His disciples understood this. They never asked Messiah if He had come to bring
some new personal salvation to individuals that asked Him into their heart.
They asked Him “Master, are You restoring the kingdom to Israel
at this time?” (Acts 1:6) The
work of Messiah was much, much bigger than any mere individual.
This is, of course, why He clearly stated (repeatedly)
that He had no intention to rid His father’s People of the Torah and the
Prophets. In fact, He came to fully exemplify them both, in human form in order
to demonstrate what a perfectly obedient Son looks like. It’s not that no other
man before Him *could not* do it. Rather, they *would not* do it. He chose to
become a suffering servant, by will and obedience.
Yeshua’s entire purpose and function was clear. We see this everywhere we look, in the accounts of Yeshua’s life. As in Matthew 15:24, He told us that He was “sent only to the lost sheep of the house of Israel.” He knew the prophecies of Jeremiah and Ezekiel. And He not only knew them, from studying the Torah His entire life, He embodied them perfectly.
So, what
about us? Will we literally learn from, and live by, we read or will we
too be guilty of being slow of heart to place our trust in what the prophets
foretold? The entire Word agrees. The New Testament Gospel must be what the
prophets foretold or it is not the Gospel. Period. There is no other. Let us
labor to be found rightly dividing the Word of Truth. Selah.
2 comments:
I would say that the Christianity that most of us have inherited exalts New Testament over the prophets. I've been told my whole Christian life that things like what Paul wrote supersedes and negates them. I've never thought this felt right and from what you've shared here this helps me to know why.
Nathan, Most all of us have inherited the same doctrine that tells us Torah was a burden no man could keep, even though that disagrees with Scripture. Study the Word my friend. Holy Spirit will guide you into truth and Torah is truth! (Psalm 119:142)
Post a Comment