Beta wrote:You may consider it blind faith because humans can not believe what they can't see , but from God's point the right way becomes obvious. Heb.11v1. There is no point in being a Christian if we can't trust God - Jesus did fully and we are expected to follow him.
I do not know where you stand in your Christian walk but could it be we are on opposite sides ? (I just don't know you yet)
I have abandoned my Christian walk. I used to be a Christian. I am now an atheist and a humanist. I think that it is fair to say we are on opposite sides.
Beta wrote:I don't know who calls Moses a Lawgiver.
It is common, I am told among Jewish scholars. He was their prophet, after all. I don't think that they mean that he formulated the law but that it was through Moses that God gave them their law. Similar to the way that Paul is sometimes called the apostle to the gentiles by the Christians.
Beta wrote:MY Bible says there is only one and it is God. Is.33v22 , Jas.4v12. The reason God gave his Laws through Moses was by request of the people and not by original intent Ex.20v18/19. In Ex.20v1 God set out personally to speak to the People listing the 10 Commandments which we see referred to in Jas.2v10/11 as the Law and in Rom.7v10-12 as holy, just and good. It may help not to refer to the Commandments as Law since that can confuse , and when I say split I mean we split the Commandments by disregarding the first four. Christians are well into worshipping idols and icons, misusing God's name, breaking the Sabbath.
I see you listed a lot of OT Laws coming through Moses that never made it into the NT as we are now in a new covenant. The 10 Commandments never were part of the abolished Laws but remain in a spiritual context. Now we can have the HS to help us keep them we no longer need what has been dealt with in Christ. It is pointless to bring them up as we take our example from the risen Christ and the Apostles.
So many scriptures refer to them in the NT we'd have to pull pages out of the Bible to disregard them 1Jh.2v4, 5v3, These Commandments are a code of conduct that would guarantee love and peace among those who call themselves Christian - if only they were serious.
You have confused me. Do you think that Christians should obey as best they can, the entire law, only the ten commandments, or none of the old law and be guided by the Holy Spirit? Do you split the ten from the rest of the law as outlined in the Torah?
More to the point, do you believe that secular governments should enforce the first four commandments on non-believers?