Part 2
You seem to use 2 Peter 3:16-17 to detract from interpretations outside of your own but miss the irony that the passage can also apply to your understanding. Have you considered that you have misunderstood Paul?
If you have a different belief on that passage let me know, but it appears to me that Peter is saying that this twisting of Paul's writings is to be a common thing. My belief on what he is saying is by far the minority. Modern Christiany's interpretations of Paul is the majority.
Is it possible that I am the one who is misunderstanding Paul, sure... But my stance is that the majority of Paul's writings used to support a law that no longer applies are misinterpreted due to mistranslations, missing context, etc. (Romans 2, 3, 7, 14, Galatians 2, 3, Collossians 2, etc.).
If I am wrong about all of that and Paul is actually teaching that the first covenant laws are done away with, then I'm
either also wrong about all the verses in the OT and in Mathew, Luke, John, Peter, James, Revelation, etc. that I believe teach that the law still applies,
or Paul is a false prophet.
Yes. carried out forever by the members of the covenant. Christ is an everlasting participant in the covenant. There is no reason to assume that any commandment in the OT is applicable to people in the modern day nor that anyone new can join that covenant.
Heaven and earth eventually fade away. So which one is it: Forever? Or until heaven and earth fade away?
Heaven and earth give us our concept of time.... so "forever" and "until heaven and earth disappear" are the same.
Do you think its a coincidence that in Mathew 5:18-19 and Luke 16:17 it says that the law applies until heaven and earth disappear and in Revelation 21:1 there is a vision of that time actually coming?
You can also renegotiate the terms of the lease. Just because the rule used to be "no dogs" and "no smoking in the rooms" doesn't mean that those are going to be the terms of the new lease. Christ marks the fulfilment of the old law ("paying off the old lease"), and the terms of the "new lease" are outlined in the NT.
Sure you can renegotiate lease terms, but where in scripture does it say this actually happened?
Also, where does the Messiah say in the NT that these laws are new or that the first covenant laws no longer apply? I have pointed to where he says the opposite.
It seems to be your interpretation that the OT laws will always apply to everyone, but many of us disagree with that premise not just because of some hunch or some feeling, but because of what scripture says. Your response seems to be: "Well, even though Paul explicitly talks about the OT laws not applying, that's not what Paul actually meant! Look here at 2 Peter 3:16-17. Some people misunderstand, therefore you misunderstand."
This is a complete strawman/misrepresentation of my position... and I have made this clear in many of my posts. Again my position is as follows:
The majority of Paul's verses that are used to push the ideology that the OT laws no longer apply are commonly misinterpreted in modern Christianity. This comes as a result of lack of understanding of the OT, scriptures taken out of context, lack of knowledge of the original language, culture, attachment to long held beliefs and traditions, etc. We have a warning of this taking place from Peter, but that warning does not carry much weight in the church.
My position is also that Pauls writings should not outrank any of the disciples or the writings in the law/prophets. So
IF there
APPEARS to be a contradiction between Pauls writings and other authors, I will not prioritize him over others. Ultimately though, I try to find at least two "witnesses" regarding a topic before coming to a belief on it in scripture.
The approach is fair enough from the perspective of the Talmud where several rabbis present slightly different opinions on various things. We could look at some of Paul's writing as being advice very specifically for Timothy. There are ways to reevaluate the context of what is being said. If in a letter to Timothy, Paul said "don't do that thing!" it could be understood to not necessarily apply to everyone.
Most of the bible is described not prescribed... however many people like to pull misc. verses out of context that supports how they want to live and apply it to their lives. Paul's writings for example were sent to specific people dealing with certain issues. This is not to say we can't get anything positive from them, but we are really reading someone else's mail.
For the sake of argument, if OT laws applied, which ones would apply? Which ones wouldn't? How are you differentiating between "laws of men" and "laws of God"? Is there a definitive list? If your answer is the Mosaic 10 commandments and we whittle the topic down to the commandment about the Sabbath day, how does one observe the Sabbath? What constitutes work? Does flipping a light switch constitute work? What about typing on a keyboard?
What laws still apply? All laws given to mankind to carry out throughout their generations forever... From "Be fruitful and multiply".. to the dietary laws... the holy days... the ten commandments... etc. What doesn't apply are things like animal sacrifice. Why? Because that is an earthy penalty for breaking the law, not the law itself. The penalty was paid with the Messiah's body.
How does one observe the Sabbath? The simple answer is dont work, and don't allow others to do so in your home (Exo 20:8-11)... but of course we have the Messiah for clarification. How do you differenciate God's work from man's work? The Messiah gave healing, feeding the hungry and pulling an ox out of a ditch as exceptable examples, but he had a problem with buying and selling (money changers) being mixed with that which was holy (set apart by God). God's work is selfless... not materialistic or contains personal gain.
Set the day apart from the other days... get some rest from worldly things, maybe get out in nature, help your fellow man in need, some worship, study some scripture, some meditation, exercise (Just some ideas)....
None of us are going to get it perfect... we all fall short and require grace. But not trying is definitely not the answer.
Colossians 2:13-23 tells us that "don't touch this!" such as by the custom of honouring the Sabbath by abstaining from work is a "commandment of men". If you don't consider "commandments of men" to be important, how does one remember and keep holy the Sabbath? And before you jump in to try to say "the touch comment is about fasting". No.
The sabbath is not a commandment
of man... but
for man, sure. I'm not sure how you came to that conclusion that the sabbath is a commandment of men.
I have addressed colossians 2 many times on here... no this passage is not about fasting specifically, but the same concept applies that people were being judged based off of man made laws, not the Father's law:
Colossians 2:20-22
20 If you have died with the Messiah to the basic
principles of the world, why are you submitting to
its decrees as though you still lived in the world? 21 “Don’t handle this! Don’t taste or touch that!” 22 All of these things will be destroyed as they are used, because they are
based on human commands and teachings.
In many places in scripture there is a clear distinction between the commandments of men (human commands), and commandments of God. When the word "decrees" is used in scripture it is speaking of man's law. The people of Colossae were judging the believers who were trying to keep God's law... based off of their man made laws. That is the context.
Verse 16 in this chapter is also commonly misinterpreted in modern Christianity to mean the opposite of what it is saying. Part of the reason this happens is because of some minor translation issues with the grammar... but the people Paul was writing to were actually trying to keep God's law and being unrighteously judged by the people of Colosae and their doctrines.