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DOES OBEYING THE LAWS AND COMMANDS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT PLEASE
GOD?
From Dr. John Juedes, a Lutheran pastor
and an expert on the cult, The Way International.
Vicky- Thanks for all your good research on [Michael] Rood. Here's an
article I wrote about the Law. It developed out of a letter I
sent responding to a Rood follower who tried to explain why
Christians have to obey the law today. John Juedes
DOES
OBEYING THE LAWS AND COMMANDS OF THE OLD TESTAMENT PLEASE GOD?
Michael Rood and his followers
believe that the purpose of the law is to describe things that
please God. So Christians should obey Old Testament laws because
He commanded them, and because doing so pleases Him. The OT
commands were meant to be perpetual, to be obeyed for all time.
But does the New
Testament support these assumptions? Since the NT is the new
covenant, our practice is to understand the OT in the light of
the NT and Christ’s
teachings.
Why Did God Give
the Law of Moses?
According to the New Testament,
there are at least two reasons the Law was given. Jesus speaks
of one of them in his teaching on divorce in Matthew 19:3-10.
The Jews believed that Moses commanded divorce, and they quoted
the law saying that a man could divorce his wife for any cause.
Jesus told them that Moses gave that command because of the
hardness of their hearts, and that what actually pleased God was
permanent marriage, as it was “in the beginning.”. In other
words, the commands on divorce did not please God, he just
included them because of the deep sinfulness of mankind. No
doubt there are other OT laws which do not show what pleases
God, but were simply allowances for the depth of human sin. To
return to the law of Moses in many cases is to return to
compromises made for man’s sin.
Galatians 3:19-24
describes the primary purpose of the law. The law kept people
locked up until faith was revealed, and was the
schoolmaster until Christ came. Once the law brings
people to Christ, it is no longer needed.
“19 (The law) was added
because of transgressions, until the seed should come to
whom the promise was made.... 23 But before faith came,
we were kept under the law, shut up unto the faith which should
afterwards be revealed. 24 Therefore the law was our
schoolmaster to bring us to Christ, that we might be justified
by faith. 25 But after that faith is come, we are no
longer under a schoolmaster.” Note the key prepositions–
“until, before, after, no longer.” There is no longer a use for
the law, none at all, since Christ, or Messiah, has come.
Colossians 2:11-17
repeats this teaching. The cross canceled our debts and the law
that stood against us. “So let no one judge you about what you
eat or drink or about holy days or the new moon festival or the
Sabbath. All such things are only the shadow, the reality is
Christ.” The law, which was only a shadow, was canceled when
the reality, Christ, came. It was useful before Christ came. Now
it is useless. It has been replaced by Christ.
This is the point of the
book of Hebrews. Who needs Moses? Jesus Christ is greater. Who
needs the high priest? Jesus Christ is the greater Priest.
Moses, his law and his priest have been replaced by the One they
led people to find. Moses and his law, the high priest and his
sacrifices are needed and useful no more.
Michael Rood uses
Matthew 23 to contrast the oral law (“enactments,” or “tenakot”
in Hebrew) from the written Law of Moses (Torah). This is in
fact an important distinction. But then he misuses this verse to
assert that believers in Y’shua (Jesus) today are required to
keep the Torah but not the oral law. (See “A Rood Awakening”
tour and the companion “Raiders of the Lost Book” video [ARA/RLB]).
But the New Testament does not contrast the written law from the
oral law– but rather contrasts the law (both written and oral)
from faith: Paul said that according to the written and oral law
he was blameless. But he counted all that “dung, that I may win
Christ, 9 And be found in him, not having my own righteousness,
which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of
Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith” (Philippians
3:8-9). Faith replaces the whole written and oral law.
Hebrews, Romans
and Galatians all go into great detail to prove that Abraham,
Isaac, Enoch and others knew nothing of the law and did not obey
its commands, and yet were righteous. They did not need the law
to show them what pleased God, nor did they need to obey it in
order to please God. The law would have added nothing to their
God-pleasing lives, because faith pleased God, not obedience to
commands.
