, wants his royal children to live lives worthy of their paternity and position.

—J. I. Packer, Knowing God (InterVarsity Press, 1993), 222–223

Sproul on Antinomianism

Posted in Law with tags on April 14, 2009 by Harry

Antinomianism , or lawlessness, in theology, is the idea that members of a particular religious group are under no obligation to obey the laws of ethics or morality as presented by religious authorities.  Antinomianism is the polar opposite of legalism, the notion that obedience to a code of religious law is necessary for salvation.

Is Jesus your lord? – R.C. Sproul talks about antinomianism.  This is an excerpt from R.C. Sproul’s audio teaching on the book of Romans:

I would say that one of the greatest problems that we have in evangelical Christianity today is the pervasive influence of what we call antinomianism, the spirit of antinomianism that says, “I am saved by faith.  I am justified by faith.  I am saved by grace.  Therefore I never have to be concerned in the slightest about obeying the law, or of doing righteousness, that the pursuit of righteousness is something Pharisees do because they are legalists and they seek to be justified by their works.  But we’re delivered from that by Christ.  We’re free from the law.  We’re free from requirements like that.  We don’t have to worry about obedience.”

That’s antinomianism.  That says that the law of God, the mandates of God, the commandments of God have no real binding influence on my conscience.  That is not just a distortion of Christianity, dear friends, that is a fundamental denial of Christianity.  And if a person really believes that, he can’t be justified; he can’t even be a Christian.  And yet the notion is all over the place in Christian circles.
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Truth For Life: Promise and Law *****

Posted in Law, Self-Audit, Sin, Total Depravity on March 15, 2009 by Harry

Galatians 3: 15 – 29
15 To give a human example, brothers: even with a man-made covenant, no one annuls it or adds to it once it has been ratified.
16 Now the promises were made to Abraham and to his offspring. It does not say, “And to offsprings,” referring to many, but referring to one, “And to your offspring,” who is Christ.
17 This is what I mean: the law, which came 430 years afterward, does not annul a covenant previously ratified by God, so as to make the promise void.
18 For if the inheritance comes by the law, it no longer comes by promise; but God gave it to Abraham by a promise.
19 Why then the law? It was added because of transgressions, until the offspring should come to whom the promise had been made, and it was i put in place through angels by an intermediary.
20 Now an intermediary implies more than one, but God is one.
21 Is the law then contrary to the promises of God? Certainly not! For if a law had been given that could give life, then righteousness would indeed be by the law.
22 But the Scripture imprisoned everything under sin, so that the promise by faith in Jesus Christ might be given to those who believe.
23 Now before faith came, we were held captive under the law, imprisoned until the coming faith would be revealed.
24 So then, the law was our guardian until Christ came, in order that we might be justified by faith.
25 But now that faith has come, we are no longer under a guardian, 26 for in Christ Jesus you are all sons of God, through faith.
27 For as many of you as were baptized into Christ have put on Christ.
28 There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus.
29 And if you are Christ’s, then you are Abraham’s offspring, heirs according to promise.

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Law

Posted in Law on March 14, 2009 by Harry

From the Reformation Study Bible (J.I. Packer was the author of these articles):

TheThree Uses of the Law: What Good Is the Law?

Throughout the history of the church there has been widespread confusion over the role of the Old Testament law in the Christian life. Many theologians have utterly rejected the law as irrelevant to New Testament believers. Although there have been varied opinions concerning specific issues, traditional Reformed theology has summarized this matter in terms of three valid uses of the law. Some theological writers present these in the order given below; others reverse the first two, so there is some discontinuity within the Reformed tradition as to what are the “first” and the “second” uses of the law.

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Romans 7:13-25

Posted in * Favorites, Law, Romans, Sanctification, Sin on March 11, 2009 by Harry

“13 Did that which is good, then, bring death to me? By no means! It was sin, producing death in me through what is good, in order that sin might be shown to be sin, and through the commandment might become sinful beyond measure. 14 For we know that the law is spiritual, but I am of the flesh, sold under sin. 15 For I do not understand my own actions. For I do not do what I want, but I do the very thing I hate. 16 Now if I do what I do not want, I agree with the law, that it is good. 17 So now it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells within me.

