The Letter of the Law // The Spirit and The Word, Part 1 Podcast Por  arte de portada

The Letter of the Law // The Spirit and The Word, Part 1

The Letter of the Law // The Spirit and The Word, Part 1

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Sometimes we can look at God's Word – the Bible and think of it as a book of rules. But it turns out that this notion that God is all about the letter of the law is way off the mark. Sometimes we can look at God's word, the Bible and think of it as a book of rules. But it turns out that this notion of God is all about the letter of the law is way off the mark. The law's a funny thing … some people say the law's an ass, it's something that we both love and we hate. On the one hand, when we see a serious crime committed like a child killed by a drunk driver or a murder or a rape or terrorism, we want the perpetrator to experience the full force of the law. On the other, sometimes the law does indeed seem to be an ass. When people apply the letter of the law rather than the spirit of the law, we can end up with silly, sometimes damaging outcomes. In a sense that's how we think about God. If God was God, holy and righteous (whatever that meant,) then I knew that I fell short of that. And therefore, God must be a bunch of rules that I'd fallen foul of. But my hunch is that, I don't know. If we understand God that way well maybe we're missing the point. I wonder if you recognise any of these: I'm your Lord, your God and you shall have no other gods before me. You shall not make for yourself an idol or bow down and worship an idol. You shall not use the Lord's name in vain. You shall keep the Sabbath day of rest. You shall honour your father and your mother. You shall not kill. You shall not commit adultery. You shall not steal. You shall not bare false witness against your neighbour. You shall not covert your neighbour's wife. (Exodus 20: 1-17) Well of course, we recognise those as probably the Ten Commandments – Gods law in a nutshell – the things that Moses brought down from the mountain on the tablets of stone. But actually, you may or may not know that in the Book of the Law (as the Jews understand the Law), which is the Books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy, known as the Torah, there a 613 commandments and prohibitions. So the Ten Commandments are just like the top ten. Then there's another 603 commandments and prohibitions on top of that … do this, don't do that, don't do this, do that. Some of them make a lot of sense – don't kill, don't steal, don't commit adultery, and don't lie. There's a whole bunch of other ones that we look at now and they'd make our stomachs turn like animal sacrifices and all that sort of stuff, things that don't make a whole lot of sense to us, (here and now, today). I mean, could you imagine going to Church and taking some animal and slitting its throat? Probably they'd come and lock us up for doing that these days. So some of God's Laws come naturally. They make sense and others don't. Don't lie, don't cheat, don't bare false witness – they make sense but the temptation's always there. Just run your eyes down those ten and most people have broken at least one of those in just the last 24 hours let alone the other 603. In one sense, the law does make sense. Imagine what our society's would be like without the will of law. Look at what happened in Bosnia, look at what happened in Rwanda, look at what's happening in Israel and Lebanon. Without law there's anarchy and innocent people get hurt and there's pain and there's oppression. So the law does make sense but you can take it to extreme. Totalitarian law is ugly and oppressive. People's freedom is taken away. So the law is a great servant but a terrible master. But (and here's the but), it's easy to think of God's Law as being like a totalitarian regime. If God's God, He is the ultimate totalitarian because He's all-powerful, so who wants to have a part of that? Who wants to have some rule-based God that's got all the power? No, thank you very much. Well, in fact, there was a bunch of people called the Pharisees. They were a bunch of religious leaders in the 1st century who lived at the same time Jesus did and the word Pharisee comes from the Hebrew word 'to separate'. They were religious separatists and they took following God's Law, those 613 commandments and prohibitions, to the most absurd and extreme lengths. What do you think God would say about that? Is God a rule-based god? Is God a god that says, "Yes, there's someone following my law, I'm excited about that." This is what Jesus said to these Pharisees. He said: Woe to you scribes and Pharisees, you hypocrites because you tithe mint and dill and cumin but you neglect the weightier matters of the Law. Justice, mercy, faith, it's these you ought to have practiced without neglecting the others, you blind guides, you strain out a gnat and you swallow a camel. (Matthew 23:23) What's this tithing of mint and dill and cumin all about? Well, these days we go to the supermarket and we buy a bunch of mint or we buy some dill or we buy a jar of cumin and we think so what? Back then, mint, dill and cumin were pretty high priced herbs and ...
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