THE BELIEVER AND THE MOSAIC LAW:
How Do They Relate? (Pt. 1)
by
Ron Merryman, Copyright, 1995
Believers who actively witness, read
widely, and aggressively communicate Biblical truths have no doubt been
confronted with conflicting views on the Christian’s relationship to the Mosaic
Law. Those who saddle believers with the Law, mostly Reformed/Covenant
theologians, label their antagonists "antinomian." Those who
advocate freedom from the Law, mostly evangelicals, dispensationalists, and
some Pentecostals, label Reformed brethren "legalists."
To add fuel to this fire, the decline of
Christian values in Western civilization during the past fifty years has
stimulated a reactionary and contrasting rise in what I choose to call a rigid
Christianity. It is rigid in the sense that those involved seek to
impose God’s mediatorial Kingdom laws upon nation states. I am referring, of
course, to the Christian Reconstruction movement with its emphasis on theonomy
("the rule of God") and Dominion theology.
Reformed/Calvinist theologians of the past
are notorious for carrying the Law (of Moses) right past the Cross and laying
it on the backs of believers. But now a few, having adopted the Dominionist
persuasion, are taking it a step further and laying it upon all
humankind. Their ultimate goal is the establishment of the Kingdom of God on
earth. Having successfully brought the kingdoms of this world under God’s
law-rule, the "Church" can turn it over to Jesus Christ at His
second advent.1 The Church will be victorious, the Kingdom will be
established now, and the Law of God will be supreme everywhere and over all,
including unbelievers! Dominion theology is a rebirth of the postmillennialism
of the nineteenth century. However, during the nineteenth century,
postmillennialists optimistically and naively expected to convert the entire
world to and through the Gospel with no thought of imposing Mosaic Law on
nation states.
Though confined to a small number of
Presbyterian and Reformed leaders, the movement has enjoyed more recent success
among the Pentecostals.2 Reconstruction ideas also are manifest in
some religious/political postures of pastors and leaders of the religious right
who are not necessarily involved in the movement.
But the purpose of this paper is to focus
on New Testament passages that deal with the believer’s relationship to the
Mosaic Law. Do the Dominionists really have a sound exegetical basis upon which
their promotion of the Law is based? Are Christians under the Law? If so, in
what sense are they under it? What place has Mosaic Law in the sanctifying
process of a true believer, if any? Or, stated another way, do you as a
believer grow by seeking to obey the Mosaic Law (the Ten Commandments in
particular)? Moreover: are we as believers to establish theocratic states that
seek to function under Mosaic Law? Sound doctrine is the result of solid
exegesis, not religious or philosophical speculation. Let’s look at the New
Testament teachings.
Five
Purposes of the Mosaic Law Stated in the New Testament
As background, it is important that we
examine God’s purposes in the Mosaic Law3 as clearly stated in
the New Testament. I list five purposes below. These are not speculative;
they constitute the Holy Spirit’s viewpoint of the true intent of the Law.
1. First, the Law was given "to stop every
mouth"– that is, to muzzle every voice that would flaunt
self-righteousness before God.
Now we know
that what things soever the Law saith it saith to them who are under the Law that
every mouth may be stopped...4 (Rom. 3:19)
Paul definitely has the Old Testament Law
in mind because he uses the Greek definite article with the word law in
both places in this verse. He is not talking about any law per se, but
specifically the Old Testament Mosaic Law to which he referred in Romans
2:11-29.
Saith to them who are under the Law... primarily refers to Jewish people, those to whom the
Law Covenant was given in Exodus 19-30.
That every mouth may be stopped… refers to Jews and Gentiles alike, with special
emphasis on the Jew who self-righteously regarded Gentiles as reprobate
sinners. The Law was given, says the Holy Spirit, that every mouth,
religious and non-religious, might be muzzled, shut-up, and quieted when
confronted with the holiness that God’s righteous Law demands. When individuals
rightly perceive the righteousness that the Law requires, they are left
hopelessly speechless.
This is a clear statement of one of God’s
major purposes in giving His holy Law. It was designed to create a sense of
personal embarrassment to members of the human race regarding their
unrighteousness, an embarrassment that would cause them to muzzle themselves
before the holy, righteous, almighty God. His purpose in giving the Law was not
to produce righteousness, but speechless GUILT!
2. God’s second purpose of the Law is to
produce in every human being a sense of personal guilt, accountability, and
hence a need for God’s forgiveness.