18 For I know that nothing good dwells in me, that is, in my flesh. For I have the desire to do what is right, but not the ability to carry it out. 19 For I do not do the good I want, but the evil I do not want is what I keep on doing. 20 Now if I do what I do not want, it is no longer I who do it, but sin that dwells within me.

21 So I find it to be a law that when I want to do right, evil lies close at hand. 22 For I delight in the law of God, in my inner being, 23 but I see in my members another law waging war against the law of my mind and making me captive to the law of sin that dwells in my members. 24 Wretched man that I am! Who will deliver me from this body of death? 25 Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, I myself serve the law of God with my mind, but with my flesh I serve the law of sin.”

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God’s Judgement and the Law

Posted in Judgement, Law on March 9, 2009 by Harry

Romans 2:12 “For all who have sinned without the law will also perish without the law, and all who have sinned under the law will be judged by the law.”

  • All will be judged according to the standard they had
  • The Gentiles will perish (i.e., face final judgment) because of their sin (cf. vv. 14–15) even though they are without the law (they don’t have the written laws of the OT)

Law – Interesting Article

Posted in Law on December 20, 2008 by Harry

The controversy about the relation of the moral Law to believers centers in the Law given by God through the ministry of Moses to the people of Israel. What relation have believers to this Law of Moses? To answer this question it is first of all necessary to determine in what sense the word “law” is being used in such an expression as “the Law of Moses”. Sometimes it is used in a wide sense and sometimes with a narrower meaning. It may be taken either for the whole dispensation and promulgation of the commandments, moral, judicial and ceremonial; or it may be employed more strictly for that part which is called the moral Law, together with the preface and the promises which are added to it; or it may be understood most strictly of all for that which consists in mere commandments, without any promise whatever. Most of the views which are held about the difference between the Law and the Gospel take the word Law in this last and strictest sense. But it is clear that if all the commandments and threatenings scattered up and down in the Scripture are taken to be properly the Law, and if all the gracious promises, wheresoever they are found, are then taken to be the Gospel, it will not be surprising that many hard things are said about the Law.

It has been customary to divide the body of the Mosaic laws into moral, ceremonial and judicial respectively, and though questions have been raised about this division, they are not of particular consequence, and the grouping may be safely accepted. The portion of the Law of God with which the present study is concerned is the moral Law.

Not all the questions are answered, however, by the elimination of these other aspects of the Law of Moses, for the word “moral” has itself been used in a variety of senses. These different meanings have, in turn, provoked a number of further problems, not only in the exposition of the Law, but also in other aspects of Christian doctrine. The question demanding an answer therefore is what it is that makes a law moral. Although there is nothing in the connotation of the term to imply an obligation that is permanent, yet this is the meaning which belongs to the idea of moral Law; and it is this permanence of obligation which distinguishes that which is moral from those other obligations which are in other categories.

It is widely assumed that the Law of nature and the moral Law are identical; but this is a mistake, for there are at least two important differences between them. First of all, the moral Law given by God brings about a new obligation from the fact that it is formally commanded. Thus, although the substance of the Law of Nature and of the moral Law agree in many things, yet the man who breaks the Ten Commandments in their promulgated form is guilty of sinning more heinously than the man who has never received them. Secondly, although the moral Law requires many things which are also contained in the Law of nature, it also has far more in it than ever could be in that earlier Law. An example of this is to be found in the confession of Paul that he had not known lust to be sin unless the Law had said so, although he had the Law of nature to convince him of sin.

The moral Law was given to the people of Israel when they were in the wilderness at Mount Sinai, and there may perhaps be two reasons why at this time, rather than sooner or later, God gave this Law. The first reason was that the people of Israel had fallen into idolatry, and so the Law was given in order to restrain their idolatry and suppress their rebellion. This would appear to be the meaning of the statement that the law “was added because of transgressions” (Galatians iii. 19). The other, and perhaps the most important, reason why God gave the Law at this time, rather than another, was that the Israelites were now becoming a nation. They were about to enter into Canaan and to develop a settled life, so God made laws for them; for He was their King in a special manner, insomuch that all their laws, even political, were Divine.

