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Showing posts with label Moral Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Moral Law. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 21, 2023

Christians Applying the Old Testament Laws

A law stays in effect until it is annulled, replaced, or its time-limit or restriction has been fulfilled. All laws are not equal and not all reveal the same thing. "Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You give a tenth of your spices—mint, dill, and cumin. But you have neglected the more important matters of the law—justice, mercy, and faithfulness. You should have practiced the latter, without neglecting the former (Matt 23:23 NIV). The moral law reveals the holy nature of God and does not change. You shall be holy, for I Yahveh your God am holy (Lev. 19:1); You shall thus observe all My statutes and all My ordinances and do them; I am Yahveh (Lev. 19:37). Also see 1 Peter 1:14-16 and Acts 14:15.

There were specific Hebrew terms for this category of law, namely the moral law. The main term is mitsvah, usually translated as ‘commandment’ in English. You have heard of this term before. At a Bar-mitsvah, a 13-year-old boy becomes a son of the commandments in Judaism. The Ten Commandments are the foundation for this moral law (Eph 6:1-4), often called the “ten words” or the “testimony,” but many other moral laws give more clarity beyond the foundational and overarching Ten Commandments. The 10 words instruct us on the larger categories and show what loving God (1-4) and loving our neighbor (5-10) looks like (Matt 22:37-40; Rom 13:8-10). But these 10 Words are broad umbrella like commands and the additional moral laws in the Torah provide more specifics for human obedience. For instance, both homosexual relations (Lev 18:22) and bestiality (Exod 22:19) are a violation of the overarching foundational moral law, ‘Do not commit adultery’ (Exod 20:14; Matt 19:18-19). [1] The additional moral laws clarify what God hates and what holiness looks like, as well as what paganism looks like. If one loves God, that person will obey Him (Mark 12:28-34; John 14:15; Deut 11:1).

However, in the middle of the Ten Commandments is the 4th commandment that has both moral and ceremonial aspects (Exod 20:8-11). Understanding the Sabbath regulations is a difficult study and takes years of work to come to a solid conclusion. Historical Theology is only partially helpful in this matter because of the diversity of interpretations for the last 2,000 years. The ceremonial part of the fourth commandment concerns the day of the week (Matt 12:10-12; Luke 13:14-15) and is a sign for Israel (Exod 31:12-17). Saturday commemorates both the six 24-hour-day creation week and the redemption of Israel from Egypt’s brutal slavery (Deut 5:15). They observed the Sabbath prior to receiving the law (Exod 16:23-29; also see Gen 3:8-11, 4:3, 26:5; Mark 2:27-28) and it is described in the law (Deut 5:13-15; Exod 20:8). However, Jesus arose on the first day of the week and for forty-days repeatedly met with the disciples on the first day of the week (John 20:1, 19-29; Luke 24:21-45). This New Covenant redemptive act in redemptive history was greater than the redemption of the Jews from Egypt (a type of the Suffer Servant’s redemption, see Isaiah 53). Thus, a change of day was in order just like the change in the covenantal sign of circumcision to baptism (Col 2:11-14) and the replacement of the Passover with the Lord’s supper (Mark 14:16-26). So, the moral part of this commandment continues forward, but the ceremonial part does not. We each must decide individually how to handle the day of worship and determine which day to honor each week (Rom 14:5-6). However, our conclusion on obeying this part of the 4th commandment cannot be made binding on another believer’s conscience according to the New Testament (Col 2:16). The three moral aspects of the 4th commandment that are repeated and applied to Christians are the requirements to work, to worship, and to rest (This is also the view of G. Campbell Morgan and close to Augustine’s position). However, ‘rest’ in the New Covenant takes on a salvific (Matt 11:28-30) and eschatological application (Heb 4:9). Trusting or believing in Jesus and the Word of God produces new covenant rest, and we are commanded to do it (1 John 3:23 and Heb 3:11-4:11). Unlike the other nine commandments, the whole fourth commandment is not repeated in the New Testament and not applied to the church. Likewise, the ceremonial part is annulled in the New Testament by both practice and command (Acts 15:5-32, 20:7; 1 Cor 16:1-2, Rom 14:5-6; Col 2:16; Gal 4:9-12). But the three moral parts of this command that are repeated (work, worship, rest) and not repealed in the New Testament are binding on the church (1 Thes 3:10; Heb 10:23-27; Mark 6:31; Heb 3:7-19). However, Saturday worship (contra Seventh Day Adventist) or Sunday Christian Sabbath rules (contra Thomas Boston) are not required for believers today. However, worshipping on Saturday or following Sunday Christian Sabbath rules are not individually forbidden, and the latter provided much good for the Puritans of old and their godly descendants. The Lord’s Day (Rev 1:10) Sunday worship is important, and it is wonderful to use the day for Bible study, worship and acts of mercy. But the New Testament would not support exercising Church discipline on a believer who picked apples or jogged on a Sunday.  

I must admit I wish this issue was simpler to resolve and that John Chrysostom, Augustine, Martin Luther, John Calvin, and John Owen all agreed on this matter (Historical Theology). It would have even helped to have an ancient council to clarify a doctrine of the Lord’s Day. I do not take it lightly that what I just wrote is not in full conformity to the Westminster Confession of Faith and the 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith. I decided not to re-enlist in the Navy Seabee Reserves after serving 6-years, 10-months in 1986 based on my earlier influence of these documents. Today I would have a lifetime monthly pension and temporary medical care benefits if I had re-enlisted and completed the additional 13-years. Likewise, when I was applying to be a Navy Chaplain in 2001, it would have helped my application if I was currently in a Reserve unit or had already completed my 20-years when I graduated with the required M-Div. in 2004. I do not want to be aligned only with the theology of modern evangelicals, but deeply desire continuity with orthodox believers from past centuries. Thus, I would prefer to be able to affirm fully every article of a historical confession, but after studying this issue for years, I have some reservations. Do note that the American version of the Westminster Confession has omitted the section on identifying the Anti-Christ, so the PCA was not above accepting a modified version missing one section of the original Westminster Confession. Furthermore, it is fine for anyone to limit Sunday activity to ministries of the word, works of mercy, corporate worship, Bible study, and even physical rest. Do note that when I taught Sunday School and preached twice on Sunday, it was hard work, and I was exhausted on Monday. The Levites who hauled wood and water to the temple on Saturday and the priests who sacrificed the animals were required to work on the Sabbath but were not guilty of sin.

Where historical theology is helpful is when a new teaching suddenly arises. New theological and doctrinal understandings that show-up after the 1800s are a problem. Unless the new views are based on recent archaeological findings or comparative language word studies previously not available to help with biblical terms that are only used once in the Bible (hapax legomenon), they are suspect at best, dangerous at worst. There are some rare discoveries that clarify a text we may have misunderstood, but these are the exception and not the rule. It takes an enormous amount of pride to think that you are the first one to get a doctrine right in over 2,000-years when Christ’s best gifted men to the church have already lived and recorded their research for us.

 Most of the civil laws of the nation of Israel have a moral law principle that undergirds them. But they are, in essence, a culture and time-frozen application of those principles. Likewise, some civil laws reflect the mercy of God and restrict some humans while protecting others. The slavery (Deut 15:12) and divorce laws (Deut 24:1-4) fall into this category. Neither of these human actions mirror the holiness of God, but God, in grace and mercy, puts in protection for the weaker party living in a fallen world with these civil law restrictions. The time-frozen national restriction of Israel’s civil laws, called misphpatim, does not directly and exactly apply to the Christian in a wooden strict fashion. However, the moral principles that undergird these laws do still apply to the New Covenant believer. For example, observe Paul using this method by comparing Deut 25:4, 1 Cor 9:8-11, and 1 Tim 5:18. [2] These civil laws require thinking, studying, and prayer to discern the underlying moral principle that applies to Christians in every culture and in every time period (See Matt 18:16; Luke 3:8-12, 10:26-28, 20:27-39; Acts 3:22-23, 23:4-5; Rom 9:15-17, 10:5-13, 19:19, 11:8, 12:19-21, 15:10; 1 Cor 5:13, 10:6-13; 2 Cor 6:16-18, 8:13-15, 13:1-3; Gal 3:10-14, 5:14; 1 Tim 2:19; Heb 3:4-6, 7-11, 8:3-6, 9:11-14, 18-28, 10:30-31, 12:18-24, 13:6; 1 Pet 2:9; and Rev 1:6). This is not an easy task to complete, and we can make mistakes using our best efforts. Likewise, the application in 1604 AD in Spain will differ from the application in Australia in 2024.

Should the Corinthians pay their pastors? Paul says yes, based on the civil law of Israel. Must westerners with a sloped an A-frame roof build a rail around that roof to obey the Bible (Deut 22:8)? No. However, the principle of providing safety in the home for guests does apply to them and the modern necessity of installing rails on steps and decks is for this same purpose. This is how you love your neighbor as yourself (Matt 22:39 and Jam 1:8).