Now we know that what things soever the
Law saith it saith to them who are under the Law that every mouth may be
stopped and all the world may become guilty before God. (Rom. 3:19)
The New American Standard Version (hereafter,
NASV) translates guilty5 as "accountable"–
i.e., "that the entire world might become accountable to God."
The word means subject to judgment or liable to punishment, in
this case, by God.
God’s holy Law not only muzzles human
self-righteous boasts, it stimulates a sense of personal guilt and
accountability to Him with an accompanying expectation of judgment or
punishment. The Law of God reveals sins and shortcomings, but it does not and
cannot correct them. It simply leaves those who really hear the Law with a
sense of guilt and liability before the righteous, personal God of the
universe.
3. The third
purpose of the Law as stated in the Scriptures is to provide an objective
knowledge of sin for the human race.
Now we know
that what things soever the Law saith, it saith to them who are under the Law:
that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before
God. Therefore by the deeds of the Law there shall no flesh be justified in His
sight: for by the Law is the knowledge6
of sin. (Romans 3:19,20)
We are not left to our own machinations on
the issue of sin. It is not a matter of subjective speculation or comparative
human values from God’s point of view. God Himself in the Moral Law (the Ten
Commandments) has given an incisive and objective revelation of sin, a moral
code against which all members of the human race can measure themselves.
By the Law is the knowledge of sin... God’s Law objectively defines sin for the human
race. This is precisely what Paul means in Rom. 7:7 when he states
"... I had not known sin, but by the Law: for I had not known lust,
except the Law had said, ‘Thou shalt not covet.’ "
Romans 5:20 intensifies this purpose:
"Moreover, the Law entered, that the offence might abound..."
The NASV translates, "And the Law came in that the transgression might
increase..." The point is this: God introduced His holy Law in the
course of human history to make apparent the exceeding sinfulness of sin. The
offence is more reprehensible when one realizes that sin directs itself not
just against mankind, but against the personal, almighty God, our
Creator-Sustainer, and, above all, our Redeemer.
BY THE LAW IS THE KNOWLEDGE OF SIN, BUT
NOT ITS CORRECTION! The Law is like a plumb bob: it shows clearly how far out
of line we are, how untrue, but in no way can it correct our crooked posture.
It is like a mirror reflecting our flaws, blemishes, and defects with
absolutely no power to correct any of them. The Law tells us how wrong we are,
but it cannot "right" us!
Someone aptly stated this dilemma as
follows:
This do and live, the Law commands, but
neither gives me feet nor hands: A better word the Gospel brings, it bids me
fly and gives me wings! –Author Unknown
This brings us to God’s next stated
purpose of the law.
4. The fourth purpose of God’s Law is that it
serves as a stern child disciplinarian to bring its hearers to Christ, that
they might be declared righteous by God through faith in Christ’s finished work
on the cross.
Wherefore the Law was our schoolmaster8 to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith. (Galatians 3:24)
My expanded translation of v. 23
demonstrates the significance of this verse in its context: "But before
the faith came of which I have been speaking, i.e., the faith in Christ Jesus
that justifies, we, the hearers of the Law, were constantly guarded, kept in
ward9 under the Law (where there was no room for subjectivity
or compromise relative to sin), shut up10 or locked in unto
the faith which should afterwards be revealed." To genuine hearers of
the Law in any age, the Law serves as a stern, authoritarian guardian that,
like a guided missile, leads directly to faith in Christ! The Law cannot
justify. However, it did and does make one conscious of the need to be right
before God.
The glorious and directive purpose of the
Law: to lead to Christ any and all who hear its condemnatory message and by
faith in Him find not only forgiveness, but also absolute righteousness before
God! In this way "Christ is the end11 of the Law for
righteousness to everyone that believeth" (Rom. 10:4). The NASV
translation is even more clear: "Christ is the end of the Law so that
there may be righteousness for everyone who believes." The meaning and
contextual connection is "Because the Jews seek justification by the
Law (good works), they miss God’s true method to be just or righteous, that is,
by simple faith in Christ’s redeeming work. Christ has abolished the Law in
order that all who believe may be justified." Christ has abolished the
Law, not by destroying it, but by fulfilling it. Because He fulfilled it, He is
the end of it. ONE COULD WELL SAY THAT CHRIST IS NOT ONLY THE TERMINATION OR
END OF THE LAW, HE IS ITS TERMINATOR.
The Scriptures clearly teach that for
believers, the Law of Moses IN ALL OF ITS ASPECTS has been abrogated or
abolished by Christ in His cross.12 Have the Dominionists, Reformed
theologians, or any of the Law-pushers given serious consideration to Paul’s
teaching in this regard? Would they—could they – even consider Paul an "antinomian?"