Do you need a
chaperone after the marriage? Do you need to study blueprints
after the house is built? (You can experience the house by going
in it and studying it. The reality is the house, the shadow and
imagination is the blueprints.) Obeying the law is like keeping
a chaperone with a married couple in heir bedroom, or studying
the blueprints outside without going into the house. Is it more
pleasing to include the chaperone after marriage, even though a
couple doesn’t have to?
The Passover only
foreshadowed what was to come– that on the day of Passover the
Passover Lamb (Christ) was sacrificed, and on the day of first
fruits He rose from the dead, becoming the first fruits of those
who sleep (1 Cor.15) Later the Spirit came on the Feast of Weeks
as the first of the Harvest. Why celebrate the freeing of Israel
from Egypt (blueprint) when the reality of Christ freeing all
people from death has already occurred. Why celebrate a Harvest
of grain (very sketchy blueprint) when the reality of Christ the
first fruits from physical death has already happened? Why
celebrate the early Harvest when the giving of the Spirit and
the ingathering of the first of the Church has already occurred?
To go back to the
Law is to kiss the shadow instead of your wife (she wouldn’t be
pleased with that!). To go back to the law is often to not
please God, but to obey God’s compromises to sin. According to
the New Testament and Jesus Christ, the law served its purpose
once, but it is no longer needed because Messiah has come.
The Teaching and Practice
of the Apostles
What was the
practice of the apostles according to the New Testament? They
are good models for us to follow. Did they obey the law never,
sometimes or always? If they at times followed the Law of Moses–
what reason did they have to do so? Did they consider obedience
to the law to be pleasing to God or required by God?
The Apostle Peter
did not obey the law of Moses. Paul tells us this in Galatians
2:11-16:
“11 But when Peter was come
to Antioch, I withstood him to the face, because he was to be
blamed. 12 For before certain came from James, he
did eat with the Gentiles: but when they were come, he withdrew
and separated himself, fearing them which were of the
circumcision. 13 And the other Jews dissembled likewise with
him; insomuch that Barnabas also was carried away with their
dissimulation. 14 But when I saw that they walked not
uprightly according to the truth of the gospel, I said
to Peter before them all, If you, being a Jew, live after the
manner of Gentiles, and not as do the Jews, why compel the
Gentiles to live as do the Jews? 15 We who are Jews by nature,
and not sinners of the Gentiles, 16 Knowing that a man is not
justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus
Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might be
justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the
law: for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified.”
Peter lived “after the manner of
the Gentiles and not as do the Jews.” When he changed his
behavior by obeying the law at Antioch, Paul said Peter “was to
be blamed,” because obeying the law was “not uprightly according
to the truth of the Gospel.” By this, Paul condemns Peter for
obeying the law. According to this verse, Paul did not obey the
law, either and he condemned those who did.
Peter no longer
obeyed the law because God himself commanded Peter not to keep
the law in a vision in Joppa recorded in Acts 9:
“13 a voice came to him,
‘Rise, Peter; kill, and eat.’ 14 But Peter said, Not so, Lord;
for I have never eaten any thing that is common or unclean. 15
And the voice spoke to him again the second time, What God has
cleansed, that do not call common.”
God commanded
Peter to break the law. The law called certain things unclean.
After Pentecost, God declared all things clean, thereby ending
the law.
The apostles and
elders met in council to address the issue of whether or not
Gentiles should be required to be circumcised and obey the law
of Moses.