The ceremonial laws (Hoq, Huqqah) governed old covenant worship, which had many temporary types pointing to Jesus the Messiah (Col 2:13-17; Heb 9:1-28) along with the purity laws that were given to make God’s people distinct, separated, and to develop a mind-set of distinction (antithetical thinking) in the Jewish people as an example to the pagan world (Exod 8:17-19, 21-24, 9:4, 11:7; Lev 10:8-11, 11:47, 18:3, 26-27, 20:25-26; Deut 14:1-21; Gal 3:24-26). The Jew went through the fields each day making mental distinctions. That animal is clean, and that animal is unclean. He developed a worldview in which everything was not a shade of grey. Some things were white, and some things were black. Thus, the Jews not only looked different to the pagans around them, but they also thought differently from the pagans did because of the worship and purity laws. Separation is for the purpose of evangelism, is helpful for fighting the sin of compromise, and for preserving a culture and bloodline, but these types of rules were not everlasting moral principles that could not be set aside under any circumstances (Deut 7:1-16). The Jews were isolated as the particular people of God. Why was this the case? They alone had the Mosaic covenant promises, they alone had the special revelation of God (OT), and they alone provided the bloodline of the coming Messiah (Abraham>Jacob>David; Rom 1:3). These temporary rules made them distinct, protected, isolated, and harder to be assimilated into pagan culture. Satan’s numerous attempts to do this failed, including his efforts through Antiochus Epiphanes (Num 25:6-9; Exod 1:22; Est 3:8-11; Dan 8:8-14). But once the Messiah had arrived, and the Scriptures had been preserved and translated along with the Jewish culture and bloodline had all been preserved, these rules had served their temporary purpose. They were set aside so the focus could be on the Great Commission of discipling all the ethnic groups on the earth in their own culture rather than making them Jews first. After the Messiah started building His church, the purity rules would work against that goal instead of promoting it (Matt 16:18; Acts 1-2, 8-10, 15; Rom 14:5-6; 1 Cor 10:30-31; Gal 3:23-29; Eph 2:11-22; Col 2:16-23).

 And these purity laws were clearly not the most important regulations in the Old Testament cannon (Tanak)—contra the Pharisees. Not eating a rabbit or some shrimp made the Jew different from the pagans around them, but not morally superior by these abstentions. Separation, isolation, and distinction are the foundations of many of the purity laws rather than morality. For instance, one not eating pork while killing babies does not cancel out the moral violation, and these laws were never equal (I visited a doctor once in NY state who ate Kosher but also insisted that we abort our son because he had a heart problem and other physical weaknesses). Even more to the point, the old covenant worship regulations were fulfilled and replaced with the new covenant worship regulations (Jer 31:31-34; Heb 9:1-10:31, 13:9; Gal 5:1-14; Col 2:9-12; 1 Tim 4:1-6). Nevertheless, much can still be learned from the principles behind even the sacrificial regulations that gives types and insights about the Messiah earthly ministry and His finished cross-work. Furthermore, Jesus annulled the purity laws given to make the Jews distinct from the Gentiles because these now work counter to the gospel (See Acts 10 and 15). The LORD’s judgment on the temple in Jerusalem in 70AD (Luke 21:20-22) completely ended the Jews ability to keep the sacrificial laws in Israel, just like God tearing the curtain in front of the Holy of Holies from the top to the bottom (Matt 27:51) made it clear there was a change with the worship regulations now that the final sacrifice had been made by the Messiah Himself (Eph 5:2). Even in the old covenant period, the laws to make Israel distinct were to be set aside if they conflicted with a moral law (See Jesus’ affirmation of this in Matt 12:1-8). It would have been a greater sin, not preserving human life,[3] which is the positive aspect of the command against murder, by refusing to feed David and his men with bread only allowed for the priest’s family—a ceremonial, purity rule). The moral laws are the heavy ones [most important], the ceremonial are the light ones [least important] (Matt 23:23). The legalists always major on the minors and reverse God’s order of priority. Jesus reminds the Scribes and Pharisees of this error repeatedly (See an example in Matt 23:24).

Some take Paul’s arguments against the Judaizers that were making the ceremonial ritual of circumcision as a requirement for salvation as his rejection of the entire Old Testament law (Gal 5). Of course, the continuity and discontinuity issue has been debated for many years especially after dispensationalism arose in the late 1800s. But anti-nomianism dates back much further than this as Martin Luther had to address it in his day. This is not a careful handling of the New Testament. Long after Pentecost and the inauguration of Christ’s administration of the New Covenant Paul applies the Ten Commandments to Gentile Christians (Eph 6:1-2, Rom 13:8-10). And don’t forget, long after Pentecost the Holy Spirit used the 10th commandment against coveting to convince Paul he was a sinner and needed to embrace the glorious Lord that appeared to him on the road north to Damascus, Syria for salvation from sins power and punishment (Rom 7:7-8). 

So, can a new covenant believer eat bacon even though refraining from it made the Jews distinct from the pagan nations around them and immigrants from those nations visiting them? Yes, Jesus annulled these laws for the church (Mark 7:19; Acts 10:9-20; 1 Tim 4:1-8). So, is it okay now for a farmer to rape one of his sheep now we are in the New Covenant era? No. The moral laws in the Old Testament on bestiality, even though they are not repeated in the New Testament, have not been annulled, replaced, or fulfilled in time. God still hates this practice. However, eating catfish is not something God hates, but not eating them was a rule given to the Jews to make them different from the other people groups around them.

The laws concerning cross-dressing as a different gender than the one a human received as designed by genetics and displayed at birth by gender specific body parts are still binding no matter what the culture says (Deut 22:5). Killing babies in the womb is still sin even though over 50% of Americans approve of it in 2023 (Exod 21:22-25). In 1950, less than 1% of Americans approved of the practice. It is the covenantal administration which determines what is binding on the people of God, not the changing culture. Liberal antinomian’s appeal to the ceremonial-worship-purity-diet laws of the Jews having a time-date fulfillment as justification for violating moral laws regarding sexual immorality has no logical, exegetical, lexical, theological, or biblical basis. The new covenant administration and its documents (the NT) under Jesus (rather than Moses, the prior covenant administrator) also condemn their preferred sins along with many other sins that different groups of people prefer (See 1 Cor 6:9-11; Rom 1:16-32; Eph 5:1-21; 1 Tim 1:8-11). They cannot make a case for their behavior by proper exegesis and application of the Bible. The Political Left movement is aware of this and has started burning Bibles and silencing and jailing Christians. Like in the Roman world of the first century, this is just the beginning. They must force compromise or annihilate us to win. They have taken the first steps on social media and even controlling credit and money to block any who hold to different views than theirs. With one back-room decision, they can make a thriving business that is not politically correct to need to file for bankruptcy in weeks. Through leftist EID polices, believers can be removed from positions of employment for failure to celebrate the lifestyle choices that conflict with the Word God. It is no longer enough for the leftist movement that we love, befriend, are kind to, and show tolerance towards individual pagans that we expect to act like pagans as they live out their worldview and bend to their culture. The expectation is now to go beyond caring for the individual to celebrating their addictions and behaviors that are affirmed by leftist political advocates. This is a compromise we cannot make. We must stand firm on the Word of God like the first century Christians who would not offer worship to Caesar. They were asked just once each year to declare Ceasar is Lord and burn incense to him in worship. They died by the thousands for refusing to do this. Also remember Daniel who would not stop praying when it was illegal as well as he Apostles who would not stop preaching in Jesus’ name, in defiance of the Sanhedrin’s official order. (We must obey God rather than men.) We could even add the Hebrew families and mid-wives that would not kill the male babies in direct defiance of the binding legal order of Pharoah. God has designed the institutions of the family, the state, the church as equal institutions under Christ’s Lordship and under the authority of the Bible. These three are not in hierarchical order. Whenever the State asks the believer to do or not do something that Scripture has put under the domain of the family or the church, or has made clear in its teaching, it is the believer’s duty to courageously defy the State and accept the consequences like the three Hebrew young men in the book of Daniel (They would not bow, bend, or burn). Caesar is not Lord of the Church. Jesus the Messiah is the only Lord of the Church. The State is over taxes and has the authority to set rules to protect citizens, like traffic rules and the consequences when these laws as well as when moral laws are violated. But it does not have the authority to demand someone celebrate and encourage mutilating children who have been deceived by the education system and the culture about their gender. It does not have the authority to tell the Church that it cannot gather or cannot sing once they gather. When the State does these things, it has left its domain of authority under God and it is thus a sin to comply to its demands when its regulations are the opposite of the Bible [See David Martin Lloyd-Jones, Commentary on Romans 13].

 Without divine intervention, the Left will win this battle. I have bad news, though, for my liberal neighbors. They will not win the war. Their persecution will come to an end and be reviewed on the Day of Judgment, which will increase their everlasting punishment. And this is a sure thing.

And the King will answer them, “Truly, I say to you, as you did it to one of the least of these my brothers, you did it to me.” (Matt. 25:40 ESV)

Now as he went on his way, he approached Damascus, and suddenly a light from heaven shone around him. 4 And falling to the ground, he heard a voice saying to him, “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting me?” 5 And he said, "Who are you, Lord?" And he said, “I am Jesus, whom you are persecuting.” (Acts 9:3-5 ESV)

 The seventh angel blew his trumpet, and there were loud voices in heaven saying: The kingdom of the world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Messiah, and He will reign forever and ever! (Rev 11:15 HCSB)

Then I saw a great white throne and him who was seated on it. From his presence earth and sky fled away, and no place was found for them. 12 And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and books were opened. Then another book was opened, which is the book of life. And the dead were judged by what was written in the books, according to what they had done. (Rev. 20:11-12 ESV)

 

By Rev. Ted D. Manby, Th.M., USA 2023



[1] This law can also be broken to a lesser degree with lesser damage and consequences in one’s inner man by lusting for one that is not your spouse. Jesus said, But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lustful intent has already committed adultery with her in his heart (Matt 5:28 ESV). Unmortified lusts can become the full acts of rebellion, with all the consequences and damage done. The 10th commandment on coveting clarifies that these laws are broken first in the human heart long before the physical actions occur, and that mere outward physical compliance is not fully keeping the law.

