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Is God's 10 Commandment Law
Still Binding, Today
?
- The Law Of God Is As
Immutable As His Throne
- "Think not that I am come to destroy the law
or the prophets; I am not come to destroy, but to fulfill." Matthew 5:17.
What a contrast between the words of
Christ, and the language of those who claim that he came to abrogate [abolish] the law of
God and to do away with the Old Testament. Our Saviour, who knew all things, understood
the wiles of Satan, the snares by which he would seek to entrap the children of men, and
so made this positive statement to meet the questioning doubts and the blind unbelief of
all coming time.
But there is a law which was
abolished, which Christ "took out of the way, nailing it to his cross." Col.
2:14. Paul calls it "the law of commandments contained in ordinances." Eph.
2:15. This ceremonial law, given by God through Moses, with its sacrifices and ordinances,
was to be binding upon the Hebrews until type met antitype in the death of Christ as the
Lamb of God to take away the sin of the world. Then all the sacrificial offerings and
services were to be abolished. Paul and the other apostles labored to show this, and
resolutely withstood those Judaizing teachers who declared that Christians should observe
the ceremonial law.
Christ himself declares that he came
not to destroy the law of ten precepts, which was spoken from Sinai. He says, "Verily
I say unto you,"--making the assertion as emphatic as possible,--"Till heaven
and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law till all be
fulfilled." Matt. 5:18. Here he teaches not merely what the claims of God's law had
been and were then, but that these claims should hold so long as the heavens and the earth
remain. This testimony should forever settle the question. The law of God is as immutable
as his throne. It will maintain its claims upon all mankind in all ages, unchanged by time
or place or circumstances. The ritual system was of altogether a different character, and
typified the death of Christ as a sacrifice for the broken precepts of the moral law.
"I am not come to
destroy," Christ says, "but to fulfill,"--"to magnify the law and make
it honorable," as Isaiah, hundreds of years before, had prophesied respecting the
Messiah's work. Matt. 5:17.
"To fulfill the law." In
his own life the Saviour gave the children of men an example of perfect obedience. In his
teachings he made clear and distinct every precept of the divine law; he swept away the
rubbish of erroneous tradition with which the Jews had encumbered it; he illustrated and
enforced its principles, and showed in all its particulars the length and breadth and
height and depth of the righteousness required by the law of God.
The Pharisees were dissatisfied with
the teachings of Christ. The practical godliness which he enjoined condemned them. They
desired him to dwell upon the external observances of the ceremonial law, and the customs
and traditions of the fathers. But Jesus taught the spiritual nature of the law and made
clear its far reaching claims. Love to God and to men must live in the heart and control
the life, as the spring of every thought and every action.
- The Gospel Points To The
- Moral Code As A Rule Of
Life
- There is perfect harmony between the law of God
and the gospel of Jesus Christ. "I and my Father are one," says the great
Teacher. John 10:30. The gospel is the good news of grace, or favor, by which man may be
released from the condemnation of sin, and enabled to render acceptable obedience to the
law. The gospel points to the moral code as a rule of life. That law, by its demands for
undeviating obedience, is continually pointing the sinner to the gospel for pardon and
peace.
Says the great apostle, "Do we
then make void the law through faith? God forbid. Yea, we establish the law." Rom.
3:31. And again he declares that the "law is holy, and the commandment holy, and
just, and good." Rom. 7:12. Enjoining supreme love to God, and equal love to our
fellow men, it is indispensable alike to human happiness and the glory of God.
There are persons professing to be
ministers of Christ, who declare with the utmost assurance that no man ever did or ever
can keep the law of God. But, according to the Scriptures, Christ took upon himself our
nature, "in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his brethren," and
"was made in fashion as a man." Heb. 2:17; Phil. 2:8. He was man's example,
man's representative, and he declares, "I have kept my Father's commandments."
John 15:10. The beloved disciple urges that every follower of Christ "ought himself
also so to walk even as he walked." 1 John 2:6. All who are in Christ will follow the
example of Christ. All who justify the sinner in his transgression of God's law belong to
that class of whom our Saviour said, "Whosoever therefore shall break one of these
least commandments, and shall teach men so, he shall be called the least in the kingdom of
Heaven." Matt. 5:19. They can have no part with Him who came to magnify the law and
make it honorable. They are deceiving the people with their sophistry, saying to the
sinner, "It shall be well with thee," when God has declared, "The soul that
sinneth [transgresseth the law] it shall die." Ezek. 18:4.
The words of Christ are both
explicit and comprehensive. "Whosoever"-- minister or layman, wise or
ignorant--"shall break one of these least commandments"--willfully or
presumptuously, as did Adam and Eve--is included in the condemnation. Breaking one of the
commandments makes man a commandment breaker. "Whosoever shall keep the whole law,
and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of all." James 2:10. No excuse can avail
for him who strictly obeys nine of the precepts of God's law, but ventures to break one
because it is for his profit or convenience to do so. God demands implicit obedience to
all his requirements.
"And shall teach men so."
This is a point worthy of careful consideration. Christ foresaw that men would not only
break the commandments of God themselves, but would teach others to break them. Some are
not content with doing this by example; they defend sin, and pervert the word of God to
justify the transgressor. Such persons will have no part with the people of God. But the
greatest guilt rests upon the professed watchmen, who do not hesitate to speak evil of the
law, and even to make those who are ignorant of the Bible believe that they are fallen
from grace if they keep it. "All we have to do," say they, "is to believe
in Christ, come to Christ."
The most fatal delusion of the
Christian world in this generation is, that in pouring contempt on the law of God they
think they are exalting Christ. What a position! It was Christ who spoke the law from
Sinai. It was Christ who gave the law to Moses, engraven on tables of stone. It was his
Father's law; and Christ says, "I and my Father are one." The Pharisees held the
reverse of the modern position, but were in just as great an error. They rejected Christ,
but exalted the law. And it makes little difference which position is taken, so long as we
ignore the true one,--that faith in Christ must be accompanied by obedience to the law of
God.
- Sin Is The Transgression
Of The Law
- While we point the sinner to Jesus as the one who
can take away sin, we must explain to him what sin is, and show him that he can be saved
from
his sins, but not in them. He must be made to realize that
"sin is the transgression of the law." 1 John 3:4. Paul makes the inquiry, many
years after the death of Christ, "Is the law sin? God forbid. Nay, I had not known
lust, except the law had said, Thou shalt not covet." Rom. 7:7. Thus Paul
exalts the moral law. When this law is practically carried out in everyday life, it is
found indeed to be the wisdom of God. It serves to detect sin. It discovers the defects in
the moral character, and shows sin to be exceeding sinful, revealing it in all its
hideousness. Through obedience to its requirements, Christian character is perfected.
God's law is a copy of his mind and
will. The sins forbidden there could never find a place in Heaven. It was love that
prompted God to express his will in the ten precepts of the Decalogue. Afterward he showed
his love for man by sending prophets and teachers to explain and illustrate his holy law.
God has given man a complete rule of
life in his law. Obeyed, man shall live by it, through the merits of Christ. Transgressed,
it has power to condemn. The law sends men to Christ, and Christ points them back to the
law.
The Signs of the Times -
September 4, 1884
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