E
Ed_Rand
Guest
You are wrong friend. Paul quotes the Torah when he’s explaining this. “Cursed is everyone who does not continue to do everything written in the Book of the Law.”–Galatians 3:10 and Deuteronomy 27:26.Dear Ed,
What is the meaning of “law” that was mentioned by Paul in this case? Do you think it was the Thorah?. Now, do you know a book called Talmud?
OK. Let us go back to Jesus when he “disobeyed” the Sabath, in which Jesus cured the sicks during Sabath. In Sabath, no one was allowed to work, and curing was considered as working. Jesus also claimed that He is “the Lord of Sabath”. Later on, Jesus said that “not a single iota of Thorah would be erased”. Do you believe that Jesus was being inconsistent? No way, Ed. After the fall of Israel to the Babylon, they would like to come back to what the Thorah said. But, the Thorah was written hundreds of years prior to their lifetime. And, lifetimes separated by hundreds of years were different. This was the job of the Pharasee, who derived new laws from the Thorah to be reasonable to their current way of living. Those laws were recorded in the book called Talmud.
So much that the Pharasee derived the laws that the new laws be so “burdensome” to the Jews. This was the kind of laws critized by both Jesus and Paul.
Think about it. Were there any law including the Thorah during Abraham time? There was none. That was why Paul made this analogy in his letter to the Romans. But, did it mean that there was no law at all? There was. That is what the meaning that human was created under the image of God. Without any written law, there was already a reluctance of human to kill others, or eat other human (except in remote jungle of Borneo or the islands of Pacific). So, the Thorah was the reflection of what was already unwritten. The Pharasee later on derived the Thorah from a living law into a dead law written in Talmud. Later on, Jesus bring this law back into living and loving law.
Dear Ed, you cannot take a verse in Paul’s letter and make an interpretation out of it. You have to read the entire letter of even other letters of Paul, in order to understand him. Remember, even Peter in his letter even said that Paul’s letters were difficult to be understood. That was normal. Paul was highly educated, compared to Peter, who was an ex-fisherman.