TrueBeliever37
Well-Known Member
You seem confused about the difference between law and covenant.
So you agree there is now a NEW covenant?
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You seem confused about the difference between law and covenant.
Unless one understands the fulfilment of the Sabbath as being rest and peace in Christ. The seventh day of God's week is not the same as the seventh day in man's week. Taking each day as a thousand years, God's Sabbath is yet to come.And here I thought you said "the covenant made with Moses and Israel was never intended as an everlasting covenant" which would include the covenant of the Sabbath which was, as you concede, of an everlasting nature. Of course, one could point out that God might not have called any other particular covenant "eternal" because he knew that there would be a breaking of it (Deut 31).
Calling something a lamb and its being a lamb are 2 different things.Given that Jesus is referred to as 'the lamb of God' by John the Baptist, speaking prophetically, and that the sacrifice took place within God's temple, many would say it fits perfectly!
The sabbath is fulfilled by keeping its laws, each and every week. The seventh day is the seventh day. Looking at it fancifully, one could find ways to justify all sorts of distinct practices.Unless one understands the fulfilment of the Sabbath as being rest and peace in Christ. The seventh day of God's week is not the same as the seventh day in man's week. Taking each day as a thousand years, God's Sabbath is yet to come.
Do priests rest on the Sabbath?
The text literally calls the servant Israel.
The text presents the perception of non-Jewish kings about the nation of Israel (named explicitly) suffering for the actions of the non-Jewish nations. Here is what I recently posted explaining the pronouns.For the transgression of my people was he stricken - he shall bear their iniquities - he bare the sin of many, and made intercession for the transgressors. Isaiah 53:8-12 How could that possibly be Israel?
Isn't this someone suffering for God's people? It doesn't sound like an animal to me. Does it to you?
The text presents the perception of non-Jewish kings about the nation of Israel (named explicitly) suffering for the actions of the non-Jewish nations. Here is what I recently posted explaining the pronouns.
Malachi 3:1. 'Behold, l will send my messenger, and he shall prepare the way before me: and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to his temple, even the messenger of the covenant, whom ye delight in: behold, he shall come, saith the LORD of hosts'.Calling something a lamb and its being a lamb are 2 different things.
Something happening on the temple mount, but not on the proper altar doesn't count.
Crucifiction of a scourged sacrifice doesn't count.
The one performing the sacrifice has to be a particular person also.
It doesn't fit at all.
If you follow the pronouns and the grammar, the kings speak and the people are spoken of as a singular servant of God:Your explanation doesn't make sense to me. Please clarify. How does "for the transgression of my people was he stricken" work into what you just said?
Someone was to suffer because of the transgressions of God's people. Also are you saying Israel was a man of sorrows?
It's not fanciful to understand a day with God as a thousand years. Psalm 90:4 has indicated this to Jewish commentators, and the idea is repeated in the second epistle of Peter 3:8.The sabbath is fulfilled by keeping its laws, each and every week. The seventh day is the seventh day. Looking at it fancifully, one could find ways to justify all sorts of distinct practices.
It isn't even clear that he is talking about the "temple." The word is "heichal" or sanctuary. There is discussion among Jewish commentators as to how much human involvement is necessary in the construction of the. Some say a lot, some say a little.Malachi 3:1. 'Behold, l will send my messenger, and he shall prepare the way before me: and the Lord, whom ye seek, shall suddenly come to his temple, even the messenger of the covenant, whom ye delight in: behold, he shall come, saith the LORD of hosts'.
Do you think Malachi is talking of the temple built with hands, or the temple build without hands?
And therefore any time you want "day" to mean anything else it does? The text in Psalms actually says "כִּ֤י אֶ֪לֶף שָׁנִ֡ים בְּֽעֵינֶ֗יךָ כְּי֣וֹם אֶ֭תְמוֹל כִּ֣י יַֽעֲבֹ֑ר" "as a thousands years are like a yesterday that has passed" so now every yesterday is 1000 years but not a tomorrow...It's not fanciful to understand a day with God as a thousand years. Psalm 90:4 has indicated this to Jewish commentators, and the idea is repeated in the second epistle of Peter 3:8.
'But beloved, be not ignorant of this one thing, that one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day'.
These are the same Christians that believe the psalmist was speaking for God when he wrote that the Law is perfect. It is a contradiction.Er, because Christians do not believe it is perfect, or at any rate, that it is not a complete expression of what God intends for Man, perhaps?
But this idea of 'evolution' bothers me. You're reading it the wrong way around by reading the OT in light of the NT, when it's the NT that has to be held accountable to what is said in the Tanakh. To get out of this, Christians invent the notion of reading the OT in light of the NT, which is just ridiculous. It's like believing in Jesus a priori, then finding reasons to - which is what I see in the NT.
That's why Christians don't follow most of it? The law written on hearts is,
A) Only for Israelites
B) The exact same Torah, nothing obsolete or unnecessary.
This is nothing like Christianity.
So you claim.Each of the major religions have a new beginning/world/humanity/creation where the truth will be a living reality and not scripture. They all see their vision as exclusively theirs. Jews have a living Torah. Christians have the vision outlined in Revelation and so forth.
There may indeed be differences in how that same truth is expressed in deeds but to me it will be the same truth differently expressed not something exclusive to any religion.
What you call subjective I call fulfillment.
Again, used in context of "in actuality" and not in the literal sense that you read it as.
In brief Rival, there is often the employment of hyperbole in God's word, or, at least, such superlatives are literal in a contextual manner.This is in religious debates and so is open to everyone.
In trying to understand Christianity and what underpins it, I keep coming up against essentially the belief that the Torah isn't enough, it's not good enough, it doesn't do this or that.
Psalm 19 says 'The Law of the Lord is perfect', and the Torah in Deut 4 says not to add or take away from it, and in Deut 30 it says it is not far away, hard to do etc.
Can someone please explain to me, if the Torah is perfect, which the Tanakh says it is, why is Jesus or Christianity as a whole necessary? There shouldn't be any need for any 'new' revelation or upgrade, per the Torah itself (it would be adding or taking away).
Can you still have Christianity if you believe the Torah is perfect? I don't believe you can.
This is in religious debates and so is open to everyone.
In trying to understand Christianity and what underpins it, I keep coming up against essentially the belief that the Torah isn't enough, it's not good enough, it doesn't do this or that.
Psalm 19 says 'The Law of the Lord is perfect', and the Torah in Deut 4 says not to add or take away from it, and in Deut 30 it says it is not far away, hard to do etc.
Can someone please explain to me, if the Torah is perfect, which the Tanakh says it is, why is Jesus or Christianity as a whole necessary? There shouldn't be any need for any 'new' revelation or upgrade, per the Torah itself (it would be adding or taking away).
Can you still have Christianity if you believe the Torah is perfect? I don't believe you can.