[2] Paul writes: Do I say these things on human authority? Does not the Law say the same? 9 For it is written in the Law of Moses, "You shall not muzzle an ox when it treads out the grain." Is it for oxen that God is concerned? 10 Does he not certainly speak for our sake? It was written for our sake, because the plowman should plow in hope and the thresher thresh in hope of sharing in the crop.11 If we have sown spiritual things among you, is it too much if we reap material things from you? (1 Cor 9:8-11 ESV) Also see 1 Cor 10:1-11.

[3] Each of the Ten Commands has a positive command built into it, as well as a negative prohibition for the command to be kept. Not only is one to not take a human life in anger, but he/she is also to preserve human life in love. It is not enough to refrain from lying. You must also speak the truth when it is needed.

Sunday, April 26, 2020

The Ten Commandments: Ethics for the Twenty-First Century by Mark F. Rooker. A Book Reivew


The Ten Commandments: Ethics for the Twenty-First Century by Mark F. Rooker, Nashville: Broadman & Holman, 2010

With careful exegesis and detailed scholarship, this work makes a significant contribution to the study of the Ten Commandments from a conservative evangelical perspective. It is written in such a way that it will be beneficial to interested laymen, Sunday School teachers, pastors, theologians, and scholars. The introduction thoughtfully considers the issues of the conflict over the numbering of the commandments among Jewish, Roman Catholic and Protestant scholars. Likewise, the conclusion offers significant help to the Bible student seeking to apply these moral laws to contemporary life and forming a biblically ethical framework that is pleasing to God. The chapters between the introduction and conclusion deal with each of the Ten Commandments in numerical order one chapter at a time. The separate Hebrew terminology used for each commandment in both the Exodus 20 and Deuteronomy 5 passages are carefully exegeted, compared and contrasted. Thus, this work has an advantage over most commentaries on either Exodus or Deuteronomy since the majority of scholars give very little space to the difference in wording in these two texts.  This makes this volume extremely useful in studying this subject.

Biblical Theology
Rooker’s format of each chapter on each of the Ten Commandments is extremely helpful to the student of Biblical Theology. Following each chapter’s introduction, he then addresses the meaning of the commandment at hand. In this section he sets the context in the Ancient Near East and carefully defines the important Hebrew terms in each commandment from Exodus and Deuteronomy. The next section deals with the commandment being studied as it appears in the Old Testament followed by a section on its occurrences in the New Testament. Each chapter’s conclusion gives further explanation and summarizes the chronological study already offered and then adds practical applications and suggestions for modern life.

Handling the Controversial Fourth Commandment
Because of the wide range of opinions on the fourth commandment, it is impossible for an evangelical Christian to take a position that is accepted by all Bible students. Dr. Rooker does not shy away from this commandment or refuse to take a position. Even though it differs at its onset from this reviewer’s published view, after careful study of this chapter, this reviewer believes Rooker’s position is the most defensible one. Along with many evangelicals, Rooker states that the fourth commandment is not repeated in the New Testament in the sense that it is binding upon New Covenant believers. No one would argue that it is not mentioned in the Sabbath debates between the Pharisees and Jesus. But the other nine commandments that appear in teaching passages for Jewish and Gentile Christians are directly applied to them as ethical behavior that is pleasing to God because they reveals his character (e.g. Rom 7:7, 13:8-10; 1 Cor 7:19, 10:14; Eph 6:1-2; 1 Thes 4:2-3; 1 John 5:21). Thus, even though this reviewer has argued that the first nine commandments are repeated in 1 Tim 1:8-11 and applied to new covenant believers, there is a weakness in this view that is not present in Dr. Rooker’s position on this issue. His viewpoint best supports the perspicuity (clarity) of Scripture. This doctrine is under attack by certain Emerging Church spokesmen even though it is directly taught in passages like Psa 19:8. “The command [mitzvah] of the LORD [Yahweh] is radiant, [BDB =pure, clear] making the eyes light up” (Psa 19:8 HCSB). The Ten Commandments are most assuredly included in the moral commands (mitzvah) that the Bible declares are “clear.” Without significant outside help, most believers in various cultures studying 1 Tim 1:8-11 would not see that these adjectives all apply to the first nine commandments in order starting with the third adjective. Thus, Dr. Rooker’s view that the fourth commandment is not repeated in the New Testament is what most readers would also see in their reading of it and thus his stance supports the doctrine of the clarity of the Scriptures better than the viewpoint of this reviewer.
Likewise, Rooker also denies that there is sufficient biblical evidence that Sunday replaced Saturday in the Messiah’s administration of the New Covenant as the Christian Sabbath. Reformed Baptists and conservative Presbyterians will not agree with this view whereas most types of Dispensationalists will make this same argument. This view is also the easiest one to defend from the Bible text itself without going into complicated typology and continuity issues. However, Rooker’s application of the moral principles behind the fourth commandment is identical to this reviewer’s view and will be accepted with joy by those who don’t have antinomian tendencies.

Significant Insights
In chapter ten of this work, the explanation on coveting may be one of the best in print in English. It is very insightful to make the distinction that what is forbidden in this commandment is longing for an actual possession that belongs to a specific person or a person legally attached to him/her rather than desiring a possession similar to one owned by a friend. A balance between the positions of the legalists and the libertines is found in each chapter of this work, but this is clearly evident in chapter ten.

Possible Improvements
Because of the subtitle, this reviewer would recommend the addition of a footnote on abortion in chapter five. At what point the baby should be considered a person needs to be stated. Thus, he/she would be protected by this law against murder. Simply citing a work on the Old Testament that defends human life and personhood beginning at conception would greatly improve this chapter. Even though, euthanasia is not mentioned in this chapter either, the clarity of the meaning of murder in this chapter makes its application to euthanasia extremely clear.

Conclusion
Like the other works in the NAC Studies in Bible and Theology, this work by Mark Rooker should be included in the library of every student of the Bible who teaches other believers biblical truth. Laymen will not need to spend much time in the footnotes, but they will definitely benefit from each chapter of this very helpful work.

Ted D. Manby, Th.M.; Goldsboro, NC; Associate Pastor of Adamsville Baptist Church

Thursday, August 25, 2016

Jerome and Augustine on the Moral & Ceremonial Law




In 400 AD Jerome and Augustine were debating over whether the ceremonial law was fulfilled by itself or if all Jewish laws were abrogated. Jerome argues for the removal of the entire law, but in this letter, he acknowledges that Augustine did not accept his view which matched the unorthodox Origen. These letters prove beyond the shadow of a doubt that Thomas Aquinas did not "invent" the three categories of the law in the 1200's when Augustine held this view back in 400AD. These letters English translation can be found in a number of places on the internet. Every time I read Jerome I find that there are few in history I disagree with more. But his laying out Augustine's view so clearly in this letter was a great service to the orthodox and actually harms the case of his fellow antinomians whose constant mantra is the threefold division of the law is from Aquinas. By the way, Aquinas did not invent the doctrine of the Trinity either. Augustine wrote a whole book on that doctrine.
 

From Jerome to Augustine (A.D. 404)

This is Jerome's answer to Letters 40, 48, and 71. On receiving these letters, Jerome in three days completes an exhaustive reply to all the questions which Augustine had raised. He explains what is the true title of his book "On Illustrious Men", deals at great length with the dispute between Paul and Peter, expounds his views with regard to the Septuagint, and shows by the story of "the gourd" how close and accurate his translations are. His language throughout is kind but rather patronizing: indeed in this whole correspondence Jerome seldom sufficiently recognizes the greatness of Augustine. The date of the letter is A.D. 404.
 
To Augustine, my lord truly holy, and most blessed father: Jerome sends greetings in Christ.

CHAPTER I

1. I have received by Cyprian, deacon, three letters, or rather three little books, at the same time, from your Excellency, containing what you call sundry questions, but what I feel to be animadversions on opinions which I have published, to answer which, if I were disposed to do it, would require a pretty large volume. Nevertheless I shall attempt to reply without exceeding the limits of a moderately long letter, and without causing delay to our brother, now in haste to depart, who only three days before the time fixed for his journey asked earnestly for a letter to take with him, in consequence of which I am compelled to pour out these sentences, such as they are, almost without premeditation, answering you in a rambling effusion, prepared not in the leisure of deliberate composition, but in the hurry of extemporaneous dictation, which usually produces a discourse that is more the offspring of chance than the parent of instruction; just as unexpected attacks throw into confusion even the bravest soldiers, and they are compelled to take to flight before they can gird on their armor.