It is a mistake to think of the moral Law as something new, for it is as original as the natural Law. The moral Law existed long before the administration of it by Moses. Murder was a sin from the very beginning, as appears by God’s words to Cain; indeed, so also was the very anger itself that precedes murder. Men, therefore, were never without the Law, nor ever shall be, and there is a sense in which it may truly be said that the Decalogue belongs to Adam, to Noah, to Abraham, to Christ, to the Apostles, as well as to Moses. As has been noticed above, there was, of course, a historical reason why in the time of Moses there should be a special promulgation and solemn repetition of it, but even so the Law was perpetually heard among men even from the very beginning. This consideration will greatly contribute to a right estimate of the worth of the Law, it being the constant instrument of God for the definition of man’s duty, for conviction of sin and for exhortation to holiness. To reject the use of the Law, therefore, is to reject the universal way of God in both the Old and the New Testaments.

The gift of the Law to Israel was an act of God’s infinite mercy and grace. In the addresses of Moses to the people (Deuteronomy vii. and ix.), God impresses on the Israelites the greatness of His love in giving them His commandments. He emphasises again and again that it was not for their sakes, or because of any merit in them, but purely because He loved them. The psalmist takes up this goodness of God in the giving of the Law by saying, “He hath not dealt so with any nation” (Psalm cxlvii. 20), and Hosea likewise stresses this mercy in the words, “I have written to him the great things of my law” (Hosea viii. 12). All the benefits that psalmists and prophets regard as coming by the Law of God are thus to be traced back to the grace and mercy of God in giving the Law, and it is evidence of a deep misconception of God’s ways when the Law of God is deprecated in any manner at all.

There is no disputing that, in the Gospel, God has granted greater expressions of His love to man, but this does not mean any diminishing of the grace that is in the Law. The Law belongs to believers in the present for the same evangelical ends as it was originally given to the Israelites. Not one commandment can be read in its spiritual meaning — which is its true meaning — without finding some cause to praise God. It is not enough, therefore, that the believer should not despise or neglect the Law: he must the rather thank God that His Law is read and expounded. Well may the godly man delight to have that purity commanded which will make him loathe himself, which will make him prize Christ and grace the more, and which will be a quick goad to all holiness. Besides all this, it is false thinking even to contemplate a severance of the Law from the Gospel, for when taken together they mutually put a fresh relish and taste upon each other.

A consideration of the majestic accompaniments of the promulgation of the moral Law will serve to exhibit its outstanding dignity. These accompaniments reveal that God put great glory on it; and although the New Testament points out that the Gospel ministration of grace is to be esteemed more highly than the Mosaic ministration of it, yet absolutely and in itself, the Law was greatly honoured by God. It would be right to conclude that God gave the Law in this solemn and impressive manner in order that its authority and majesty might be the more readily recognised. This dignity belongs peculiarly to the moral Law, in distinction from the judicial and ceremonial; for although the judicial and ceremonial Laws were given at the same time as the moral Law, there is nevertheless a great difference between them. It is recognised, of course, that these three kinds of laws agree in many particulars. They agree in their common efficient cause, which was God; they agree in the minister or mediator, who was Moses; they agree in the subject, which was the people of Israel; they agree also in their common effects, which were to bind the people to obedience and to punish those who offended. But the moral Law is pre-eminent, and this is seen firstly, in that it is the foundation of the other Laws, and they are reduceable to it; secondly, in that it is to abide always, whereas the others were not; and thirdly, in that the moral Law is distinguished from the others in having been written by God, and in the command that it should be kept in the ark.

Exception is sometimes taken to the relevance of any discussion about the Law given by Moses, and it is asked: Is the Christian a Jew? Does the Law of Moses belong to believers? Has not Christ abolished the Law? Is not Moses, with his ministry, now at an end? These are questions that are often raised, and so it is worth enquiring whether the Ten Commandments as given by Moses belong now to Christians or not.