15:1 “certain men which came
down from Judaea taught the brethren, and said, Except you be
circumcised after the manner of Moses, you cannot be saved. 2
When therefore Paul and Barnabas had no small dissension and
disputation with them, they determined that Paul and Barnabas,
and certain other of them, should go up to Jerusalem to the
apostles and elders about this question.... 5 But there rose up
certain of the sect of the Pharisees which believed, saying,
That it was needful to circumcise them, and to command them to
keep the law of Moses..... 7 Peter rose up, and said to them,
Men and brethren, you know how a good while ago God made choice
among us, that the Gentiles by my mouth should hear the word of
the gospel, and believe. 8 And God.... 9 put no difference
between us and them, purifying their hearts by faith. 10 Now
therefore why tempt God, to put a yoke upon the neck of the
disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear?
11 But we believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus
Christ we shall be saved, even as they.... (Later James
declared,) 19 my sentence is that we trouble not them,
which from among the Gentiles are turned to God: 20 But that we
write to them, that they abstain from pollutions of idols, and
from fornication, and from things strangled, and from blood. 21
For Moses of old time has in every city them that preach him,
being read in the synagogues every Sabbath day.... 23 And they
wrote letters after this manner; ‘The apostles and elders and
brethren send greeting to the brethren which are of the Gentiles
in Antioch and Syria and Cilicia: 24 Forasmuch as we have
heard, that certain which went out from us have troubled you
with words, subverting your souls, saying, You must be
circumcised, and keep the law: to whom we gave no such
commandment: 25 It seemed good to us, being assembled with
one accord, to send chosen men to you with our beloved Barnabas
and Paul, 26 Men that have hazarded their lives for the name of
our Lord Jesus Christ. 27 We have sent therefore Judas and
Silas, who shall also tell you the same things by mouth. 28 For
it seemed good to the Holy Ghost, and to us, to lay upon you no
greater burden than these necessary things; 29 That you
abstain from meats offered to idols, and from blood, and from
things strangled, and from fornication: from which if you keep
yourselves, you shall do well. Fare you well.’ 30 So when they
were dismissed, they came to Antioch: and when they had gathered
the multitude together, they delivered the epistle: 31 Which
when they had read, they rejoiced for the consolation.”
The issue was
clearly whether Gentiles should obey the Torah and be
circumcised (circumcision began some 600 years before Moses).
The letter which the Apostles wrote answering this question is
quoted in verses 23-29. It does not include either circumcision
or obeying Torah as any of the necessary things. James also
states that the men who taught that believers should be
circumcised and obey the Torah did not have the apostles’
authorization (24) and were “subverting your souls.” In the same
way, everyone today, including Michael Rood, who teaches that
believers should obey Torah are “subverting your souls.”
Although this is a
key passage on this issue, Rood barely addressed it in the “A
Rood Awakening” tour and the companion “Raiders of the Lost
Book” video (ARA/RLB). He dismisses this passage by asserting
that the apostles opposed the enactments of the Pharisees (oral
law), no the written Law of Moses. However, they always use the
term “Law of Moses,” never the term “enactments,” which in the
Gospels is usually translated as “traditions” of men. It is
clear they mean the written, not oral, law because James speaks
of the Law being read in synagogues (21). The oral law
could not have been read in synagogues then, because it wasn’t
written down (And to this day the Torah is read in synagogues,
not the oral law which is often referred to as the Talmud or
Mishnah.
Rood also tries to
escape the obvious conclusion of Acts 15 by asserting that when
v. 21 mentions that Moses is read in synagogues, it means that
the believers in Y’shua (Jesus) will hear the rest of the Torah
in their synagogues and then they will be required to obey it
all. This makes no sense at all– in part because believers in
Y’shua were thrown out of all the synagogues so could not hear
the Torah there.
