Shekinah-Life

Time for the Eagles to Arise & Shine' your SHEKINAH' has come: YeshaYAHu 60:1

Levana Peggy

"Not Subject to the Law of God?" Christianity's Difficulty with "the Law" Part 4.

As mentioned, the Hebrew view of faith is not just "believing" in God, as some teach. Even demons believe in him (James 2:19) and know who Yeshua is (Matthew 8:29). Having repented (teshuvah) in faith, we are now to look at the Torah as our "how-to guide" regarding God's will for our lives. The entire Torah is the "Law of Liberty" we are to live by. (James 1:25; 2:12) We cannot pick and choose which Torah commandments we want to follow either (James 2:10-11).

Any religion which, under the guise of "liberty," picks what it wants out of the Torah according to its own criteria and rejects the rest, stands in opposition to God's liberty through the Torah. (13)

Herein lies a significant problem with Christian Bible interpretation. When it comes to defining what "faith" is, Christianity pays little heed to the fact that in the Hebrew Bible, including the books of the "New Testament," the Hebrew authors had a different view of what "faith" meant as it was taught in their culture. Their view of "faith" is not the same as what we think of in our 20th century non-Hebrew culture.

You can have the best Greek interlinear Bible in the world, but if you don't put the "New Testament" text back into its first century Hebrew context, you cannot arrive at a correct understanding.

For example, Christianity, particularly the more evangelical Protestant denominations, have difficulty explaining parts of the book of "James" -- especially verses such as:

James 2:24 -- "You see that a person is justified by what he does and not by faith alone."

If you open a dozen Christian Bible commentaries, you will probably get a dozen "explanations" of this verse. The "Protestant reformer," Martin Luther, had great concerns over the book of "James" being in the Bible, because in his view, it taught works as part of faith. Luther was too immersed in Hellenized Christianity and had such a hatred for the "works" in the Roman church, to understand what this Hebrew writer, (Ya'acov, the brother of Yeshua) was saying. Luther also disregarded Torah because of its "works."

Because of this anti-Torah mindset, the book of "James" (along with the rest of Scripture) continues to be misunderstood. For instance, when "James" makes a POSITIVE reference to the "Law," such as in this verse, it's taught that he can't possible mean the Torah. Take this verse as an example:

James 1:25 -- "But whoso looketh into the perfect law of liberty, and continueth therein, he being not a forgetful hearer, but a doer of the word, this man shall be blessed in his deed."

The famous Christian teacher and author, J. Vernon Mcgee gives the following explanation of the above verse:

"'The perfect law of liberty.' This is not the Mosaic Law; it is the law of grace. James does not talk about law here in the same sense that Paul does. When Paul talks about the law, he is talking about the Mosaic Law. When James talks about law, it is the law of faith. There is love in law in the Old Testament, and there is law in love in the New Testament." (14)

McGee doesn't offer any evidence to support why he says Paul means one thing and James another. His explanation as to why "James' law" can't be the same as "Paul's law," is based on the standard Christian theological view of "the Law," that being:

"Paul's Law" is the Law of the "Old Testament" which he taught was done away with in terms of us following it.
As James is making a "positive" reference to "Law," (us looking into it as our guide) then this "good Law" of James can't be the same "bad law" of Paul's, therefore it must mean something else, something called, "the law of grace."
Christianity will point to certain "New Testament" verses to "prove" the Law has ended. The aforementioned theology book by Charles Ryrie, on the subject of "The End of the Law" makes these three claims:

"The Jerusalem Council settled this matter early and clearly (Acts 15) ... Peter described the Law as an unbearable yoke ... they did not try to place the believers under the Law ... they realized the Law had come to an end."
"In 2 Corinthians 3:7-11 Paul even specifies that the part of the Law which was written on stone (the Ten Commandments) was done away. He dares to label the moral part of the Law as a ministry of death and condemnation, but thank God, this has been replaced by the New Covenant which brings life and justification."
"In Hebrews 7:11-12 ... if the Law has not been done away, then neither has the levitical priesthood, and Christ is not our High Priest today. But if Christ is our High Priest, then the Law can no longer be operative and binding on us." (15)
Unfortunately, Ryrie's conclusions are arrived at by interpreting Scripture through the same preset anti-Torah bias. An interpretation of the same three verses from a context-sensitive, pro-Torah standpoint, would be as follows:

Acts 15 -- The Jerusalem Council was called to address the specific issue of Gentiles having to prove themselves through works of the Torah PRIOR to salvation (15:1). The Gospel was now going out to a very pagan Gentile world, and these new believers were coming directly into the faith of Israel through the Messiah, no longer having to "come up through the ranks" of Judaism as Gentiles had before. This was a "new way" of doing things, but it was confirmed by God (15:8). However, it was difficult for many Jews to accept this "instant acceptance of Gentiles," as these converted pagans knew nothing of Torah and brought a lot of terrible practices with them. Once they accepted Yeshua, the Council in fact required these Gentiles to follow certain minimal Torah commands (15:20) in order to fellowship with Jewish (and also other Gentile) believers who already knew and kept Torah. The council gave these basic Torah commands with the understanding that they would learn more of Moses' Torah as they attended Synagogue/Temple. (This is the meaning of Acts 15:21.) Peter's comment in verse 10 is pointing out that if God had commanded perfect Torah observance as a prerequisite to faith, then they all were in jeopardy, as none of them could keep it perfectly prior to faith.
2 Corinthians 3:7-11 -- Paul does not "label the moral part of the Law, a ministry of death and condemnation." Rather, what he is saying is that only the Spirit of God, received through faith, gives life to the written text of the Torah, which if attempted to be followed apart from the Spirit (in faith), indeed brings death (the curse of the Law). Paul also taught this in Romans chapter 8, saying that those coming to faith, being of the Spirit, are no longer condemned by the Torah -- now saved, they are to follow it. (See the section below, "Is the Torah Realy for Believers?) It is not the Law that is taken away, but the veil (blindness of trying to do Torah without faith) that is removed (circumcised) through trusting in Yeshua.
Hebrews 7:11-12 -- The book of Hebrews is concerned with a very specific teaching that Christianity is ignorant of. Hebrews shows that Yeshua is the permanent Yom Kippur salvation sacrifice and that His priesthood is part of a heavenly priesthood based in the heavenlies, that began with Adam and was passed through the "first born" (or specifically one more deserving than the first born, i.e., Seth, Shem, Jacob). As such, this aspect of the priesthood, the role of the High Priest (cohen hagadol) at Yom Kippur, has changed. In fact, it has in a sense, reverted back to that of the first born. God's original intention was for the first born of each family to continue acting as a priest, but this was corrupted by the sin of the golden calf and only then given to the Levites. (16) The first Covenant was not in itself corrupt. It was the sin of the people, (who made the promise to follow the Torah), that caused it to be considered corrupt (Hebrews 8:8). The new (renewed) Covenant, is essentially the same Covenant. It is "different" primarily in that it is based not on the promise of sinful men, but on the better promise of the Messiah, whose priesthood is eternal (Hebrews 5:6-9, 7:20-22, 8:6). Yeshua's death did not do away or change other parts of the Torah, including the rest of the sacrificial system (which was/is for reconciliation, NOT salvation). Hebrews is concerned with the salvation sacrifice of Yom Kippur, not the rest of the sacrificial system. Additionally, we are NOT yet in the New Covenant. (Jeremiah 31; Hebrews 8:13.) The books of Ezekiel and Revelation show the sacrificial system (other than the Yom Kippur sacrifice) will return during the Millennium when the Temple is back on Mount Moriah and Yeshua again walks the earth, ruling sinful man with a rod of iron. (17) There is no inconsistency in the idea that parts of the Torah were destined to change as the Torah has that "built into itself." For example, Israel received new revelation for when they were in the Land. Another example is found in Numbers 27:1-11, where we see the addition of commands to deal with the situation where a man dies without any sons to inherit. In none of these cases does God take away the Torah. These things are done, as author David Stern states, "Within the framework of one eternal Torah." (18)
Oddly, Christian author Ryrie acknowledges that the Jewish view of the Law was that of a unit. Speaking of the moral, ceremonial and judicial aspects of the Law, he states:

"Though this threefold division is almost universally accepted in Christian theology, the Jewish people either did not acknowledge it or at least did not insist on it" ... "commands from various parts of the Law were equally binding and the punishment equally severe. The Law was a unit." ... "James approached the Law as a unit. He decried partiality because it violated the law to love one's neighbor as oneself, and this single violation, he said, made the people guilty of the whole Law (James 2:8). He could scarcely arrive at such a conclusion unless the Law were a unit." (19)

Ryrie admits there is a problem understanding how the Law still applies to Christians. His reply is that "the Law of Christ contains some new commands ... some old ones ... and some revised ones." (20)

Ryrie is correct about the unity of the Torah. This then provokes the question; If; a) the Jewish view of the Torah was that of a unit, and, b) Yeshua's own brother "James" taught oneness of the Law in his letter in the Bible, and, c) Yeshua taught the unity of Torah by saying not the smallest part of the Law was done away with by Him -- then how does Christianity defend its position of picking and choosing what is now binding on Christians as part of the "Law of Christ?"