It is needful, first of all, to investigate the sense in which it is said that the Law binds the believer in its Mosaic form. This is sometimes understood to mean that the Law binds because of Moses, so that whatever belongs to the Mosaic administration belongs also to the Christian. But such a view is false and is quite contrary to the whole current of Scripture; for then not only the moral Law, but also the ceremonial, would bind the Christian. Another way of understanding the relation to Moses is to say that it is purely on account of his having been the inspired writer. This, of course, cannot well be denied by any who hold that the Old Testament belongs to Christians; for why should not the books of Moses belong to them, as well as the books of the prophets? But there is a further way of understanding this relation of the believer to the Law of Moses. When God gave the Ten Commandments by Moses to the people of Israel, though they were the people to whom He then spoke, yet He intended the obligation to keep these commandments to fall not only upon the Israelites, but also upon all other peoples who in due time would be brought to a knowledge of Himself. The proper state of the question, then, is not whether Moses was a minister to Christians as well as to Israel (for that is clearly incorrect), but whether, when God delivered the Ten Commandments by the hand of Moses, He had in mind only the Israelites, or whether all other true worshippers of God were foreseen as included within their authority. This latter alternative is the true one, and at the same time defines the sense in which the Law binds the believer in its Mosaic form.

That this may be made more clear, it must be observed that the moral Law binds in two ways. It binds, first of all, in respect of its substance. To the extent that much of this substance is found also in the Law of Nature it applies universally, and so was binding on the Israelites even before the promulgation of it on Mount Sinai. Secondly, it binds in respect of the authority and command which are put upon it; for when a Law is promulgated by a proclamation, then an additional obligation comes upon it. Thus when Moses as the servant of God delivered this Law to Israel he thereby brought a further obligation upon them. The main question to be answered, however, is whether this obligation was temporary or perpetual.

The chief problem is that of the perpetuity of the Mosaic Law, and some light is given on this by the fact of the revocation of that part of the Mosaic Law which was purely ceremonial. It is obvious that the obligatoriness of this ceremonial Law would not have ceased unless the Law itself had been revoked; and so, by the same argument, the moral Law given by Moses must still be binding unless it can be shown that it is repealed.

Further, the ceremonial Law ceased, because it contained but the shadows of the real, and when Christ came there was no longer any need for the shadows; similarly, the judicial Law ceased, because when the state of Israel came to an end there was no more reason for the Laws. These Laws became obsolete by their very nature. No such thing can be affirmed about the moral Law, however, for the substance of that is perpetual, and there are no places of Scripture which abrogate it.

The perpetuity of the Mosaic Law can be demonstrated by a number of arguments, the first of which is an answer to an objection raised in connection with the abolition of the ceremonial Law. It was the apostolic opinion that, if the forms of ceremonial worship were necessary for justification, this would, in effect, either exclude Christ altogether, or join Him together with the ceremonial Law. (See Acts xv. 5,10,19,20,24,28,29.) It is true that when the apostles demolish this error they quite clearly show, not only that the works of the ceremonial Law have no power to justify, but also that the works of the moral Law are equally unable to do this; but in acknowledging this fact, it must be remembered that when the apostles bring the moral Law into the dispute, they do it only in respect of justification, and not in respect of obligation.

The second argument for the perpetuity of the Mosaic Law is from the fact that the Scripture urges the obligation of the moral Law upon converted Gentiles, and that this obligation is said to have come down to them from their fathers, thus looking upon Israelites and believing Gentiles as one people. When Paul writes to the Romans he tells them that, “Love is the fulfilling of the Law” (Romans xiii. 8,9); and thereupon sums up the commandments which were given by Moses. Similarly, when he writes to the Gentile Ephesians, he urges children to honour their father and mother because it is the first commandment with promise: a commandment, of course, which was entirely Mosaic in its source (Ephesians vi. 2). This is further evident from the epistle of James, which is to converted Gentiles as well as to Jews. The words, “If ye fulfil the royal law according to the scripture” (James ii. 8), are an allusion, of course, to the Law of Moses, where the second table contains love to one’s neighbour; and in the words, “He that said, Do not commit adultery, said also, Do not kill” (James ii. 11), the argument is drawn, not from the substance of the Law, but from its Author, the God who spoke by Moses. The reason why these commandments extend to the believing Gentiles is that the Jews and believing Gentiles are looked upon as one people. (See I Corinthians x. 1-2.)