 2. But our armor is Christ; it is that which the Apostle Paul prescribes when, writing to the Ephesians, he says, ,'Take unto you the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to withstand in the evil day;" and again, "Stand, therefore, having your loins girded about with truth, and having on the breastplate of righteousness; and your feet shod with the preparation of the gospel of peace; above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith ye shall be able to quench all the fiery darts of the wicked: and take the helmet of salvation, and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God." Armed with these weapons, King David went forth in his day to battle: and taking from the torrent's bed five smooth rounded stones, he proved that, even amidst all the eddying currents of the world, his feelings were free both from roughness and from defilement; drinking of the brook by the way, and therefore lifted up in spirit, he cut off the head of Goliath, using the proud enemy's own sword as the fittest instrument of death? Smiting the profane boaster on the forehead and wounding him in the same place in which Uzziah was smitten with leprosy when he presumed to usurp the priestly office; the same also in which shines the glory that makes the saints rejoice in the Lord, saying, "The light of Thy countenance is sealed upon us, O Lord." Let us therefore also say, "My heart is fixed, O God, my heart is fixed: I will sing and give praise: awake up, my glory; awake, psaltery and harp; I myself will awake early;" that in us may be fulfilled that word, "Open thy mouth wide, and I will fill it; " and, "The Lord shall give the word with great power to them that publish it." I am well assured that your prayer, as well as mine, is that in our contending the victory may remain with the truth. For you seek Christ's glory, not your own: if you are victorious, I also gain a victory if I discover my error. On the other hand, if I win the day, the gain is yours; for "the children ought not to lay up for the parents, but the parents for the children." We read, moreover, in Chronicles, that the children of Israel went to battle with their minds set upon peace, seeking even amid swords and bloodshed and the prostrate slain a victory not for themselves, but for peace. Let me, therefore, if it be the will of Christ, give an answer to all that you have written, and attempt in a short dissertation to solve your numerous questions. I pass by the conciliatory phrases in your courteous salutation: I say nothing of the compliments by which you attempt to take the edge off your censure: let me come at once to the matters in debate.
CHAPTER II

3. You say that you received from some brother a book of mine, in which I have given a list of ecclesiastical writers, both Greek and Latin, but which had no title; and that when you asked the brother aforesaid (I quote your own statement) why the title-page had no inscription, or what was the name by which the book was known, he answered that it was called "Epitaphium," i.e. "Obituary Notices:" upon which you display your reasoning powers, by remarking that the name Epitaphium would have been properly given to the book if the reader had found in it an account of the lives and writings of deceased authors, but that inasmuch as mention is made of the works of many who were living when the book was written and are this day still living, you wonder why I should have given the book a title so inappropriate. I think that it must be obvious to your own common sense, that you might have discovered the title of that book from its contents, without any other help. For you have read both Greek and Latin biographies of eminent men, and you know that they do not give to works of this kind the title Epitaphium, but simply "Illustrious Men," e.g. "Illustrious Generals," or "philosophers, orators, historians, poets," etc., as the case may be. An Epitaphium is a work written concerning the dead; such as I remember having composed long ago after the decease of the presbyter Nepotianus, of blessed memory. The book, therefore, of which you speak ought to be entitled, "Concerning Illustrious Men," or properly, "Concerning Ecclesiastical Writers," although it is said that by many who were not qualified to make any correction of the title, it has been called "Concerning Authors."
CHAPTER III

4. You ask, in the second place, my reason for saying, in my commentary on the Epistle to the Galatians, that Paul could not have rebuked Peter for that which he himself had done, and could not have censured in another the dissimulation of which he was himself confessedly guilty; and you affirm that that rebuke of the apostle was not a maneuver of pious policy, but real; and you say that I ought not to teach falsehood, but that all things in Scripture are to be received literally as they stand.
To this I answer, in the first place, that your wisdom ought to have suggested the remembrance of the short preface to my commentaries, saying of my own person, "What then? Am I so foolish and bold as to promise that which he could not accomplish? By no means; but have rather, as it seems to me, with more reserve and hesitation, because feeling the deficiency of my strength, followed the commentaries of Origen in this matter. For that illustrious man wrote five volumes on the Epistle of Paul to the Galatians and has occupied the tenth volume of his Stromata with a short treatise upon his explanation of the epistle. He also composed several treatises and fragmentary pieces upon it, which, if they even had stood alone, would have sufficed. I pass over my revered instructor Didymus (blind, it is true, but quick-sighted in the discernment of spiritual things), and the bishop of Laodicea, who has recently left the Church, and the early heretic Alexander, as well as Eusebius of Emesa and Theodorus of Heraclea, who have also left some brief disquisitions upon this subject. From these works, if I were to extract even a few passages, a work which could not be altogether despised would be produced. Let me therefore frankly say that I have read all these; and storing up in my mind very many things which they contain, I have dictated to my amanuensis sometimes what was borrowed from other writers, sometimes what was my own, without distinctly remembering the method, or the words, or the opinions which belonged to each. I look now to the Lord in His mercy to grant that my want of skill and experience may not cause the things which others have well spoken to be lost, or to fail of finding among foreign readers the acceptance with which they have met in the language in which they were first written.  If, therefore, anything in my explanation has seemed to you to demand correction, it would have been seemly for one of your learning to inquire first whether what I had written was found in the Greek writers to whom I have referred; and if they had not advanced the opinion which you censored, you could then with propriety condemn me for what I gave as my own view, especially seeing that I have in the preface openly acknowledged that I had followed the commentaries of Origen, and had dictated sometimes the view of others, sometimes my own, and have written at the end of the chapter with which you find fault: "If anyone be dissatisfied with the interpretation here given, by which it is shown that neither did Peter sin, nor did Paul rebuke presumptuously a greater than himself, he is bound to show how Paul could consistently blame in another what he himself did." By which I have made it manifest that I did not adopt finally and irrevocably that which I had read in these Greek authors, but had propounded what I had read, leaving to the reader's own judgment whether it should be rejected or approved.

5. You, however, in order to avoid doing what I had asked, have devised a new argument against the view proposed; maintaining that the Gentiles who had believed in Christ were free from the burden of the ceremonial law, but that the Jewish converts were under the law, and that Paul, as the teacher of the Gentiles, rightly rebuked those who kept the law; whereas Peter, who was the chief of the "circumcision," was justly rebuked for commanding the Gentile converts to do that which the converts from among the Jews were alone under obligation to observe. If this is your opinion, or rather since it is your opinion, that all from among the Jews who believe are debtors to do the whole law, you ought, as being a bishop of great fame in the whole world, to publish your doctrine, and labor to persuade all other bishops to agree with you. As for me in my humble cell, along with the monks my fellow-sinners, I do not presume to dogmatize in regard to things of great moment; I only confess frankly that I read the writings of the Fathers, and, complying with universal usage, put down in my commentaries a variety of explanations, that each may adopt from the number given the one which pleases him. This method, I think, you have found in your reading and have approved in connection with both secular literature and the Divine Scriptures.

6. Moreover, as to this explanation which Origen first advanced, and which all the other commentators after him have adopted, they bring forward, chiefly for the purpose of answering, the blasphemies of Porphyry, who accuses Paul of presumption because he dared to reprove Peter and rebuke him to his face, and by reasoning convict him of having done wrong; that is to say, of being in the very fault which he himself, who blamed another for transgressing, had committed. What shall I say also of John, who has long governed the Church of Constantinople, and holding pontifical rank, who has composed a very large book upon this paragraph, and has followed the opinion of Origen and of the old expositors? If, therefore, you censure me as in the wrong, suffer me, I pray you, to be mistaken in company with such men; and when you perceive that I have so many companions in my error, you will require to produce at least one partisan in defense of your truth. So much on the interpretation of one paragraph of the Epistle to the Galatians.

7. Lest, however, I should seem to rest my answer to your reasoning wholly on the number of witnesses who are on my side, and to use the names of illustrious men as a means of escaping from the truth, not daring to meet you in argument, I shall briefly bring forward some examples from the Scriptures.

In the Acts of the Apostles, a voice was heard by Peter, saying unto him, "Rise, Peter, slay and eat," when all manner of four-footed beasts, and creeping things, and birds of the air, were presented before him; by which saying it is proved that no man is by nature [ceremonially] unclean, but that all men are equally welcome to the gospel of Christ. To which Peter answered, "Not so, Lord; for I have never eaten anything that is common or unclean." And the voice spake unto him again the second time, "What God hath cleansed, that call not thou common." Therefore he went to Caesarea, and having entered the house of Cornelius, "he opened his mouth and said, Of a truth, I perceive that God is no respecter of persons, but in every nation, he that fears Him and works righteousness is accepted with Him." Thereafter "the Holy Spirit fell on all them which heard the word; and they of the circumcision which believed were astonished, as many as came with Peter, because that on the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the Holy Spirit. Then answered Peter, Can any man forbid water, that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Spirit as well as we? And he commanded them to be baptized in the name of the Lord.' .... And the apostles and brethren that were in Judea heard that the Gentiles had also received the word of God. And when Peter arrived at Jerusalem, they that were of the circumcision contended with him, saying, Thou went in with men; uncircumcised, and didst eat with them." [To] whom he gave a full explanation of the reasons of his conduct, and concluded with these words! "Forasmuch then as God gave them the like gift as He did unto us who believed on the Lord Jesus Christ, what was I, that I could withstand God? When they heard these things, they held their peace, and glorified God, saying, “Then hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life.” Again, when, long after this, Paul and Barnabas had come to Antioch, and "having gathered the Church together, rehearsed all that God had done with them, and how He had opened the door of faith unto the Gentiles, certain men which came down from Judea taught the brethren, and said, Except ye be circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be saved. When therefore Paul and Barnabas had no small dissension and disputation with them, they determined that Paul and Barnabas, and certain other of them, should go up to Jerusalem unto] the apostles and elders about this question. And when they arrived at Jerusalem, there rose up certain of the sect of the Pharisees which believed, saying that it was needful to circumcise them, and to command them to keep the law of Moses." And when there had been much disputing, Peter rose up, with his wonted readiness, "and said, Men and brethren, ye know how that a good while ago God made a choice among us, that the Gentiles by my mouth should hear the word of the gospel, and believe. And God, who knows the hearts, bare them witness, giving them the Holy Spirit, even as He did unto us; and put no difference between us and them, purifying their hearts by faith. Now, therefore, why do you tempt  God, to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear? But we believe that, through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, we shall be saved, even as they. Then all the multitude kept silence; and to his opinion the Apostle James, and all the elders together, gave consent.