There is no basis for doing so according to the Jewish faith of Yeshua and His early followers. How this theological change came about will be discussed further in this document.

In fact, God does not change. (A popular sentiment heard in churches but not practiced, as the foundation of Christianity is based on the notion that God did change, replacing Torah-observant Israel, as His people, with the non-Torah observant gentile "Church.")

Torah-based Messianic Judaism is the only "religion" God ever created. It is the faith of Yeshua and the faith of Paul (more properly Rabbi Sha'ul) before AND after his Damascus road conversion. It is the faith of the rest of the "New Testament" writers and the faith of the original Messianic community in the first century. (Also known as Nazarene Judaism.)

Torah-based Judaism has always been a religion of salvation by faith -- "Faith" as defined by the Judaism of Messiah Yeshua, his brothers Ya'acov and Yehuda, and his apostles, Kepha, Mattityahu, Yochanan and Sha'ul -- NOT a 20th century westernized gentile definition.

Share 

Add a Comment

You need to be a member of Shekinah-Life to add comments!

Join this Ning Network

About

Badge

Loading…

TZEDAKAH / CHARITY








http://www.chabad.org/ Tzedakah teaching here

If you have been
blessed by this site,

please consider blessing us

by contributing to keep it happening!

~~~~TZEDAKAH~~~ 'Charitable giving Here'
~Help us help others~

SHALOM

Tzedakah - Charity
"Kol Yisrael arevim zeh bazeh." ="All YIsrael is responsible for one another." (Talmud Shavuot 39a)
Proverbs 29:7, "The righteous consider the cause of the poor:~ but the wicked regard not to know of it."
Tehillim (Proverbs) 28:27 27 He who gives to the poor will not lack,
But he who hides his eyes will have many curses.



~There are three tithes mentioned in the Torah...The first is intended to provide for the priesthood, so they can dedicate themselves to the work full time...The second is for your use in traveling to the festivals, and in purchasing whatever your heart desires each year...Then the third tithe (which is to be collected two years in seven) is for the poor, the widow, the orphan, and the needy.~~~Ponder this'~

Devarim (Deuteronomy) 26:12-13 12 "When you have finished laying aside all the tithe of your increase in the third year -- the year of tithing -- and have given it to the Levite, the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow , so that they may eat within your gates and be filled,
13 then you shall say before YHVH your Elohim: 'I have removed the set-apart tithe from my house, and also have given them to the Levite, the stranger, the fatherless, and the widow, according to all Your commandments which You have commanded me.
I have not transgressed Your commandments, nor have I forgotten them."

~ May Ha'Shem bless Your journey~



~Love at it's finest~

For those of you who are Brit Chadasah [Christian bible] Only~ These scriptures apply toward Charitable giving

MainSite

Yochanan Aleph (1st John) 3:17 17
"But whoever has this world's goods, and sees his brother in need, and shuts up his heart from him, how does the love of Elohim abide in him?
Yaakov (James) 2:14-17 14 What does it profit, my brethren, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can faith save him?
15 If a brother or sister is naked and destitute of daily food,
16 and one of you says to them, "Depart in peace, be warmed and filled," but you do not give them the things which are needed for the body, what does it profit?
17 Thus also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.



NOTE:: Tzadakah [Pious Benevolent giving] / Charity is a fundamental part of the Jewish way of life.
Traditional Jews give at two-ten percent of their income to charity. Moreover
traditional Jewish homes commonly have a pushke, [a box for collecting coins for the poor] The coins are routinely placed in the box.
We have several in our home for change gathering




>Baruch haba b'shem YHVH
We are all the creators son's[ daughters]
we are all one, from one, in one.

Only our perception of what
and who G-d is keeps us divided,...
yet our heart yearns to be one'
Selah





Where you come from~~~Where you are at , and Where you are going too'..that is the three main things you need to know. Would you follow a person that did not know those three things I think not ...Enjoy your journey

Shalom





THESE Rabbis may be reading ~The “Cork in the Bottle”~~ it is a Free Pdf E-Book on our main site~~~go HERE Or you can acquire the Real Book at our store link and Bless this Ministry thereby helping you and the team at ShekinahLife...Shalom | © > 2005-2008 Your way to Healing. Emotional Healing All rights reserved



**`Jewish Encyclopedia
Great reference site to look up terms and names
GO-HERE



blueletterbible.org




http://www.codexsinaiticus.org/en/

NOAHIDE-LAWs on site ->Go HERE


NOAHIDE-LAWs
->Go HERE





U S CONSTITUTION HERE









~


~


~


~


~

<Shalom,... Shalom

Shalom Aleichem/ Peace be unto you ....ToDah'[Thankyou] for stopping by
Bamidbar 6:v24-27
|24| Y'varekhekha Adonai
v'yishmerekha (Hashem bless
thee, and keep thee);
|25| Ya'er Adonai panav
eleikha vichunekha (Hashem
make His face shine upon
thee, and be gracious unto
thee);|26| Yissa Adonai panav
eleikha v'yasem l'kha shalom
(Hashem lift up His
countenance upon thee, and
give thee shalom).
|27| And they shall put My
Shem upon the Bnei Yisroel,
and I will bless them.

WavingRabbi


Shalom Aleichem…”Y&T”


The Seven Noahide Laws

While Jews are commanded to observe hundreds of laws, non-Jews are expected to follow seven that are presumed to date from the time of Noah. Judaism regards any non-Jew who keeps these laws as a righteous person who is guaranteed a place in the world to com
~~~~~~~~~
1. Not to deny G-d.
2. Not to blaspheme G-d.