The Apostle Paul
was thrown out of every synagogue he entered, in most cases
after a single sermon. He was thrown out of synagogues in
Pisidian Antioch (Acts 13), Iconium, Lystra (Acts 14),
Thessalonica, Berea (Acts 17), Corinth (Acts 18) and Ephesus
(Acts 19). Believers in Y’shua as Messiah met next door to the
synagogue in the house of Titius Justus (Acts 18:7) and in the
houses of people like Aquila (Romans 16:5). Paul left the
synagogue in Ephesus to meet at the lecture hall of Tyrannus
(Acts 19:9). The Apostle John tells believers to “put them
(false teachers) out of the church” (3 John 10), not out of the
synagogue. Not once in the book of Acts, the epistles or
Revelation is there ever a reference to believers meeting in
synagogues (the Epistles never refer to synagogues at all, and
Revelation refers only to the “synagogue of Satan”). This is no
surprise, for Saul says that he “imprisoned and beat in every
synagogue them that believed on” Y’shua (Jesus), and we see in
Acts many more Jews who did the same. .
Paul Did Not Obey the Torah (Law of
Moses)
Paul did not obey the law at
Antioch, as Galatians 2 noted above. The Jews persecuted him
because they said,
“This fellow persuades men
to worship God contrary to the law.” (Acts 18:13)
The Jews further accused Paul,
saying:
“This fellow persuades men
to worship God contrary to the law” (Acts 21:28).
In his defense, Paul never
claimed that he obeyed the law at all times (because he didn’t),
instead he spoke of how Jesus Christ revealed himself to Paul as
Lord, and the Lord commanded the end of the Mosaic law.
Eating food
offered to idols was also against the law. Yet, Paul clearly
says that believers are permitted to eat it. In fact, three
times he said that obeying the law by not eating food offered to
idols was actually “weak,” not something hat pleased God (1
Corinthians 8), and added:
“8 meat commends us not to
God: for neither, if we eat, are we the better; neither, if we
eat not, are we the worse. 9 But take heed lest by any means
this liberty of yours become a stumblingblock to them that are
weak” (1 Cor 8:8).
In other words, obeying the
law does not please God any more than disobeying it. Only the
“weak” obey the law. Obeying the commands of the law is bondage,
not liberty, and Paul no longer lived in bondage after he
received grace in Christ Jesus.
Furthermore, while
the Apostles at times worshiped in the temple, there is never
any record of them celebrating the three major festivals, even
though most of the apostles lived within the prescribed distance
from the temple for much of their lives.
Occasionally Paul
obeyed the commands of the law, but only for a special purpose,
and never because he considered God to be pleased by obedience
to the law:
“19 For though I be free from
all men, yet I have made myself servant to all, that I might
gain the more. 20 And to the Jews I became as a Jew, that I
might gain the Jews; to them that are under the law, as
under the law, that I might gain them that are under the law;
21 To them that are without law, as without law, (being not
without law to God, but under the law to Christ,) that I might
gain them that are without law. 22 To the weak became I as
weak, that I might gain the weak: I am made all things to all
men, that I might by all means save some. 23 And this I do for
the gospel's sake, that I might be partaker of it with you” (1
Cor 9:19-23).
Paul sometimes
temporarily obeyed the commands of the law because this pleased
the Jews and made them more willing to hear the Gospel of
Jesus Christ, not because it pleased God. As an example of this,
Paul circumcised Timothy not because it pleased God, but because
it pleased Jews:
“3 Him would Paul have to go
forth with him; and took and circumcised him because of
the Jews which were in those quarters: for they all knew
that his father was a Greek (Acts 16:3).
Paul circumcised Timothy not
because he believed he should obey the commands of the law, not
because it pleased God to obey, but because it pleased the Jews
and would make it easier to gain the Jews for Christ.
Clearly, the
apostles not only systematically disobeyed the commands of the
law, but also taught others not to obey them either.
Does the law
please God more? The law of Moses permits slavery, permits (and
commands in some cases) polygamy, forbids wearing cloth made of
more than one kind of material, permits concubines, commands
that beards and sideburns not be trimmed, commands wearing
tassels on clothes, commands divorce for any cause the husband
decides (and so forbids women to get a divorce), commands that
disobedient children, adulterers, homosexuals and those who
curse God be killed, and commands ritual purification after
menstruation. Does it please God to follow these commands today?
