That "get out of stoning for breaking the law given to Moses BY GOD concerning adultery" ticket should seemed handy for some woman out there.
But, how does that change the Law? And the weight thereof (which was lifted concerning the adulterous woman) And I'm sure PLENTY of Christians, including scholars who have not only read and studied this in the limited English but the original languages and cultures as well, also believe it's a "get out of hell" ticket. That's kinda what it is, cause you have "no chance in hell" of avoiding it otherwise by following the Law.
I have been guilty of this and I do try to avoid such, but it is spiritually childish to accuse another Christian of not being learned or taking their faith seriously because they disagree with you. And yet no one on here proclaiming a return to the Law has actually LAID OUT what that would look like and HOW Christians should go about doing this.
Unless it simply means "Agree with me."
Well, let's just go ahead and judge the intentions and hearts of people because they disagree with us! People we never even met personally! Forget about that whole "man looks at the outward appearance, but God looks on the heart" law in the OT somewhere...
I sympathize with frustration due to complacency and apathy, but you know, someone CAN believe in a separation between the OT and the NT and STILL practice their faith and grow in sanctification. Millions do this every day. Some persecuted Christians do this WITHOUT A BIBLE... you know, cause the ones they had were burned, if they owned one to begin with.
I'll pose the question I already have, I think twice now on this thread:
"Return to the Law" means WHAT? "Return" would indicate a change should take place in the Church - what is that change? Besides "obeying the Law," (plenty of laws and guides for Christians in the NT, yet funny there's no call to return to any of these that broken all the time in the Church, like divorce) and saying "yeah, you're right..." besides this, how do you divide the laws between spiritual and literal application?
"Sacrificing lambs just don't apply!" someone said. Why doesn't it? Is it really that hard to get a lamb and sacrifice it? Because of our culture? Liberal Christians have made the same argument concerning homosexaulity. "Our culture is changing, different time in history, it just doesn't apply anymore." (I'm not stating an opinion, just an example.) Well, if the Law of homosexuality still applies, but sacrificing doesn't, where is that distinction? (I'm aware of Romans 1, I HAVE read Scripture, but in this thread the Law seems to be confined to the OT in where to find it.)
What will this "return to the Law" look like, if the Church did this? How does that change worship? How does that change everyday life of the Christian?