For anyone being harassed by "Torah observant" Christians, or who has legitimate questions about whether to serve by the Torah:
1. The Law has jurisdiction only over the living Jew (Gentiles never were under Law but were "without the Law")--and, since believers share in Christ's death and resurrection, the Law, Itself, commands the release of the Jewish believers from their obligation to serve God by the means of the Law (the Rabbis agree with Paul--both came from the Pharisaic tradition.)
2. Gentile Christians who do not have the Law can qualify as doers of the Law.
For this reason, for Christians to distinguish themselves from other Christians with the label "Torah observant" can infer a false accusation that everyone else is "lawless": God Himself teaches us how to love one another, writing His Laws on our hearts and minds, which love fulfills the Law, so, Gentiles who walk after the Spirit, not after the flesh, bear the fruit of the Spirit against which there can be no Law.
Therefore, it is an error to accuse those who do not serve by the Law, but by Grace, of "lawlessness".
3. "Why, in Acts, did Paul prove he walked orderly and kept the Law?"
i. He did keep the Law:
a. His dying to the Law, not going back to It, was his living by the Law, since the Law, Itself, commands his freedom from the Law (to return to the Law would have been "illegal")
b. By the Spirit writing God's Law on his heart, he kept the righteous requirement of the Law
ii. Paul became a Jew to win Jewish souls to God--it would've been inopportune to explain his doctrine to the Jewish audience in Jerusalem, since there were undoubtedly countless false Jewish brothers, and plenty of Jewish onlookers.
iii. Jesus said taking vows was of the evil one, so when Paul takes vows, it must be artificial, for the sake of his Jewish audience, not something being done in seriousness before God, since vows are an affront to God. Jesus said to be shrewd as serpents and harmless as doves--Paul was being deceptive, but not harming anyone, just trying to do his best to not cause anyone to stumble at the Gospel.
iv. If it was not true that he taught Jewish believers they weren't obligated to serve by Torah, how did the Jews in Jerusalem get that impression?
1. The Law has jurisdiction only over the living Jew (Gentiles never were under Law but were "without the Law")--and, since believers share in Christ's death and resurrection, the Law, Itself, commands the release of the Jewish believers from their obligation to serve God by the means of the Law (the Rabbis agree with Paul--both came from the Pharisaic tradition.)
2. Gentile Christians who do not have the Law can qualify as doers of the Law.
For this reason, for Christians to distinguish themselves from other Christians with the label "Torah observant" can infer a false accusation that everyone else is "lawless": God Himself teaches us how to love one another, writing His Laws on our hearts and minds, which love fulfills the Law, so, Gentiles who walk after the Spirit, not after the flesh, bear the fruit of the Spirit against which there can be no Law.
Therefore, it is an error to accuse those who do not serve by the Law, but by Grace, of "lawlessness".
3. "Why, in Acts, did Paul prove he walked orderly and kept the Law?"
i. He did keep the Law:
a. His dying to the Law, not going back to It, was his living by the Law, since the Law, Itself, commands his freedom from the Law (to return to the Law would have been "illegal")
b. By the Spirit writing God's Law on his heart, he kept the righteous requirement of the Law
ii. Paul became a Jew to win Jewish souls to God--it would've been inopportune to explain his doctrine to the Jewish audience in Jerusalem, since there were undoubtedly countless false Jewish brothers, and plenty of Jewish onlookers.
iii. Jesus said taking vows was of the evil one, so when Paul takes vows, it must be artificial, for the sake of his Jewish audience, not something being done in seriousness before God, since vows are an affront to God. Jesus said to be shrewd as serpents and harmless as doves--Paul was being deceptive, but not harming anyone, just trying to do his best to not cause anyone to stumble at the Gospel.
iv. If it was not true that he taught Jewish believers they weren't obligated to serve by Torah, how did the Jews in Jerusalem get that impression?
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