The third argument is from the obligation upon the Christian to keep the Sabbath day, an argument that seems completely to confirm that the moral Law given by Moses is binding upon Christians. If the Sabbath day is a perpetual ordinance, and it is based upon the fourth commandment, it cannot fail to be seen that the commandments, as given by Moses, are binding upon believers. The distinction sometimes advanced concerning laws that bind “by reason of the matter” and laws that bind “by reason of the ministry” will not hold in this instance; for the seventh day cannot bind from the matter of it, there being nothing in nature why the seventh rather than the fifth should oblige, but only from the mere command of God for that day. If the Law of Moses is disregarded in this respect, then, of course the inference has to be made that Christians keep the Sabbath day on New Testament grounds alone, and not at all from the fourth commandment. This, however, is at variance with the general consensus of Christian thought, for all churches have honoured the moral Law, together with its Preface, and have it in their catechisms. It is not difficult, therefore, to see that the distinction which affirms that the moral Law binds as the Law of Nature, but not as the Law of Moses, is untenable; for the Sabbath Law, as it stands, cannot arise from the Law of Nature, but has its morality and perpetuity from the mere positive commandment of God.

The fourth argument is from reason, namely, that it is incongruous to have a temporary obligation upon a perpetual duty. It is wholly improbable that God, when giving the Law by Moses, should have intended that Law to be only temporary in its obligation, when the subject matter is in itself perpetual. It is not a very reasonable supposition that the true effect of the commandments should read, “You shall have no other gods until after the time of Moses”, or, “You shall not murder or commit adultery while his ministry lasts, and then that obligation must cease and a new obligation come upon you”. Why should it be thought that, when the substance of the Law is necessary and perpetual, God would alter and change the nature of the obligation? Indeed, it is impossible to give even a remotely probable reason for any such alteration.

The fifth argument for the perpetuity of the authority of the moral Law is that if the Law by the hand of Moses does not bind the believer, then the later books of the Old Testament do not belong to him either, for they are basically — especially in their moral teaching — nothing but expositions of the moral Law. The rejection of the authority of the Mosaic Law would carry with it the rejection of the entire Old Testament.

There can be no flight from the claims of the moral Law. Its demands belong to the very constitution of man as man, and are heightened by the mercy of God that has reiterated His holy Law for the salvation of sinners.

Author

Dr. Ernest F. Kevan, a Ph.D. graduate of the University of London, was a Baptist minister from 1924 to 1946 before being called to be Principal of London Bible College, where he labored until his death in 1965

TFL: "Do What It Says" ***

Posted in Law on November 4, 2008 by Harry
  • We are no longer under law as a means for acceptance by God,but we are under law by means of living for God
  • Our freedom in Christ is tied to our obedience, it is by our obedience that we are free
  • John chapter 8, “If you hold to my teaching, you are my disciples.”

TFL: "The Delight of the Sabbath, Part A" ***

Posted in Law, Sin on April 3, 2008 by Harry
  • The absence of the penalty (death) does not remove the 7th commandment from the decalogue
  • The penalty has been removed in light of the mercy and grace of God in the sacrifice of His son, the abiding significance of the command is not.

LTW: "Overcoming Timidity, Part 2" not archived

Posted in Giving, Grace, Law, Salvation on January 30, 2008 by Harry
  • 10 Commandments are not there to save us
  • They are there to drive us to God
  • They are to remind us that we are desperate for the grace of God
  • As long as a person thinks they are good enough or do enough, they will never be saved

Priesthood – Earthly and Eternal (Melchizedek)

Posted in Giving, Law, Old Testament with tags on January 26, 2008 by Harry

The Priesthood – Earthly and Eternal (Orthodox Study Bible – pg 523):