Do you follow and promote obedience to these commands in the
law? If, as followers of Rood and Old Testament law say, the
laws give a clear image of what God likes and dislikes, then why
don’t you obey and teach all these?
Did Jesus Teach that His
Followers Must Obey the Commands of the Law
Because They Are a Clear
Picture of Righteousness?
Jesus Christ
apparently lived the life of an Orthodox Jew in most ways,
following the commands of the law of Moses. However, the picture
the Gospels paint of Christ is one who challenged the Law again
and again, and was continuously attacked by Pharisees who saw
themselves as protecting the Law from the assaults of Jesus of
Nazareth.
Jews repeatedly
accused Jesus of breaking the commands of the Law, including:
+ Sabbath laws, by
- allowing his
disciples to Harvest grain on the Sabbath (Mat 12)
“when the Pharisees saw it,
they said to him, Behold, your disciples do that which is not
lawful to do upon the Sabbath day. 3 But he said to them, Have
you not read what David did, when he was hungry, and they that
were with him; 4 How he entered into the house of God, and ate
the showbread, which was not lawful for him to eat, neither for
them which were with him, but only for the priests? 5 Or have
you not read in the law, how that on the Sabbath days the
priests in the temple profane the Sabbath, and are blameless? 6
But I say to you, That in this place is one greater than the
temple.
7 But if you had known what
this means, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice, you would not
have condemned the guiltless. 8 For the Son of man is Lord even
of the Sabbath day.” Jesus admitted to breaking the law, but
declared that breaking it pleased God, and that the law of Moses
was of no effect since he as Lord of the Sabbath had declared
these actions good.
- healing on the
Sabbath ( It is especially striking that when the Jesus is
accused, he doesn’t deny the charge of working on the Sabbath.
Instead, he said, in effect, that doing good on the Sabbath was
God’s perfect will, and the Mosaic Sabbath rest laws either
could be broken to do good or could stand side by side with
doing good.
+ kasruth (kosher) laws of
clean and unclean
- Jesus repeatedly
ate with Gentiles and sinners, which was impossible to do
without breaking thee laws. Even touching (to say nothing of
actually eating) food prepared or touched by Gentiles, or even
that prepared by Jews in a non-kosher kitchen was breaking the
commands (Mat 9:10-13) When Jesus was confronted by the Jews, he
did not deny breaking the Law of Moses, but told them, “go and
learn what that means, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice’
(Mat 9:13) By saying this,
he pitted the prophets as well as himself against the Law of
Moses.
- Jews criticized
Jesus for breaking kosher law by allowing a woman who was a
“sinner” to touch His feet
- Jesus did not
censure a bleeding woman for touching him, which would make him
unclean (Mat 9:20-22)
- Jesus
specifically taught that breaking kosher laws did not
make people unclean, “Jesus said, ‘Are you also yet without
understanding? 17 Do you not yet understand, that whatever
enters in at the mouth goes into the belly, and is cast out into
the draught? 18 But those things which proceed out of the mouth
come forth from the heart; and they defile the man. 19 For out
of the heart proceed evil thoughts, murders, adulteries,
fornications, thefts, false witness, blasphemies: 20 These are
the things which defile a man: but to eat with unwashed hands
does not defile a man.’”
+ people thought that Jesus
came “to destroy the Law” (Mat 5:17)
Jesus also
contrasted his teaching from the Law. In the sermon on the Mount
(Matthew 5-7), Jesus repeatedly says “You have heard it said,”
(referring to the Law, “but I say to you...” His teaching
supercedes the Law because the Law is weak, bare, the crudest of
ideas of righteousness, which prohibits only the grossest sins
and barely scratches the surface in trying to describe what is
pleasing to God.