I will address this later. For now, let’s examine God’s last stated purpose of
the Old Testament Law.
5. The fifth purpose of God’s Law according
to the Scriptures is to serve as a restrainer of evil and a perpetual reminder
to unbelievers of their moral responsibility to God. The Law is
categorically not made for the believer.
But we know
the Law is good, if a man use
it lawfully; knowing this, that the Law is not made for a righteous13
man, but for the lawless and disobedient, for the ungodly and for sinners, for
unholy and profane, for murderers of fathers and murderers of mothers, for
manslayers, for whoremongers, for them that defile themselves with mankind, for
menstealers, for liars, for perjured persons, and if there be any other thing
that is contrary to sound doctrine.14 (1 Timothy 1: 8-10)
Could anything be clearer? The Law of God
is not laid down for a justified person. Is this consistent with the rest of
Scripture? Without a doubt it is, for justified in the New Testament is
never used in a comparative sense: one is not a little bit justified nor
justified by degrees. Justification is absolute. God sees the believer clothed
in the absolute righteousness of Christ. 2 Corinthians 5:21 states it this way:
For He (God)
hath made Him (Christ) to be sin for us (believers), that we might be made the
righteousness of God in Him.
Justification is unchangeable
righteousness! Therefore Paul says, Who shall lay anything to the
charge of God’s elect? It is God that justifieth (Rom.
8:33). Justified individuals are secure in the righteousness that God imputes
unto them in Christ. Who can bring law charges against them? The Law is
not appointed for believers in Christ.
But it is made for the unbeliever as this
verse clearly states.
Summary
Thus Far
So far, we have looked at five clear
statements in the New Testament that delineate God’s stated purposes in His
giving of the Law. These constitute the Holy Spirit’s viewpoint of the true
intent of the Law. As we have seen, the Law condemns; it highlights one’s sins,
but does not help one overcome sin. The Law creates a sense of both moral
responsibility and inescapable moral failure before God. Additionally, the Law
muzzles any sense of self-righteousness and leaves one speechlessly guilty
before God. But finally, the Law becomes an authoritarian guide that leads to
faith in Christ where one is justified, forgiven, and accepted by the Father.
Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness/justification.
Be assured that once in Christ, the Law
for the believer is abrogated, for as Paul clearly states, The Law is not
made or enacted for the justified man. Theonomists, Dominionists, and
law-oriented believers need to seriously study these clearly stated purposes of
God in the giving of His Law. Only by properly orienting to God’s purposes for
the Law can the believer properly make application of the Law.
Footnotes:
1 Leading
spokesmen and prolific writers for the Christian Reconstruction movement are
its founder, Rousas J. Rushdoony, and his son-in-law, Gary North. Others
include Greg Bahnsen, who coined the term "theonomy," David Chilton,
James Jordan, and Ray Sutton. Rushdooney’s voluminous publications emanate from
the Chalcedon Foundation in Vallecito, California: they are philosophical and
theological in nature with a noticeable lack of Bible exegesis. Gary North
established the Institute for Christian Economics in Tyler, Texas, in the early
1980’s after a falling out with Rushdoony. He holds a Ph.D. in economics and
promotes reconstruction doctrine through his publishing companies in Ft. Worth
(Dominion Press) and Tyler (Reconstruction Press). North’s writings are
flamboyant, hyperbolic, and philosophical: like those of his father-in-law,
they evidence a great deficiency of good, Bible exegesis.
2 Some
Pentecostal leaders have warmed up to the Dominion concept of "the
Kingdom Now." Marylyn Hickey, Bob Mumford, Robert Tilton, Earl Paulk,
Don Paulk, John Mears, and James Roberson are reported to be promoting these
errors (among others). God’s Law (theonomy) is to reign and Christians are to
see to it that it does! The prophecies in both the Old Testament and the New
Testament regarding Israel are misapplied to the Church. As a result, the
Church is seen as world dominant, the source of all social, economic,
political, and spiritual blessing! Shades of medieval Europe under the Popes!
3 The Mosaic Law is commonly
divided into three areas: 1) the Ceremonial Law, which delineates the
priesthood and sacrifices of the Old Testament; 2) the Civil Law, which covers
civil relationships within the Israelite nation; and 3) the Moral Law, which is
universally known as the Ten Commandments.
4 All
Scripture quotes in this paper are from the King James Version (unless
otherwise noted).
