What does obedience look like in the saved.
1. The ten commandments. plus all the the ceremonial traditions, plus the many others laws given by moses.
2. Or as Jesus himself said, Matt 22:
[SUP]37 [/SUP]Jesus said to him, “‘
You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your mind.’[SUP][
a][/SUP] [SUP]38 [/SUP]This is
the first and great commandment. [SUP]39 [/SUP]And
the second
is like it: ‘
You shall love your neighbor as yourself.’[SUP][
b][/SUP] [SUP]40 [/SUP]On
these two commandments hang all the Law and the Prophets.”
I would say the answer is number 2. Not number 1. A person who observes number 1 may look religious, sound religious, and act religious. But that does not make him a righteous person at all. The pharisee proved this (and they even added a whole bunch of laws to make sure they did not break the few God already gave)
This is the issue people have with HRM's, It is not that we are judging them as not saved, it is that we are saying, there is a better way to sanctification, than to keep following ryules and regulation, a yoke the NT said the jews could not even keep. It is asking to much, and putting way to much emphasis on self. and not God.
Thanks for your input. I would say both 1) and 2) should factor into a believer's life. It's simple -- believers should walk as the Messiah walked. To live out the will of God, the Messiah's walk included properly observing the Torah commands of His Father. As followers of the Messiah, our walk should include the same.
Regarding 2), this is a distillation of the Torah commands, not a replacement of them. The question asked of Him is which are the greatest two, not which are the only two. The idea is that if you have that pure and joyful love of God and your neighbor, then you will live your life in relationship with those two (God and neighbors) according to God's will, which is expressed in the Torah commands, among other sources throughout the history of God's interaction with mankind as recorded in the Scriptures. He gave commands about how to relate to Him and commands about how to relate to our neighbors, revealed through Moses and elsewhere, and if we love Him and our neighbors (God first, by the way, notice the order He gives these two distilled commands), then we will be Spiritually led to walk in the ways He has given for us. I recommend not over-spiritualizing things -- there is a written Word with commands enumerated for a reason; it's not an inherently bad thing. The NT is full of commands; no need to hate lists. If one hates lists, then that person might as well toss out their Bible and just pray and seek the Spirit completely for guidance with no written reference. There is a practical, functional use for the written Word and the commands found preserved within it, and they serve as one of our guides while we still have physical bodies on this physical earth. The Messiah and His disciples loved the written Word and the commands found within, and we should as well.
And on your issue with HRM folks, while this may be your feeling, I believe it to be unfounded. Non-Torah-observant folks can also look, sound, and act religious while not actually being filled with or led by the Spirit -- it's not a problem of their inspirational source (whether it be Torah commands, NT writings, the Spirit, all of the above, etc.), but of the person. And has been posited by us Torah-observant folks in the past on this board, the problem with the Pharisees is not that they kept the Torah commands (as you posit), but that they
did not keep the Torah commands, which is stated clearly by the Messiah (cf. Matt. 15, especially vs. 3, 6b, and 9): Following God's Torah commands didn't make them hypocrites -- for the Messiah and His disciples also followed them -- but forsaking God's Torah commands in favor of their man-made traditions did, and in Matt. 23:23 we read that they neglected the more important matters of the Torah/Law (justice, mercy, faithfulness -- which show they hadn't internalized the proper love for God and their neighbor) in favor of less weightier matters, while His directive for them is they should have practiced those weightier matters while also
not neglecting the less weightier matters. Similar to the Messiah's distillation of the Torah commands above, the more important matters
do not replace the less weightier matters, but the lesson is about a more comprehensive approach to the Torah commands and a proper alignment of values.
In sum, the Messiah's directive to them is not to put aside the Torah commands to achieve God's purpose for their lives in loving God and their neighbors, but instead to more comprehensively embrace them and not let their man-made traditions supplant God's Torah commands or let their pride and arrogance prevent them from reaching the goal. Likewise, I think your charge against HRM folks is unfounded. Our approach is not "follow rules for sanctification". While there may be some folks who put too much emphasis on this sort of "religious" activity, it's mostly that your perception of the rest of us is incorrect. We aim to live as God wills for us and to walk as Messiah walked. The Torah commands are a guide for this and to Messiah, for Messiah also walked in them, and the Holy Spirit also guides us. It's not the monster you make it out to be, and not the yoke mentioned in Scripture. The emphasis is always on God and what His grace empowers us to do.
Blessings to you on your journey.