8. These quotations should not be tedious to the reader, but useful both to him and to me, as proving that, even before the Apostle Paul, Peter had come to know that the law was not to be in force after the gospel was given; nay more, that Peter was the prime mover in issuing the decree by which this was affirmed. Moreover, Peter was so great authority that Paul has recorded in his epistle: "Then, after three years, I went up to Jerusalem to see Peter, and abode with him fifteen days." In the following context, again, he adds: "Then, fourteen years after, I went up again to Jerusalem with Barnabas, and took Titus with me also. And I went up by revelation, and communicated unto them that gospel which I preach among the Gentiles;" proving that he had not had confidence in his preaching of the gospel if he had not been confirmed by the consent of Peter and those who were with him. The next words are, "but privately to them that were of reputation, lest by any means I should run, or had run, in vain." Why did he this privately rather than in public? Lest offense should be given to the faith of those who from among the Jews had believed since they thought that the law was still in force and that they ought to join observance of the law with faith in the Lord as their Savior. Therefore also, when at that time Peter had come to Antioch (although the Acts of the Apostles do not mention this, but we must believe Paul's statement), Paul affirms that he "withstood him to the face, because he was to be blamed. For, before that certain came from James, he did eat with the Gentiles: but when they arrived, he withdrew, and separated himself, fearing them which were of the circumcision. And the other Jews dissembled likewise with him; insomuch that Barnabas also was carried away with their dissimulation. But when I saw," he says, "that they walked not uprightly, according to the truth of the gospel, I said unto Peter before them all, If thou, being a Jew, live after the manner of Gentiles, and not as do the Jews, why do you compel the Gentiles to live as do the Jews?" etc. No one can doubt, therefore, that the Apostle Peter was himself the author of that rule with deviation from which he is charged. The cause of that deviation, moreover, is seen to be fear of the Jews. For the Scripture says, that "at first he did eat with the Gentiles, but that when certain had come from James he withdrew, and separated himself, fearing them which were of the circumcision." Now he feared the Jews, to whom he had been appointed apostle, lest by occasion of the Gentiles they should go back from the faith in Christ; imitating the Good Shepherd in his concern lest he should lose the flock committed to him.

9. As I have shown, therefore, that Peter was thoroughly aware of the abrogation of the law of Moses, but was compelled by fear to pretend to observe it, let us now see whether Paul, who accuses another, ever did anything of the same kind himself. We read in the same book: "Paul passed through Syria and Cilicia, confirming the churches. Then came he to Derbe and Lystra: and, behold, a certain disciple was there, named Timothy, the son of a certain woman which was a Jewess, and believed; but his father was a Greek: which was well reported of by the brethren that were at Lystra and Iconium. Him would Paul have to go forth with him; and he took and circumcised him, because of the Jews which were in those quarters: for they knew all that his father was a Greek." O blessed Apostle Paul, who rebuked Peter for dissimulation, because he withdrew himself from the Gentiles through fear of the Jews who' came from James, why art thou, notwithstanding thine own doctrine, compelled to circumcise Timothy, the son of a Gentile, nay more, a Gentile himself (for he was not a Jew, having not been circumcised)? Thou wilt answer, "Because of the Jews which are in these quarters?" If, then, you forgive yourself the circumcision of a disciple coming from the Gentiles, forgive Peter also, who has precedence above thee, his doing some things of the same kind through fear of the believing Jews. Again, it is written: "Paul after this tarried there yet a good while, and then took his leave of the brethren, and sailed thence into Syria, and with him Priscilla and Aquila; having shorn his head in Cenchrea, for he had a vow." Be it granted that he was compelled through fear of the Jews in the other case to do what he was unwilling to do; wherefore did he let his hair grow in accordance with a vow of his own making, and afterwards, when in Cenchrea, shave his head according to the law, as the Nazarites, who had given themselves by vow to God, were wont to do, according to the law of Moses?
 
10. But these things are small when compared with what follows. The sacred historian Luke further relates: "And when we arrived at Jerusalem, the brethren received us gladly;" and the day following, James, and all the elders who were with him, having expressed their approbation of his gospel, said to Paul: "Thou seest, brother, how many thousands of Jews there are which believe; and they are all zealous of the law: and they are informed of thee, that you teach all the Jews which are among the Gentiles to forsake Moses, saying that they ought not to circumcise their children, neither to walk after the customs. What is it, therefore? The multitude must need come together: for they will hear that thou art come. Do therefore this that we say to thee: We have four men which have a vow on them; them take, and purify thyself with them, and be at charges with them, that they may shave their heads: and all may know that those things, whereof they were informed concerning thee, are nothing; but that thou thyself also walk orderly, and keep the law. Then Paul took the men, and the next day purifying himself with them, entered into the temple, to signify the accomplishment of the days of purification, until an offering should be offered for every one of them." Paul, here again, let me question thee: Why didst thou shave thy head, why didst thou walk barefoot according to I Jewish ceremonial law, why didst thou offer sacrifices, why were victims slain for thee according to the law? Thou wilt answer, doubtless, "To avoid giving offense to those of the Jews who had believed." To gain the Jews, thou didst pretend to be a Jew; and James and all the other elders taught thee this dissimulation. But thou didst not succeed in escaping, after all. For when thou wast on the point of being killed in a tumult which had arisen, thou wast rescued by the chief captain of the band, and was sent by him to Caesarea, guarded by a careful escort of soldiers, lest the Jews should kill thee as a dissembler, and a destroyer of the law; and from Caesarea coming to Rome, thou didst, in thine own hired house, preach Christ to both Jews and Gentiles, and thy testimony was sealed under Nero's sword.

11. We have learned, therefore, that through fear of the Jews both Peter and Paul alike pretended that they observed the precepts of the law. How could Paul have the assurance and effrontery to reprove in another what he had done himself? I at least, or, I should rather say, others before me, have given such explanation of the matter as they deemed best, not defending the use of falsehood in the interest of religion, as you charge them with doing, but teaching the honorable exercise of a wise discretion; seeking both to show the wisdom of the apostles, and to restrain the shameless blasphemies of Porphyry, who says that Peter and Paul quarreled with each other in childish rivalry, and affirms that Paul had been inflamed with envy on account of the excellencies of Peter, and had written boastfully of things which he either had not done, or, if he did them, had done with inexcusable presumption, reproving in another that which he himself had done. They, in answering him, gave the best interpretation of the passage which they could find; what interpretation have you to propound? Surely you must intend to say something better than they have said since you have rejected the opinion of the ancient commentators.

CHAPTER IV

12. You say in your letter: "You do not require me to teach you in what sense the apostle says, To the Jews I became as a Jew, that I might gain the Jews;'" and other such things in the same passage, which are to be ascribed to the compassion of pitying love, not to the artifices of intentional deceit. For he that ministers to the sick becomes as if he were sick himself, not indeed falsely pretending to be under the fever, but considering with the mind of one truly sympathizing what he would wish done for himself if he were in the sick man's place. Paul was indeed a Jew; and when he had become a Christian, he had not abandoned those Jewish sacraments which that people had received in the right way, and for a certain appointed time. Therefore, even when he was an apostle of Christ, he took part in observing these, but with this view, that he might show that they were in no wise hurtful to those who, even after they had believed in Christ, desired to retain the ceremonies which by the law they had learned from their fathers; provided only that they did not build on these their hope of salvation, since the salvation which was foreshadowed in these has now been brought in by the Lord Jesus." The sum of your whole argument, which you have expanded into a most prolix dissertation, is this, that Peter did not err in supposing that the law was binding on those who from among the Jews had believed, but departed from the right course in this, that he compelled the Gentile converts to conform to Jewish observances. Now, if he compelled them, it was not by use of authority as a teacher, but by the example of his own practice. And Paul, according to your view, did not protest against what Peter had done personally but asked wherefore Peter would compel those who were from among the Gentiles to conform to Jewish observances.