3. Not to murder.

4. Not to engage in incestuous, adulterous, bestial or homosexual relationships.

5. Not to steal.

6. Not to eat a limb torn from a living animal.

7. To set up courts { beit Dien} to ensure obedience to the other six laws.




LATEST NEWS


SHALOM ALEICHEM

Enjoy your Journey~"Y&T"

Hope your having a great time...let us know...J&TWe hope your visit to ShekinahLife is a pleasant one.....
Health is an important issue,...We also run several health and healing groups that deal with the theme of eating right.

Raw and living foods are the best way to go.
The processed foods and fast foods are very tainted to say the least but we were all told it was good and there was the convenience factor.
Look into Green smoothies, or fruit smoothies as one of your meals a day Also consider at least once a year a RawAide/Lemon aid cleanse and flush to rid the body of toxins.

The whole kit with everything you need for this valuable body detoxifying plan is available at our WebSites.



Our Family of sites
http://REFUAH.ning.com
http://RAWisLAW.ning.com
http://RAWAWAKENING.ning.com
http://ShekinahLife.com
http://ShekinahLife.ning.com
http://ShekinahLifeCenter.com






Isn't this the whole meaning of life in this world: To choose between bondage to the material world and believing that your life comes from those many forces,----Or to choose true life and to believe that all your needs and all your concerns come only from the one Source of all life.
the Rebbe'

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Above all enjoy your journey..."T"

Latest Activity

J&T @ Shekinah Chaim added a discussion
A question came up regarding people who know Kosher and the TaNakh but choose to do as they want and then deal with the issues associated with un-healthy choices: "Does He want them to not receive refuah shelemah?"More than health and healing,......
November 23
November 21
James L Hamilton added a discussion
There may have always been some in every generation that G-d gave more understanding to...however they were set apart in avodah..it would seem Some info http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lamed_Vav_Tzadikim Segments of Judaism believe that there is th...
November 20
Try hereand here
November 19

© 2009   Created by J&T @ Shekinah Chaim on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!
~ ~ >May the Torah Truth be Revealed to All who come to this site Read-Read-Read your Bible until HIS TORAH TRUTH Becomes seamless within you As Sephardic Jews of the House of IsraEL, We do not endorse Paganism.


**********************************************

Shekinah-Life' Your way to Healing
ShekinahLife
We follow "The Original Faith of the Nazarene covenant believers~~

The Sagan Priest Shual put it well:

"But this I confess to you, that according to the Way which they call a 'sect,' so I worship the Elohim of my fathers, believing all things which are written in the Torah and the Prophets."

Shekinah-Life is here to Reach and Teach' with EMET" and Ruach. [Truth and Spirit] Above all~~Enjoy your journey..."YaaKovWavingRabbi~& Hadassah Terry"
Lecha Dodi~~Lyrics: Lecha dodi, likrat kallah p'ney Shabbat n'ka'b'lah Boi kallah, boi kallah Shamor v'zachor b'dibur echad Hishmianu el ham'yuchad Adonai echad, ush'mo echad L'shem ul'tiferet v'lithilah Translation: Come, beloved, to greet the bride, the Sabbath presence, let us welcome. "Keep" and "remember" - in a single utterance, the One and only G-d made us hear. Adonai is One and Adonai's Name is One, for renown for splendor and for praise ***** ~~~