5 guilty = upodikoV ; used only in this passage in the New Testament.
6 knowledge
= epignwsiV (epignosis), a favorite word of
Paul. He used it 15 times in the noun form in his epistles and 13 times in the
verbal form. Peter used it 4 times in his second letter. Thayer (Greek-English
Lexicon of the New Testament) defines it inadequately as "precise and
correct knowledge;" Arndt-Gingrich’s (A Greek English Lexicon,
etc.) definition, "knowledge," "recognition,"
is even less adequate. Vine (An Expository Dictionary of New Testament
Words) is much better (since epignwsiV must mean more than gnwsiV ). Vine aptly
states that this word denotes "to observe, fully perceive, notice
attentively," and "a knowledge which perfectly unites the
subject with the object." Whereas
gnwsiV can mean knowledge in the abstract, epignwsiV always discerns, perceives,
comprehends. EpignwsiV , as used by Paul and Peter in the New Testament, is gnwsiV (Bible
doctrine) that has found its mark! By the Law is perceptive, discerning
knowledge of sin! It is objective fact fully perceived; it is not abstract or
subjective.
7 Note Paul’s play on words: in
Rom. 5:12 "...by one man sin entered
(eishlqen) into the world" and 5:20 "moreover the Law entered (paraeishlqen) that the offence might abound." Sin, disobedience to God’s
express will, entered human history by one man, Adam. However, the Law direct
from the hand of God also entered "that the offence might abound"--
that is, that the offensiveness of sin from God’s point of view might be
clearly demonstrated to the human race.
8 schoolmaster
= paidagwgoV , from which the English word pedagogue derives. It is better
translated as an "authoritarian guardian" or a "discipline
enforcer." In Paul’s day, the schoolmaster usually was a slave
assigned to monitor and guard the behavior of a child. This guardian was NOT A
TEACHER. Instead, the role functioned as more of a guardian-overseer to keep a
child in check.
9 kept" = qrourew in
the present, passive, indicative.
10 shut
up = sugkleiw in
present, passive, participal form. This same verb is used in Gal. 3:22 where it
is translated "hath concluded": "the scripture hath
concluded, shut up all under sin, that the promise by faith of Christ Jesus
might be given to them that believe."
11 end = teloV , end in the sense of termination ,
the ordinary use of teloV in the New Testament.
12 Supporting
passages include Col.2:14, "Blotting out the handwriting of ordinances
that was against us which was contrary to us...;" Gal.3:13, "Christ
has redeemed us from the curse of the Law... ;" Eph.2:15, "Having
abolished in his flesh the enmity, even the law of the commandments...
;" Rom.7:6, "But now we are delivered from the Law, that being
dead wherein we were held... ;" Rom. 6:14, "Ye are not under
the Law, but under grace;" Gal. 3:25, "...after that faith is
come, we are no longer under a schoolmaster." The comments of Charles
Hodge, who (though deceased) remains one of the most able of Reformed
expositors, are interesting. In his Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans,
Eerdmans Pub. Co.,1955, p.336, he appears to agree totally with what I am
stating, but later follows the standard Reformed logic (sic) when he states,
"The Law is abolished by Christ, not as a rule of life, but as a
covenant prescribing the condition of life," p. 336. In other words,
the Law is still the rule of life for a believer: Hodge puts the believer under
the Law for sanctification, but not for justification. This is typical of
Reformed theology.
13 righteous
= dikaioV , righteous, justified, in the theological sense.
14 Law
in 1 Timothy 1: 8 has the definite article: without question, Paul has in
view the Mosaic Law, for in verse 7 he refers to would-be Law teachers in the
Church. Moreover, vs. 9-10 list sins commensurate with the Ten Commandments,
sins that are contrary to sound doctrine. He is speaking of Law in the
theological sense. Though Law in verse 9 has no definite article, the
context demands that the Mosaic Law is in view. Interestingly, William
Hendriksen (Reformed) agrees. See his New Testament Commentary: I-II Timothy
and Titus, Baker Book House, 1955, p.66. However, he disagrees with the
idea that the righteous man here is a justified man. Instead, he sees
him as a moral person. In his view, the passage means that "The Law was
not made for the moral person." This interpretation contradicts God’s
stated purpose in Rom.3:19, where we are told that the Law was given to
stop every mouth, moral and immoral. Either the Apostle Paul or
Hendriksen is wrong! ¢
This article will continue in the
March/April issue. Ron will cover "What the Law Could Not Do"
and "We Are Not UNDER THE LAW, but UNDER GRACE... MEANING–?"