13. The matter in debate, therefore, or I should rather say your opinion regarding it, is summed up in this: that since the preaching of the gospel of Christ, the believing Jews do well in observing the precepts of the law, i.e. in offering sacrifices as Paul did, in circumcising their children, as Paul did in the case of Timothy, and keeping the Jewish Sabbath, as all the Jews have been accustomed to do. If this be true, we fall into the heresy of Cerinthus and Ebion, who, though believing in Christ, were anathematized by the fathers for this one error, that they mixed up the ceremonies of the law with the gospel of Christ, and professed their faith in that which was new, without letting go what was old. Why do I speak of the Ebionites, who make pretensions to the name of Christian? In our own day there exists a sect among the Jews throughout all the synagogues of the East, which is called the sect of the Minei, and is even now condemned by the Pharisees. [The adherents to ] this sect are known commonly as Nazarenes; they believe in Christ the Son of God, born of , the Virgin Mary; and they say that He who suffered under Pontius Pilate and rose again, is the same as the one in whom we believe. But while they desire to be both Jews and Christians, they are neither the one nor the other. I, therefore, beseech you, who think that you are called upon to heal my slight wound, which is no more, so to speak, than a prick or scratch from a needle, to devote your skill in the healing art to this grievous wound, which has been opened by a spear driven home with the impetus of a javelin. For there is surely no proportion between the culpability of him who exhibits the various opinions held by the fathers in a commentary on Scripture and the guilt of him who reintroduces within the Church a most pestilential heresy. If, however, there is for us no alternative but to receive the Jews into the Church, along with the usages prescribed by their law; if in short, it shall be declared lawful for them to continue in the Churches of Christ what they have been accustomed to practice in the synagogues of Satan, I will tell you my opinion of the matter: they will not become Christians, but they will make us Jews.
 
14. For what Christian will submit to hear what is said in your letter? "Paul was indeed a Jew; and when he had become a Christian, he had not abandoned those Jewish sacraments which that people had received in the right way, and for a certain appointed time. Therefore, even when he was an apostle of Christ, he took part in observing these; but with this view, that he might show that they were in no wise hurtful to those who, even after they had believed in Christ, desired to retain the ceremonies which by the law they had learned from their fathers." Now I implore you to hear patiently my complaint. Paul, even when he was an apostle of Christ, observed Jewish ceremonies; and you affirm that they are in no wise hurtful to those who wish to retain them as they had received them from their fathers by the law. I, on the contrary, shall maintain, and, though the world were to protest against my view, I may boldly declare that the Jewish ceremonies are to Christians both hurtful and fatal; and that whoever observes them, whether he be Jew or Gentile originally, is cast into the pit of perdition. "For Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believes," that is, to both Jew and Gentile; for if the Jew is excepted, He is not the end of the law for righteousness to every one that believes. Moreover, we read in the Gospel, "The law and the prophets were until John the Baptist." Also, in another place: "Therefore the Jews sought the more to kill Him, because He had not only broken the Sabbath, but said also that God was His Father, making Himself equal with God." Again: "Of His fullness have all we received, and grace for grace; for the law was given Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus: Christ." Instead of the grace of the law which has passed away, we have received the grace of the gospel which is abiding; and instead of the shadows and types of the old dispensation, the truth has come by Jesus Christ. Jeremiah also prophesied thus in God's name: "Behold, the days come, says the Lord, that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah; not according to the covenant which I made with their fathers, in the day that I took them by the hand, to bring them out of the land of Egypt." Observe what the prophet says, not to Gentiles, who had not been partakers in any former covenant, but to the Jewish nation. He who has given them the law by Moses, promises in place of it the new covenant of the gospel, that they might no longer live in the oldness of the letter, but in the newness of the spirit. Paul himself, moreover, in connection with whom the discussion of this question has arisen, delivers such sentiments as these frequently, of which I subjoin only a few, as I desire to be brief: "Behold, I Paul say unto you, that if ye be circumcised, Christ shall profit you nothing." Again: "Christ is of no benefit to you, whosoever of you are justified by the law; ye are fallen from grace." Again: "If ye be led of the Spirit, ye are not under the law." From which it is evident that he has not the Holy Spirit who submits to the law, not, as our fathers affirmed the apostles to have done, feignedly, under the promptings of a wise discretion, but, as you suppose to have been the case, sincerely. As to the quality of these legal precepts, let us learn from God's own teaching: "I gave them," He says, "statutes that were not good, and judgments whereby they should not live." I say these things, not that I may, like Manichaeus and Marcion, destroy the law, which I know on the testimony of the apostle to be both holy and spiritual; but because when "faith came," and the fulness of times, "God sent forth His Son, made of a woman, made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons," and might live no longer under the law as our schoolmaster, but under the Heir, who has now attained to full age, and is Lord.

15. It is further said in your letter: "The thing, therefore, which he rebuked in Peter was not his observing the customs handed down from his fathers, which Peter, if he wished, might do without being chargeable with deceit or inconsistency." Again I say: Since you are a bishop, a teacher in the Churches of Christ, if you would prove what you assert, receive any Jew who, after having become a Christian, circumcises any son that may be born to him, observes the Jewish Sabbath, abstains from meats which God has created to be used with thanksgiving, and on the evening of the fourteenth day of the first month slays a paschal lamb; and when you have done this, or rather, have refused to do it (for I know that you are a Christian, and will not be guilty of a profane action), you will be constrained, whether willingly or unwillingly, to renounce your opinion; and then you will know that it is a more difficult work to reject the opinion of others than to establish your own. Moreover, lest perhaps we should not believe your statement, or, I should rather say, understand it (for it is often the case that a discourse unduly extended is not intelligible, and is less censured by the unskilled in discussion because its weakness is not so easily perceived), you inculcate your opinion by reiterating the statement in these words: "Paul had forsaken everything peculiar to the Jews that was evil, especially this, that 'being ignorant of God's righteousness, and going about to establish their own righteousness, they had not submitted themselves to the righteousness of God.'
 
16. In this, moreover, he differed from them, that after the passion and resurrection of Christ, in whom had been given and made manifest the mystery of grace, according to the order of Melchizedek, they still considered it binding on them to celebrate, not out of mere reverence for old customs, but as necessary to salvation, the sacraments of the old dispensation; which were indeed at one time necessary, else had it been unprofitable and vain for the Maccabees’ to suffer martyrdom as they did for their adherence to them. Lastly, in this also Paul differed from the Jews, that they persecuted the Christian preachers of grace as enemies of the law. These, and all similar errors and sins, he declares that he counted but loss and dung, that he might win Christ." We have learned from you what evil things peculiar to the Jews Paul had abandoned; let us now learn from your teaching what good things which were Jewish he retained. You will reply: "The ceremonial observances in which they continued to follow the practice of their fathers, in the way in which these were complied, with by Paul himself, without believing them to be at all necessary to salvation." I do not fully understand what you mean by the words, "without believing them to be at all necessary to salvation." For if they do not contribute to salvation, why are they observed? And if they must be observed, they by all means, contribute to salvation; especially seeing that, because of observing them, some have been made martyrs: for they would not be observed unless they contributed to salvation. For they are not things indifferent -- neither good nor bad, as philosophers say. Self-control is good, self-indulgence is bad: between these, and indifferent, as having no moral quality, are such things as walking, blowing one's nose, expectorating phlegm, etc. Such an action is neither good nor bad; for whether you do it or leave it undone, it does not affect your standing as righteous or unrighteous. But the observance of legal ceremonies is not a thing indifferent; it is either good or bad. You say it is good. I affirm it to be bad, and bad not only when done by Gentile converts, but also when done by Jews who have believed. In this passage, you fall, if I am not mistaken, into one error while avoiding another. For while you guard yourself against the blasphemies of Porphyry, you become entangled in the snares of Ebion; pronouncing that the law is binding on those who from among the Jews have believed. Perceiving, again, that what you have said is a dangerous doctrine, you attempt to qualify it by words which are only superfluous: viz., "The law must be observed not from any belief, such as prompted the Jews to keep it, that this is necessary to salvation, and not in any misleading dissimulation such as Paul reproved in Peter."

17. Peter, therefore pretended to keep the law; but this censor of Peter boldly observed the things prescribed by the law. The next words of your letter are these: "For if Paul observed these sacraments in order, by pretending to be a Jew, to gain the Jews, why did he not also take part with the Gentiles in heathen sacrifices, when to them that were without law he became as without law, that he might gain them also? The explanation is found in this, that he took part in the Jewish rites as being himself a Jew; and that when he said all this which I have quoted, he meant not that he pretended to be what he was not, but that he felt with true compassion that he must bring such help to them as would be needful for himself if he were involved in their error’s. Herein he exercised not the subtlety of a deceiver, but the sympathy of a compassionate deliverer." A triumphant vindication of Paul! You prove that he did not pretend to share the error of the Jews, but was actually involved in it; and that he refused to imitate Peter in a course of deception, dissembling through fear of the Jews what he really was, but without reserve freely avowed himself to be a Jew. Oh, unheard of compassion of the apostle! In seeking to make the Jews Christians, he himself became a Jew! For he could not have persuaded the luxurious to become temperate if he had not himself become luxurious like them; and could not have brought help, in his compassion, as you say, to the wretched, otherwise than by experiencing in his own person their wretchedness! Truly wretched, and worthy of most compassionate lamentation, are those who, carried away by the vehemence of disputation, and by love for the law which has been abolished, have made Christ's apostle to be a Jew. Nor is there, after all, a great difference between my opinion and yours: for I say that both Peter and Paul, through fear of the believing Jews, practiced, or rather pretended to practice, the precepts of the Jewish law; whereas you maintain that they did this out of pity, "not with the subtlety of a deceiver, but with the sympathy of a compassionate deliverer." But by both this is equally admitted, that (whether from fear or from pity) they pretended to be what they were not. As to your argument against our view, that he ought to have become to the Gentiles a Gentile, if to the Jews he became a Jew, this favors our opinion rather than yours: for as he did not actually become a Jew, so he did not actually become a heathen; and as he did not actually become a heathen, so he did not actually become a Jew. His conformity to the Gentiles consisted in this, that he received as Christians the uncircumcised who believed in Christ, and left them free to use without scruple meats which the Jewish law prohibited; but not, as you suppose, in taking part in their worship of idols. For "in Christ Jesus, neither circumcision avails anything, nor uncircumcision, but the keeping of the commandments of God."