  • Hebrews Chapter 6
  • A major theme of the Book of Hebrews is the contrast between the earthly, or Levitical, priesthood, and the eternal priesthood of Melchizedek, which is fulfilled in Christ
  • The Levitical priesthood, established by Aaron of the tribe of Levi, is limited simply because those who fill it are ordinary human beings
  • The Levitical priests carry out God’s instructions and assist the people in their worship, but they cannot ultimately reconcile people to God
  • The mysterious figure of Melchizedek, on the other hand, represents an entirely different kind of priesthood
    • Melchizedek appears in Genesis (Gen. 14:18-20), long, before the establishment of the Levitical priesthood
    • He is given no genealogy and nothing is said of his death
    • He receives tithes from Abraham, implying he is superior to Abraham in rank and by extension, superior to Abraham’s descendants, the Levites
    • Melchizedek is not only a priest but a king as well
    • In this dual office he is able to reconcile the justice of God (the business of a king) with God’s mercy (the business of a priest)
    • His name means “King of Righteousness,” and his title “King of Salem” (Gen. 14:18) means “King of Peace”
    • He maybe a theophany – a pre-incarnate appearance of Christ
    • at the very least he is a type of Christ, as the author of Hebrews explains in detail
  • There are several specific points of contrast between the Levitical priesthood, and the priesthood of Melchizedek, which is fulfilled in Christ

The Priesthood of Levi:

  • Genealogical requirement:
    • The Levitical priesthood is limited to one tribe
    • It cannot transform mortal and corrupt humanity , because it consists of mere men
  • Ordination:
    • The power given at ordination is incomplete
    • The Levitical priesthood is weak, its sacrifices have to be repeated, and it cannot perfect the worshipers
    • It cannot reconcile people to God, nor give them the inner power to obey
    • The ordination is without direct confirmation from God
  • Term of office:
    • The Levitical priesthood is temporary
    • Since it is composed of mortal men, it requires many members
  • Moral and spiritual requirements:
    • These must be less than perfection, for the Levitical priests are all created beings subject to sin

The Priesthood of Melchizedek:

  • Genealogical requirement:
  • As Melchizedek was without earthly genealogy , so is Christ by virtue of His virgin birth
    He is God incarnate, immortal and sinless, and therefore His priesthood is able to transform humanity
  • Ordination:
    • The power given at ordination is strong and effective
    • The power of Christ’s priesthood is perfect and draws us near to God
    • His sacrifice is offered once for all
    • The Father Himself ordains the Son
  • Term of office:
    • Since Christ is immortal, the priesthood of Melchizedek needs only one, eternal priest
  • Moral and spiritual requirements:
    • The requirement of perfect holiness is met in Christ, the only sinless One
    • He is more than mere man – He is the Son of God

