as far as i know ((and i am not at all studied on the particulars)) there are no certain sets of laws that were never written down, that the Torah was quite definitely written down and as carefully as possible copied and preserved, and that 'tradition' is found in the Talmud ((also written down)) and consists of interpretation of The Law ((Torah, the books of Moses, in fact all of the OT)) -- for example a rabbi may take Leviticus 19:19 and after much thought, meditation and prayer, decide that in order to fully devote himself to keeping it, he should not only refrain from mixing cotton and wool, but cotton and silk, wool and any kind of flax, etc.
said rabbi would then teach all his disciples to keep the Law in this way, and he might draw philosophically a precept from 'mixing fabrics' to other applications, and forbid his disciples to do such things as using nails and wood in the same article of furniture, with the idea that he is keeping the spirit of the Law this way.
that's how we get 'eating with unwashed hands' -- not a Law given by God, but a tradition that arose from seeking to physically keep the Law ever more faithfully, with the idea that righteousness comes from physical observation, and the more physically stringent, the more righteous. this hand-washing was for ceremonial purification, not for germ-spread prevention.
thus by 'tradition of men' to focus on satisfying the righteousness of the law by stricter and stricter physical observation of it, customs arise and are 'added' by commonly agreed application of it to the elemental things of the world. as in Colossians 3, where Paul goes on to chastise the reader for foolishly submitting themselves to physical proscription ((do not handle! do not touch! do not eat!)) -- proscriptions that rise up from the very human tradition of trying to make themselves approved spiritually by what they do physically.
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i appreciate you replying; didn't mean to drag you into what you don't wish to get yourself involved in. can't say as i blame ya
Good explanation of rabbinical law.
Here's the dilemma:
'Handwriting of ordinances'-Colossians 2:14 KJV
From Strong's it seems 'Handwriting' is an accurate meaning of the word Paul is using here (though only some translations use that translation). This would seem to indicate that he's talking about the law of Moses except that the word he uses for 'ordinances' means 'opinions of judgment'. So he seems to be speaking of judgments about the law (rabbinical law) that are written down, but since they are written down he can't be talking about the oral rabbinical add-on law.
So which is it? Is it the handwriting of
rabbinical judgments which weren't written down that got nailed to the cross and no longer able to condemn us? Or is it the handwriting of
the law of Moses (stored in permanent file in the temple, which are not the opinions of judgment) that got nailed to the cross and no longer able to condemn us?
Who's condemnation have we been delivered from by the death of Christ? The condemnation of rabbinical add-on law, or the condemnation of the actual law of Moses? The context shows he's clearly talking about rabbinical law, while vs. 14 suggests, by his use of 'handwriting', that he's talking about the law of Moses itself.
My answer? Both. For when our indebtedness to the law of Moses was nailed to the cross and marked 'paid in full', nullifying the necessity to have to perform the Festival cycle, every rabbinical law lost it's power over us to dictate how we were to keep that Festival cycle. And for that reason we are not to let anyone judge us "by what you eat or drink, or with regard to a religious festival, a New Moon celebration or a Sabbath day"-Colossians 2:16. The rabbinical powers that ruled over the people of God and brought us into the bondage of their ridiculous, but binding, rabbinical rulings were disarmed and triumphed over by the cross:
14having canceled the charge of our legal indebtedness (handwriting of ordinances), which stood against us and condemned us; he has taken it away, nailing it to the cross. 15And having disarmed the powers and authorities (the Rabbi's), he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross."-Colossians 2:14-15