Subject: When did the day of worship change? |
Bible Note: I don't see how the location of the Book of the Law and the Tables of the law means one is moral and the other is not or one is still binding but the other is not. The Jews understood--and I am going to use a modern understanding of the Law just to prove a point--the Moral, Civil, and Ceremonial aspects of the Law as Moral. The wouldn’t agree with the statement you just made—10 commandments are moral the ceremonial aspects of the law are not moral. You can't say the 10 commandments are moral therefore it applies today but the ceremonial and civil aspects of the Law are not moral! If your whole basis for the 10 commandments applying to the life of the believer is because it is moral the whole law must apply--Ceremonial and Civil. Why? Because the Jews understood the whole law, not just the 10 commandments--to be morally binding to the believer. Ceremonial aspects of the Law was how a person worshipped God. That is why I believe the Sabbath is ceremonial...It deals with the believers life of worship. I hope you can see there is a difference between killing, coveting, adultry and a day set aside to acknowledge God and rest. |