The Jews did not
commit blatant adultery and did not murder, and divorced their
wives for many reasons, so they believed that they had fully
obeyed the Law and pleased God, and so were perfect (many
Orthodox Jews see themselves this way even today). The Law
executed people for murder and adultery, but never penalized
people for lust or anger. So they believed that by obeying these
commands they fully pleased God.
Then Jesus said,
“But I say to you,” and taught that lust was adultery, and anger
was murder, and that the only reason for divorce was adultery.
The Jews were shocked. They thought they knew and obeyed what
pleased God, only to have Jesus tell them that the Law was
barely a glimmer of perfection, and was light years away from
true righteousness.
From the perspective of the Law,
there was a huge difference between adultery and lust, and
between murder and anger. From Christ’s perfect perspective,
there was none.
It was as though
the Jews who obeyed the law held it up as a chunk of coal and
said, “this is the perfection of carbon, we have the perfection
of God’s will in the law.” Then Jesus held up a polished
diamond, His teaching, and said, “this is the perfection of
carbon, I am showing you the perfection of God’s will.”
Why did God give
the people of Israel such a crude and incomplete picture of
righteousness in the Law? They were raised as slaves, in the
pagan land of Egypt and had forgotten or never known what
Abraham’s life of faith and friendship with God was like. Their
hearts were hardened by sin (for example, Jesus said that their
hardness was the reason for the Law on divorce: “Moses because
of the hardness of your hearts suffered you to put away your
wives: but from the beginning it was not so.” Mat 19:8). In a
sense, this command was a compromise that took into account the
depth of Israel’s sinful nature and actions. Plus, they did not
have the Holy Spirit in them as believers in NT times do. As it
was, Israel fell far short of fulfilling even this barest of
pictures of God’s will.
To return to the
law or to see it as a clear picture of God’s likes and dislikes
is to return to the weakest of pictures of what pleases God, one
that in a sense is misleading. The Jews thought they could fully
please God by obeying it. But even if they had obeyed every
command perfectly, their righteousness would be far short, for
as Jesus said, “I say to you, That except your righteous shall
exceed the righteousness of the scribes and Pharisees, you shall
in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven” (Mat 5:20).
SHOULD CHRISTIANS
CELEBRATE EASTER?
Rood’s followers
hold that Christians should not celebrate Easter because,
1) “Easter” is the name of a
false goddess, 2) worship services take place at sunrise on a
Sunday which was the day of the week when legend says a sun god
rose, and 3) believers are not commanded to celebrate Easter; in
contrast, God’s people were commanded by Moses to celebrate
other festivals such as Passover, so they should be celebrated
instead
First, a look in
any dictionary reveals that “Easter” means the celebration of
Christ’s resurrection. No meaning for the word “Easter” has
anything to do with a goddess or non-Christian religion.
Dictionaries do note that the word “Easter” comes from the Old
English (OE) word “Eastre” which meant “spring” or the name of a
goddess. Old English was spoken from 400- 1100 A.D. The word
“Easter” was never used for a goddess. But a word that was
spelled differently (“Eastre,” not “Easter”) and used over 900
years ago did mean this at that time. (The Resurrection of
Christ was celebrated hundreds of year before Old English came
along.) It really makes no difference what a related word meant
900 years ago. What matters is what our modern English words
mean now. Rood’s argument is like saying that we shouldn’t use
battery chargers now because 500 years ago the English word
“charger” meant a platter, and it was used to carry John the
Baptist’s severed head.
But just for the
sake of dialogue, let’s pretend that “Easter” was used today to
mean both the day of resurrection and the name of a goddess.
Would Christians then need to avoid the word and the celebration
for this reason? The practice of early Christians sheds some
light on this.
Three prominent
leaders in the early church were Apollos, Dionysius and Tychicus
(their names appear many times in the New Testament). They
continued to use these names long after they became respected
Christian leaders, even though many people of that time
worshiped “Apollos” as a sun-god, “Dionysius” as a god of wine
and revelry, and “Tyche” as god of destiny. It didn’t bother
them that their names were names of Greek and Roman gods, they
were just names.
