Madcornishbiker
New Member
While I may argue about his theology regarding the importance of the Law and what "Grace" is, he does say this:
Debates about the Law raged throughout Christianity in the 1 st century, but Paul was very clear that works of Law were useless, and when the "Older Men and Apostles in Jerusalem were called upon to answer the debate about the Law, they came back with a very clear decision, as recorded at Acts 15:28,29.
This decision makes it clear that as Paul later said, the law was affixed to the stake with Christ. Though as Jesus said, He came not to destroy the law, so the principles in it are still valid, but to fulfil it, meaning that it is no longer a valid legal document. Hence the Apostles only carrying on those few points of the Law.
Now we know that "Sin" according to 1 John 3:4 is "transgression of the Law", as the definition of Sin probably didn't change between Paul's time and John's. Is Paul nonetheless exhorting Christians to continue to refrain from "sin" (Lawlessness ,breaking the Law and the commandments)? Did he mean some other "Law"? What does he mean in Romans 2:13?
Did he mean some other law? Yes indeed. Those who follow Christ are no longer under law but under principle, which is contained, as Jesus pointed out in the two greatest commandments. However it is also called "the law of love".
Being under principle rather than Law does put a much greater load of responsibility on followers of Christ, in making sure that their decisions are correct and in line with biblical principle.
Is Paul simply misunderstood about the Law by most? Did he actually teach obedience to it regardless of what he said about its importance?
Paul is misunderstood about many things by most, but then so is the bible.
The bible, as the word of God can only be a harmonious "whole" from Genesis to Revelation, so any apparent contradictions mean that we are not understanding things properly.
From Genesis to Revelation? Yes, of course. It is important to remember that both Jesus, as a faithful and practising Jew, and the Apostles who came out of Apostate Judaism to follow the true path. The only scripture they had to teach from, and teach from it they did, were the writings we now wrongly call the Old Testament.
Since the Law was no longer in force by that time what Paul taught could only have been obedience to the principles embedded in the Law.
Remember that God said long ago that He would write His laws on people's hearts. In what sense? They would live by the principles embedded in it, not by the letter of it. That also explains Jesus comment to the Pharisees on the very subject of overly strict adherence to Law, "Did you never read this? I want mercy not sacrifice??