18. I ask you, therefore, and with all urgency press the request, that you forgive me this humble attempt at a discussion of the matter; and wherein I have transgressed, lay the blame upon yourself who compelled me to write in reply, and who made me out to be as blind as Stesichorus. And do not bring the reproach of teaching the practice of lying upon me, who am a follower of Christ, who said, "I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life." It is impossible for me, who am a worshipper of the Truth, to bow under the yoke of falsehood. Moreover, refrain from stirring up against me the unlearned crowd who esteem you as their bishop, and regard with the respect due the priestly office the orations which you deliver in the church, but who esteem lightly an old decrepit man like me, courting the retirement of a monastery far from the busy haunts of men; and seek others who may be more fully instructed or corrected by you. For the sound of your voice can scarcely reach me, who am so far separated from you by sea and land. And if you happen to write me a letter, Italy and Rome are sure to be acquainted with its contents long before it is brought to me, to whom alone it ought to be sent.

CHAPTER V

19. In another letter, you ask why a former translation which I made of some of the canonical books was carefully marked with asterisks and obelisks, whereas I, afterward, published a translation without these. You must pardon my saying that you seem to me not to understand the matter: for the former translation is from the Septuagint; and wherever obelisks are placed, they are designed to indicate that the [LXX] Seventy have said more than is found in the Hebrew text. But the asterisks indicate what has been added by Origen from the version of Theodotion. In that version I was translating from the Greek: but in the later version, translating from the Hebrew itself, I have expressed what I understood it to mean, being careful to preserve rather the exact sense than the order of the words. I am surprised that you do not read the books of the Seventy translators in the genuine form in which they were originally given to the world, but as they have been corrected, or rather corrupted, by Origen, with his obelisks and asterisks; and that you refuse to follow the translation, however feeble, which has been given by a Christian man, especially seeing that Origen borrowed the things which he has added from the edition of a man who, after the passion of Christ, was a Jew and a blasphemer. Do you wish to be a true admirer and partisan of the Seventy translators? Then do not read what you find under the asterisks; rather erase them from the volumes, that you may approve yourself indeed a follower of the ancients. If, however, you do this, you will be compelled to find fault with all the libraries of the Churches; for you will scarcely find more than one manuscript here and there which has not these interpolations.

CHAPTER VI

20. A few words now as to your remark that I ought not to have given a translation after this had been already done by the ancients; and the novel syllogism which you use: "The passages of which the Seventy have given an interpretation were either obscure or plain. If they were obscure, it is believed that you are as likely to have been mistaken as the others if they were plain, it is not believed that the Seventy could have been mistaken."

All the commentators who have been our predecessors in the Lord in the work of expounding the Scriptures have expounded either what was obscure or what was plain. If some passages were obscure, how could you, after them, presume to discuss that which they were not able to explain? If the passages were plain, it was a waste of time for you to have undertaken to treat of that which could not possibly have escaped them. This syllogism applies with peculiar force to the book of Psalms, in the interpretation of which Greek commentators have written many volumes: viz. 1st, Origen: 2d, Eusebius of Caesarea; 3d, Theodorus of Heraclea; 4th, Asterius of Scythopolis; 5th, Apollinaris of Laodicea; and, 6th, Didymus of Alexandria. There are said to be minor works on selections from the Psalms, but I speak at present of the whole book. Moreover, among Latin writers the bishops Hilary of Poitiers, and Eusebius of Verceil, have translated Origen and Eusebius of Caesarea, the former of whom has in some things been followed by our own Ambrose. Now, I put it to your wisdom to answer why you, after all the labors of so many and so competent interpreters, differ from them in your exposition of some passages?

If the Psalms are obscure, it must be believed that you are as likely to be mistaken as others; if they are plain, it is incredible that these others could have fallen into a mistake. In either case, your exposition has been, by your own showing, an unnecessary labor and on the same principle, no one would ever venture to speak on any subject after others have pronounced their opinion, and no one would be at liberty to write anything regarding that which another has once handled, however, important the matter might be.

It is, however, more in keeping with your enlightened judgment, to grant to all others the liberty which you tolerate in yourself for in my attempt to translate into Latin, for the benefit of those who speak the same language with myself, the corrected Greek version of the Scriptures, I have labored not to supersede what has been long esteemed, but only to bring prominently forward those things which have been either omitted or tampered with by the Jews, in order that Latin readers might know what is found in the original Hebrew text. If anyone is averse to reading it, none compels him against his will. Let him drink with satisfaction the old wine, and despise my new wine, i.e. the sentences which I have published in explanation of former writers, with the design of making more obvious by my remarks what in them seemed to me to be obscure.

As to the principles which ought to be followed in the interpretation of the Sacred Scriptures, they are stated in the book which I have written,' and in all the introductions to the divine books which I have in my edition prefixed to each; and to these I think it sufficient to refer the prudent reader. And since you approve of my labors in revising the translation of the New Testament, as you say -- giving me at the same time this as your reason, that very many are acquainted with the Greek language, and are therefore competent judges of my work -- it would have been but fair to have given me credit for the same fidelity in the Old Testament; for I have not followed my own imagination, but have rendered the divine words as I found them. understood by those who speak the Hebrew language. If you have any doubt of this in any passage, ask the Jews what is the meaning of the original.

21. Perhaps you will say, "What if the Jews decline to answer, or choose to impose upon us?" Is it conceivable that the whole multitude of Jews will agree together to be silent if asked about my translation, and that none shall be found that has any knowledge of the Hebrew language? Or will they all imitate those Jews whom you mention as having, in some little town, conspired to injure my reputation? For in your letter you put together the following story:

A certain bishop, one of our brethren, having introduced in the Church over which he presides the reading of your version, came upon a word in the book of the prophet Jonah, of which you have given a very different rendering from that which had been of old familiar to the senses and memory of all the worshippers, and had been chanted for so many generations in the Church. Thereupon arose such a tumult in the congregation, especially among the Greeks, correcting what had been read, and denouncing the translation as false, that the bishop was compelled to ask the testimony of the Jewish residents (it was in the town of Oea). These, whether from ignorance or from spite, answered that the words in the Hebrew manuscripts were correctly rendered in the Greek version, and in the Latin one taken from it. What further need I say? The man was compelled to correct your version in that passage as if it had been falsely translated, as he desired not to be left without a congregation -- a calamity which he narrowly escaped. From this case, we also are led to think that you may be occasionally mistaken.
CHAPTER VII

22. You tell me that I have given a wrong translation of some word in Jonah and that a worthy bishop narrowly escaped losing his charge through the clamorous tumult of his people, which was caused by the different rendering of this one word. At the same time, you withhold from me what the word was which I have mistranslated; thus taking away the possibility of my saying anything in my own vindication, lest my reply should be fatal to your objection. Perhaps it is the old dispute about the gourd which has been revived, after slumbering for many long years since the illustrious man, who in that day combined in his own person the ancestral honors of the Cornelii and of Asinius Pollio, brought against me the charge of giving in my translation the word "ivy" instead of "gourd" I have already given a sufficient answer to this in my commentary on Jonah. At present, I deem it enough to say that in that passage, where the Septuagint has "gourd," and Aquila and the others have rendered the word "ivy" (kissos), the Hebrew MS. has "ciceion," which is in the Syriac tongue, as now spoken, "ciceia." It is a kind of shrub having large leaves like a vine, and when planted it quickly springs up to the size of a small tree, standing upright by its own stem, without requiring any support of canes or poles, as both gourds and ivy do. If, therefore, in translating word for word, I had put the word "ciceia," no one would know what it meant; if I had used the word "gourd," I would have said what is not found in the Hebrew text. I, therefore, put down "ivy," that I might not differ from all other translators. But if your Jews said, either through malice or ignorance, as you yourself suggest, that the word is in the Hebrew text which is found in the Greek and Latin versions, it is evident that they were either unacquainted with Hebrew, or have been pleased to say what was not true, in order to make sport of the gourd-planters.

In closing this letter, I beseech you to have some consideration for a soldier who is now old and has long retired from active service, and not to force him to take the field and again expose his life to the chances of war. Do you, who are young, and who have been appointed to the conspicuous seat of pontifical dignity, give yourself to teaching the people, and enrich Rome with new stores from fertile Africa.' I am contented to make but little noise in an obscure corner of a monastery, with one to hear me or read to me.

(I have stood by Jerome's statue in Bethlehem. There are no pictures of any disrespect to this anti-Semitic confused old boy's bronze replica. There is definitely nothing on film. Definetly not.)