By the same token,
people today don’t avoid the name “Diane” or “Diana” because it
was once used of a goddess of fertility 2,000 years ago (Acts
19; some translations use the Roman name “Diana,” while others
use the equivalent Greek name “Artemis”). And, Christians aren’t
compelled to avoid “Nike” shoes because the Greeks once built
temples to Nike, nor eliminate the fourth day of the week
because the word “Wednesday” once referred to a Norse god, nor
refuse to acknowledge planets like Saturn and Neptune because
the names were once used for Greek gods.
In fact, the OT in
a few places (Jeremiah 31:32, 3:14, Isaiah 54:5ff) even used the
name “Baal” for the true God, because “Baal” could mean owner,
husband, master or the idol Baal. While the Hebrew titles
“Elohim” and “El” were normally used for the true God, they were
also used for the goddess Ashtoreth (1 Kings 11:5, 33) and for
idols (Isaiah 57:5). The prophets didn’t seem compelled to avoid
the titles because they were also used by idol worshipers,
anymore than Christians avoid the titles “God,” “Lord” or
“Master” because some people use them for false gods today.
Worship From Obedience or from Thankfulness?
Should Christians
celebrate Passover because the Mosaic law commanded it to
be done, but not celebrate Easter because the Bible does not
command us to?
This leads to the
question- should Christians celebrate only things Israel was
commanded to celebrate- and not celebrate things that are not
commanded to celebrate?
The Bible does not
command me to hug my children, celebrate their birthdays, or
enjoy wedding anniversaries with my wife. Does this mean that I
should not do these things? If my wife commanded me to celebrate
our anniversary by giving her gifts, would this make me enjoy
celebrating it more? Would she be more pleased if I gave her a
gift because I was commanded to, or because I wanted to do so
because I love her (even though she hadn’t commanded or expected
it)? Surely it’s apparent that we are more pleased with gifts
that come from someone’s love rather than done in obedience to
command.
It is revealing to
read books of laws for Orthodox Jews such as Laws and Customs
of Israel. Vol 3-4 includes a section on “Laws Concerning
How to Honour, Delight in and Rejoice on a Festival.” It lists
things that are mandatory and obligatory to do in order to
delight in a festival. But does performing a list of mandatory
commands make anyone delight in a festival? It is far more
likely to burden one with making sure that all the obligatory
commands are obeyed.
The same is true
of celebrating The Day of the Resurrection of our Lord (note
that traditional churches typically use the term “The Day of the
Resurrection of our Lord” in bulletins and worship materials
rather than the more common “Easter.”) The Christian Church
celebrates it because Christians since Christ’s resurrection
were excited, thankful, happy, pleased and delighted that Christ
rose from the dead, and that this assured believers that they
will rise to eternal life as well. No OT festival provides
forgiveness of sins, resurrection and eternal life– only the
death and resurrection of Christ do. OT festivals celebrate
God’s provision for the physical descendants of Jacob, not for
all people. But the resurrection of Christ, on the other hand,
brings forgiveness and life to all human beings who believe, not
just to the Jews. There is far more reason to celebrate Christ’s
resurrection than any other festival or event in history– not
because we are commanded to, but because we are delighted to.
Dr. John P Juedes, 2005
http://www.abouttheway.org/
Other
Articles by John Juedes :
FOUND A BOOK, BUT LOST THE GOSPEL--
A REVIEW OF “A ROOD AWAKENING” AND
“RAIDERS OF THE LOST BOOK” BY MICHAEL ROOD
~
MICHAEL ROOD, DOOMSDAY PROPHET
All Scriptures from the KJB
Unless Noted
Copyright . All articles are the sole property of SeekGod.ca and Vicky Dillen. All Scripture King James Version unless otherwise stated.
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2Corinthians 6:2
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