TFL: "The Privelege of Disgrace" *****

Posted in * Favorites, Communion, Cross, Giving, Law, Old Testament with tags , on January 17, 2008 by Harry
  • Hebrews 13
  • How can we impact our world?
    • Be contended
    • When everyone else is complaining and griping, stay content
  • Being content does not mean not trying to improve our circumstances and using all lawful means to do so
    • It is not wrong to try to improve our lot
    • We strive to do our best, be a hard worker and we leave in the hands of God what may emerge from that
    • Rather than lusting for promotion, for advancement, for money for their own sakes
    • Contentment does not trying to advance but means that whether or we advance or not, we stay content with our lot
    • Ambition is okay, but we must stay content – whether we advance or not – with our lot
  • What were the strange teachings referred to in the above scripture?
    • Residual Judaism – that by maintaining strict adherence to externals we will come closer to God and the key to maintaining a close walk with God
    • Spiritual growth and maturity does not come about by slavish observance to externals
    • Gal 3:3: 3Are you so foolish? After beginning with the Spirit, are you now trying to attain your goal by human effort? 4Have you suffered so much for nothing—if it really was for nothing? 5Does God give you his Spirit and work miracles among you because you observe the law, or because you believe what you heard?
  • Spiritual growth and maturity comes along the pathway of understanding, appreciating, receiving, and enjoying the grace of God
    • Grace in the beginning, grace in the middle and grace in the end
    • The gospel is the soul channel by which the grace of God is mediated to men and women
    • We did not earn God’s favor, we can offer nothing
    • Man made rigamarole is very dangerous
  • Communion – The issue of redemption was settled on the cross – it was once for all and that is where our altar is, those who say there is a continuing sacrificial elements in order to receive grace, forgiveness, or anything else bar themselves from participation at the altar of Christ
    • That is why there is no altar in church, our altar is at the cross
    • What Jesus did on the cross was a once and for all sacrifice
    • We celebrate holy communion as a symbolic recollection of what Jesus did on the cross, we have no more need to offer sacrifices as the ultimate sacrifice has already been offered
  • There is only one mediator between God and man – Jesus
  • There is no need to tell someone else your sins – you must tell Jesus only
  • The cross was raised outside the city wall – God was reconciling men’s sins
    • God did not count man’s sins against man, he counted them against His son
    • He bore our sins
    • 1Peter 2:24: 24: He himself bore our sins in his body on the tree, so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness; by his wounds you have been healed
    • Mark 15:34 (New International Version): 34And at the ninth hour Jesus cried out in a loud voice, “Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?”—which means, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?”[a] The answer from heaven would have been: “Because Jesus you stand in the place of sinners, you bear the guilt of sinners, you absorb the punishment of sinners, you bear My wrath.”
  • The Justice of God which must punish sin and the love of God that makes a way of escape find its expression in a moment of time – on the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ
  • There is no role for external rigamarole
  • Jesus suffered to make us holy, not happy and that is why through many toils, dangers, and snares we have come because He is conforming us to the image of His son
  • Bearing disgrace for Jesus is a privilege
  • To the Jew everything in the camp is kosher and clean and everything outside is dirty
  • We must go outside the camp because in Jesus all the values have been reversed and here we have no enduring city, but we are looking forward to the city to come, which cannot be shaken
  • Pliable (from Pilgrim’s Progress) would have said I like my security and I am not going outside the camp to take my stand with Jesus
  • “I believe in God, why do I have to follow Jesus” – because God has left us no other option

TFL: “Essentials of Christian Maturity” ****

Posted in Discipleship, Giving, Law, Old Testament, Temptation with tags , on January 14, 2008 by Harry
  • Hebrews 12
  • 1. Keep strong and keep straight
    • Referring to Is 35:3 where the prophet describes holiness and peace
  • 2. Pursue harmony and holiness
    • Do not compromise holiness for harmony with others
    • We must me different: There must be a change of heart so that people can say that this person is different and is not just the same as us with an interest in holy things
  • 3. Grow in grace and not in bitterness
    • We may miss the grace of God by the soil on our own souls, for example: bitterness, envy, etc.
    • If we miss God’s grace, it is not because it is not accessible to us, it is that we are not availing ourselves to it (not taking the opportunity God has given us)
    • Physical appetite meant more to Esau than his birthright so that he sold out in a moment for immediate pleasure
    • Every inroad that sexual immorality would make into our hearts and minds is to be resisted; Not in order that God may accept us, but because we are aware that God in His grace has accepted us
    • Just “see to it” that this garbage can of immorality is out of your life (analogy of kids being told to take the garbage out)
    • We are not taken to heaven because of our see to list, we are taken to heaven on the basis of His son and we are “seeing to it” because that is what good sons and daughters do
  • 4. Don’t quit
  • Mt. Sinai: Represents the giving of the Law
    • Legalism
  • Mt. Zion
    • Represents the coming of the gospel and Jesus Christ
    • You were at Mt. Sinai before
    • You were afraid of God
    • You were doing all these things because you thought God would accept you for doing them
    • You were trying to earn your own way to heaven
  • When you came to Mt. Zion it suddenly made sense to you
    • We do not have to earn our way to heaven
    • Jesus died on the cross and we go to heaven on the strength of what he has done – this was radical for the readers of Hebrews
    • You cannot do it on your own, we need Jesus
    • You are right there – don’t quit – it is there available to you
  • 5. “see to it that yo do not refuse him who speaks
    • The prophets were ignored by people for ages because they did not tell people what they wanted to hear
    • We want to go to church and have a nice time
    • If God did what he did to those who did not receive the prophets what lays in store for those who do not accept His son
  • 6. Worship God in awe
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