Originally posted by billwald
The side that wins the war writes the history books - and the Bibles.
Huh?
Which side of the war were Luke and Peter on?
Isn't it their writings which give the most trouble to your position?
My primary complaint against Paul is his misuse of the OT and his bad logic.
1. He uses "law" as if the Mosiac Covenant was the only communication from God to man. He totally ignores the Noahic Covenant, which provides the basic Law for the human race.
What? No he doesn't! Ever read Roman 13?
Romans 13:1 Let every soul be subject to the governing authorities. For there is no authority except from God, and the authorities that exist are appointed by God. 2 Therefore whoever resists the authority resists the ordinance of God, and those who resist will bring judgment on themselves. 3 For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to evil. Do you want to be unafraid of the authority? Do what is good, and you will have praise from the same. 4 For he is God's minister to you for good. But if you do evil, be afraid; for he does not bear the sword in vain; for he is God's minister, an avenger to execute wrath on him who practices evil. 5 Therefore you must be subject, not only because of wrath but also for conscience' sake. 6 For because of this you also pay taxes, for they are God's ministers attending continually to this very thing. 7 Render therefore to all their due: taxes to whom taxes are due, customs to whom customs, fear to whom fear, honor to whom honor.
2. There isn't one verse in Exodus through Deut which references anyone's status in the next world. The Mosiac Covenant only provides a social contract for those who came out of Egypt and will live in Israel and to converts and aliens who live in the land. The blessings and punishments are all temporal.
So what's your point?
3. The sin offerings are for misdemeanors and inadvertent felonies. There was no sacrifice that atoned for an intentional felony.
What are you saying? That the Mosaic Law was not an important part of salvation? Is that it? I don't think I follow your logic here.
Please explain what your understanding is of the Gospel. What must one do to be saved? Is the Gospel the same now as it was prior to Christ? If not, in what way has it changed?
4. The Mosiac Covenant does NOT apply to gentiles living outside the Land. Orthodox, Catholic, Lutheran, and Reformed believers have a marginal case for applying the Mosiac Covenant to themselves if the Church replaces Israel and receives all the blessings and obligations that were contractually accepted by Israel.
The Body of Christ is not Israel and vise versa. There is no logical reason for the Body to take over Israel's role.
Gentile Dispensationalists have absolutely no Biblical or logical justification for applying the Mosaic Covenant to themselves.
Quite right! Paul could not have said it better himself!
5. There is no Biblical or logical justification for separating the Ten Words from the rest of the 613 positive and negative statements found in the Torah (first 5 books). The Ten Words are like chapter headings in a book. For example, the 2nd greatest commandment is not part of the 10 words. The prohibitions against homosexuality and bestiality are not in the Ten Words. Reading the Ten Commandments is an incomplete exposition of the LAW.
Again, I don't believe Paul himself could have said it any better! We are not under the law, period.
That is, the Mosaic Law. Dispensationalists believe that there is more than one dispensation currently active. In fact there are at least two; The Dispensation of the Grace of God, and the Dispensation of Human Government.
In short, the criminal justice system set up in the Bible should still be in effect and it is the criminal justice system that God himself will use to judge the nations and us. In other words, if our government legalizes homosexuality it does the homo not good. He will still answer to God for his perversion as will the nation which legalized it.
6. It is an error - or at least a cheap bluff - to claim that Jesus "fulfilled the administrative and sacrificial portions of the Law" and we are only obligated to obey the moral parts. Who are we to determine which parts of God's Law do not have moral implications.
I repeat my challenge to separate the 613 statements into the 3 artificial categories. I have been making this challenge for 10 years and no one has done it.
Do you not accept Jesus as your sufficient sacrifice? The blood of lambs and bulls never atoned for the sin of anyone. They were but a symbol of the substance which is Christ!
Further, all but the criminal justice portion of the law was intended for Israel alone. There is now no Jew or Gentile, for Israel has been cut off. Therefore those portions of the law that pertained exclusively to Israel are rendered meaningless. What's the point of being separate if this is no longer any difference in the way God treats either set of persons?
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All of this is somewhat off the subject though isn't it? After all, if you accepted Paul as being in the office appointed him by Jesus Himself then all of this would be clear to you. As I said before, you have a great advantage over 90+% of the church today in that you see and acknowledge a difference in the message Paul preached verses that which Jesus and the twelve preached.
You have that much correct! All that remains is for you to see that those whom you do acknowledge as being in authority endorsed Paul's ministry and for you to endeavor to understand why God made a change, what that change was and what it means to your theological construct.
You must at this point acknowledge one of two things...
1. That based upon the testimony of the twelve apostles and of the book of Acts, Paul's ministry and therefore his epistles are a valid portion of scripture.
Or…
2. That, not only are Paul's letters invalid but so are Peter's and the book of Acts because they clearly endorsed Paul.
Which will it be?
Accept Paul, or reject all three, Paul, Luke and Peter (and perhaps more)?
Keep in mind that Luke also wrote one of the Gospels and that your rejection of his writings will by necessity require the rejection of a fourth of the Gospels as well, not to mention the implications of rejecting Peter who was one of, if not the primary leader of the twelve.
Resting in Him,
Clete