Friday, June 17, 2016

How to apply Lev 20:13 in the USA in 2016

A friend was asked this question:

“Lev 20:13 - Does anyone believe this to be the right course of action?  This is clearly what the Bible teaches, KJV.  Do we ignore the OT in favor of the NT?”

[The timing of the question came after a man who may have been a practicing bi-sexual Muslim and one who pledged his allegiance to ISIS on a 911 call, murdered 49 people at a homosexual club in Orlando, FL. But, let's assume there is no connection to the terrorist act and the question.]

There is a new book out that will help you think through this issue of application of Old Testament law in our day. The Whole Christ: Legalism, Antinomianism, and Gospel Assurance—Why the Marrow Controversy Still Matters, by Sinclair B. Ferguson. Anyone who is genuinely concerned about the application of Old Testament law will invest the time and funds for a quality resource on this issue.

Applying Old Testament law is a matter that requires careful study and thought. Here are some of the issues. As far back as 400 AD, we have letters between Augustine and Jerome concerning the three dimensions of the law (Moral, Ceremonial, and Civil). Augustine argued for the continuity of nine of the Ten Commandments and Jerome argued for the abolishment of all Jewish law. These three distinctions are also found in the 1600s in both the Westminster Confession of Faith (1647) and the 1689 London Baptist Confession of Faith. If one looks at the five major Hebrew terms for the law used in the Bible, these types are also evident.

Ancient Israel was given worship regulations that instructed them on rituals, purity rules, fasts, diets, sacrifices and other Old Covenant worship practices. The Messiah fulfilled these Ceremonial Laws and declared all foods clean in Mark’s gospel (7:19) and even Gentile believers in Acts 10. These temporary worship rules are signified by the Hebrew terms Hoq and Huqqa. Jeremiah promised a New Covenant would come that would change the Old Covenant (Jer 31).

Ancient Israel was a theocracy ruled directly by God. He gave them national Civil Laws, which were time-frozen applications of the Moral Law to govern their nation before the destruction of Jerusalem in 70AD. Even if one ignores the church’s place in the Kingdom of God after Pentecost, (34AD) it is a little hard to ignore the ending of the nation of Israel by the Romans. The Babylonians ended the Israelite theocracy (See the book of Daniel), but the final remaining shreds of the nation ended in 70AD. The restored nation in 1948 is not a theocracy but is a democracy that can choose to use some of the ancient Civil Laws but does not in many instances, including the area listed above.

After the Mosaic administration of the Covenant was in place, all requirements of capital punishment were regulated by the Civil Law of the nation Israel in their land. Just like the laws of Russia do not apply in Atlanta, so the laws of Israel that were also fulfilled by the Messiah, Jesus, are not binding in North America. Because these have a connection to the Moral Law, they do give wisdom to individual believers and even legislatures in all nations who are the New Covenant governing authorities (Rom 13) of each nation. They have principles that can and should be applied to each age and each time. When these are written into the law of a nation, they then are binding on its citizens until repealed, replaced or annulled.

 However, in the New Covenant the church is not a nation or a government and it is not issued the sword or stones. The church is to use church disciple for any violations of the Moral Law of God among professing believers. But they are required to affirm the government and God’s use of corporal punishment on those who violate God’s Moral Law and not take the law into their own hands.

No individual has the authority to take up the sword that God has alone given to human government to punish violations of Civil Laws (self-defense is not being discussed here). Many of the Civil Laws are stated in the Old Testament with phrases like, “If a man.” The Hebrew term is Mishpatim, which has the Hebrew term for a judge (Shepet) in it as the judges applied the Civil Law in the ancient land of Israel (the term is often translated as ordinances or judgments). The requirement to put a fence around your roof is one of these laws (Deut 22:8). The principles of safety in the home and neighbor love (Matt 19:19) are both required for New Covenant believers who love God. However, literally building a fence around an American “A” roof is not required and would not fulfill the principle of this ancient ordinance in days of flat roofs used for entertaining guests.

The Moral Law has an enduring application in the life of believers in every covenant and age and is even seen in the Natural law written on the human hearts in even the most pagan cultures (Rom 2:14-16). The Ten Commandments are the basis of this dimension of Old Testament law. However, of the 613 laws in the Old Testament, there are more than 10 that are Moral Laws. These laws are based on the character of Yahweh and set forth his nature to his people. The Messiah kept these laws in the place of every believer and removed the curse attached to them by his death. But these laws are still binding on the people of God. The law can still say, “Do this” to a believer but it can no longer say, “Do this or die.” The death for violations of the law for those in Christ has already occurred and satisfied God's wrath.

It is not accidental that nine of the Ten Commandments are repeated in the New Testament and applied to the New Covenant people of God (Some argue all ten are based on 1 Tim 1:8-11). These laws reveal sin and God’s righteousness as well as wise guidance for believers in every age. Because they show us what God likes and dislikes, we display our love and loyalty to Jesus the God-Man by keeping these laws. These laws were never given to earn or supplement grace and salvation. But the legal heart in man tries to turn them into a Covenant of Works to replace or add to God’s Grace found only in Jesus the Messiah. These efforts distort the purpose of the law and displease God. Display your love for God and glorify Him by gracious obedience to the Moral Law of Christ, the royal lawgiver instead (Jam 2:8) of offering works to attempt to earn God's favor.

The pre-incarnate Christ wrote the Ten Words (Commandments) with his own finger and then handed them to Moses two times (See John 4:24, not the Father). They were then kept under the mercy seat in the Ark of the Covenant where the special presence of God resided until the book of Ezekiel. When the Israelites continually violating the Moral Law, God’s special glory left the temple and then returned on 11 of the Apostles in the court of the Gentiles under Solomon’s porch on the temple mount around 34AD on the day of Pentecost. Jesus now has his Holy Spirit write these laws on the hearts of all true believers (Heb 10:16) much like he did with Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden at Creation. The New Covenant uses the Holy Spirit as the mediator of the Moral Law just like the Older Covenant used Moses as the mediator. But the Law was God’s Law (Deut 11:1) given in love by the hand of Yeshua the Messiah in both Covenants. Those who claim to be Christians while hating the Moral Law (Rom 13:8-10) graciously given in love from the hand of Jesus are living contradictions of the gospel (John 15:9-10).

Believe it or not, there is a vast difference between eating a rabbit, shrimp or bacon and murdering a human with an everlasting soul. The consequences of breaking Moral Laws are much more significant in every age, nation and culture. The Ten Words are also called “The Testimony” (Eduth) in the Old Testament. The Hebrew term translated ‘commandment’ is Mistvah. These terms are used for Moral Laws.

The New Testament says, “Thus, Jesus declared all foods clean” (Mark 7:19) and Paul says, “All foods are sanctified by gratefulness and prayer” (1 Tim 4:3-5). Something radically changed after the arrival of the Messiah. However, Jesus does not declare idolatry acceptable (1 John 5:21) and Paul does not sanction adultery (1 Cor 6:18) in the New Covenant. Instead, the New Testament further clarifies how these sins are broken in the human heart (Matt 5:28) just like the Old Testament did by including “coveting” in the list (Deut 5:21) of the Ten (a heart sin). There is a difference between Ceremonial and Moral Laws.

All the NT passages on the covenantal change on the ceremony of circumcision, which was required during the Mosaic administration, should make this even clearer (Rom 2:25-29; 1 Cor 7:19; Gal 5:1-12, 6:14-16; Eph 2:11-19; Phil 3:2-11 and Col 2:11-12). Compare these to Gen 17:1-14 and Lev 12:13. A significant change has taken place with the Ceremonial Law in the New Covenant. But, this change has not taken place in the New Testament with the eternal moral requirements. For example, consider the fifth Commandment (Eph 6:1-3) concerning the treatment of parents and leaders. The everlasting dimension of the Moral Law carries over into the Messiah’s administration of the Covenant of Grace. Again, see The Whole Christ book to help you with this.

Now directly concerning the Scripture passage you cited.

 If a man has sexual intercourse with a male as one has sexual intercourse with a woman, the two of them have committed an abomination. They must be put to death; their blood guilt is on themselves. (Lev 20:13 NET)


The fact of the matter is that the above sentences are not commands but are part of an explanation of the Civil Law of Israel and God as King states the punishment in the ancient Israelite Civil Laws. He was the King, Judge, Jury and the Lawmaker. That is not the case in the USA. Look at our abortion rates for proof.

Nevertheless, the act cited in Lev 20:13 is forbidden in the Moral Law. It is Lev 18:22 that is the Moral Law forbidding this practice and this is an extreme violation of the commandment (Mistvah) against adultery (Exod 20:14) in the Decalogue (Also see Rom 1:26-27; 1 Cor 6:9 and 1 Tim 1:10). The church in every age or nation is to respond to this just like it is modeled in 1 Cor 5 and Matt 18:15-20 by church discipline for those who profess to be Christians.

However, the individual in the church or the state has no authority to take any ultimate action. God has not given the sword to individuals or to the church, but only to the state. The church has keys, not swords. We should expect pagans and the world to live like this and getting them to stop without them first embracing Christ will only make them twice a son of hell if they replace antinomian behavior with legalism (Matt 23:15). Both are rejections of the Grace of Christ. Neither obnoxious extreme pleases or glorified God. Just like us, these folks need the gospel—nothing more and nothing less.