Red,
You're trying to use a Bible study where the person who is teaching that Bible study USES the Talmud,the Mishna and is into KABBALAH. Don't you get what we are trying to tell you?
I carefully went through this study. I checked it with scripture, not whatever this Kabbalah is. I am into scripture, not this other stuff. I think that God created and knows all about us and our world, it is only through scripture and God we get the truth. So I watched this study carefully if it agreed with scripture. It did.
What started me on it was that all scripture does not agree that all the law of Moses is to be ignored, yet Galatians seems to say so. I was so frustrated I cried, for it seems to me that understanding what scripture says is important to our very life. And one scripture NEVER says that another is wrong. I spent months digging in scripture and history, I would not give up until I understood.
I learned that a Rabbi named Hillel, for one, was instrumental in handling the problem of the 'God Fearers" as they called one group of gentiles who wanted to join the Jews in the synagogue. They were a problem because many weren't sincere, and when they made friends with the Jews, when they left or had the Jews join them in some of their pagan worship they didn't give up, but combined with the new worship, they were a bad influence. The rabbis decided to do something about it.
What they decided to do was to make it tough for the gentiles to join them, only the sincere would go through what the rabbis suggested. They made a list of requirements. History records that they did this and there were several names for this list, but history doesn't give us one copy of the entire list. It is called the 18 requirements, the Law of Moses, and sometimes simply circumcision. When they finished all 18 requirements, they could join synagogue. During Paul's day, everyone knew all about this, it was the talk of the town very like we spoke of "the cold war" and everyone knew exactly what that was. Everyone knew exactly what Paul was speaking of when he said "Law of Moses". It was these requirements for joining in the synagogue.
We don't know what Paul meant when he said Law of Moses. We say that we must ignore Christ when He talks of obedience because of Paul speaking of the law of Moses. We accept that Paul spoke against what God said in scripture. When we say Judaizing, it includes not listening to many things God told us to listen to.
If we accept history, everything falls into place. We can listen to Paul as speaking for God. We can listen to all God says. We can listen to Christ as agreeing with Paul and Paul agreeing with Christ.