Questions for debate:Tart wrote: Do you keep the law?
Should Christians keep the law?
If so, how much of the laws should we keep?
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Questions for debate:Tart wrote: Do you keep the law?
The Bible actually says the Ten Commandments are summed up in two commandments.Tart wrote: As far as Moses laws, Noah laws, etc... I am actually a firm believer in the Ten Commandments (which were supposedly written by God)...
I cant think of any commandments it would be ok to break... I try to live by those laws... I think the Ten Commandments may be the only laws, that i might be able to uphold (to the best of my ability)...
So are you saying the Ten Commandments should invalid in our time.. or something?2timothy316 wrote:The Bible actually says the Ten Commandments are summed up in two commandments.Tart wrote: As far as Moses laws, Noah laws, etc... I am actually a firm believer in the Ten Commandments (which were supposedly written by God)...
I cant think of any commandments it would be ok to break... I try to live by those laws... I think the Ten Commandments may be the only laws, that i might be able to uphold (to the best of my ability)...
You must love Jehovah your God with your whole heart and with your whole soul and with your whole mind. This is the greatest and first commandment. The second, like it, is this: You must love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments the whole Law hangs, and the Prophets. - Matthew 22:39
Jesus was quoting the Law Code in Leviticus 19:18. "You must not take vengeance nor hold a grudge against the sons of your people, and you must love your fellow man as yourself. I am Jehovah." and Deut 6:5, "You must love Jehovah your God with all your heart and all your soul and all your strength."
They are not a curse like the used to be. Under the Law Code breaking the ten commandments meant a person was but to death. The punishment is not what we are under anymore. Yet are we still expected to not kill or steal, and we are expected to honor father and mother to the best of our ability? Yes, as that would be loving our fellow man.Tart wrote:So are you saying the Ten Commandments should invalid in our time.. or something?2timothy316 wrote:The Bible actually says the Ten Commandments are summed up in two commandments.Tart wrote: As far as Moses laws, Noah laws, etc... I am actually a firm believer in the Ten Commandments (which were supposedly written by God)...
I cant think of any commandments it would be ok to break... I try to live by those laws... I think the Ten Commandments may be the only laws, that i might be able to uphold (to the best of my ability)...
You must love Jehovah your God with your whole heart and with your whole soul and with your whole mind. This is the greatest and first commandment. The second, like it, is this: You must love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments the whole Law hangs, and the Prophets. - Matthew 22:39
Jesus was quoting the Law Code in Leviticus 19:18. "You must not take vengeance nor hold a grudge against the sons of your people, and you must love your fellow man as yourself. I am Jehovah." and Deut 6:5, "You must love Jehovah your God with all your heart and all your soul and all your strength."
Paul denied that the laws of sacrifice could provide salvation from sin. He was not against the moral law.Elijah John wrote:The moral and ethical law. Not the ceremonial law, and not the ritual purity laws which Jesus flouted as being needlessly divisive. (Healing lepers and touching other outcasts and "untouchables")
But keep the law for what purpose? For forgiveness? Salvation? Community or tribal cohesion? Or to do the will of God?
Ya i suppose... (and thank you for bringing up the Sabbath Commandment, becuase i wasnt really thinking that hard about them).. Though at the same time, i suppose being within a community, at Church on Sundays is still a thing? Idk... Maybe it is important maybe its not... To me, i think it is...2timothy316 wrote:They are not a curse like the used to be. Under the Law Code breaking the ten commandments meant a person was but to death. The punishment is not what we are under anymore. Yet are we still expected to not kill or steal, and we are expected to honor father and mother to the best of our ability? Yes, as that would be loving our fellow man.Tart wrote:So are you saying the Ten Commandments should invalid in our time.. or something?2timothy316 wrote:The Bible actually says the Ten Commandments are summed up in two commandments.Tart wrote: As far as Moses laws, Noah laws, etc... I am actually a firm believer in the Ten Commandments (which were supposedly written by God)...
I cant think of any commandments it would be ok to break... I try to live by those laws... I think the Ten Commandments may be the only laws, that i might be able to uphold (to the best of my ability)...
You must love Jehovah your God with your whole heart and with your whole soul and with your whole mind. This is the greatest and first commandment. The second, like it, is this: You must love your neighbor as yourself. On these two commandments the whole Law hangs, and the Prophets. - Matthew 22:39
Jesus was quoting the Law Code in Leviticus 19:18. "You must not take vengeance nor hold a grudge against the sons of your people, and you must love your fellow man as yourself. I am Jehovah." and Deut 6:5, "You must love Jehovah your God with all your heart and all your soul and all your strength."
The only commandment from the 10 commandments that doesn't effect those under the Law of the Christ is the sabbath. After the death of Jesus, Christians are no longer required to keep the sabbath.
They are valid, except the sabbath. The other 9 are valid because the are encompassed in one commandment to love our neighbor as ourselves. However, we are not put to death for breaking them, like in the days when the Law Code was in effect. Jesus death covers our sins except practiced sin. There is no covering sins that are practiced.Tart wrote: Like im just trying to get what you are saying, what you believe, what you disagree with (in my post.... if you do)....
If the Law is abolished... Like, we dont believe it is ok to kill people (for example)... No one believes that it is ok to kill people (unless your a psycho, i guess)... right?
Is it becuase of your theology, that you might suggest these laws are no longer valid? Apologetic for atheist critics?
(edit, i wrote this before i saw the post above)
Yes meeting together is a Christian commandment, "And let us consider one another so as to incite to love and fine works, Let us not forsake the gathering of ourselves together, and all the more so as you behold the day drawing near. (Heb. 10:24, 25)Tart wrote:
Ya i suppose... (and thank you for bringing up the Sabbath Commandment, becuase i wasnt really thinking that hard about them).. Though at the same time, i suppose being within a community, at Church on Sundays is still a thing? Idk... Maybe it is important maybe its not... To me, i think it is...
"For if we practice sin willfully after having received the accurate knowledge of the truth, there is no longer any sacrifice for sins left, but there is a certain fearful expectation of judgment and a burning indignation that is going to consume those in opposition." - Heb 10:27But Christian theology still says sinning leads to death, and you believe that right?