How many
times have I heard people
say things like, "There are 613 Commandments in the Torah - I can't keep
them all!" (Usually followed by another misconception, such as: "The
law is a curse!")?
I will tell
you - I cannot count the times...
But I do have
to wonder: these people who think it is "impossible" to keep the
Commandments - have they ever actually read the list of
commandments? My guess is "No."
I Googled it
once and found a helpful website, Hebrew4Christians,
which lists the commandments and the corresponding scripture for each. One of
the very first things I noticed as I made my way down their list was the
overlapping of commandments. In fact, the website comments on this:
The website
goes on to comment that "some laws do not apply at to [Gentiles] at all
(for example, laws concerning Temple practices, agricultural laws, civil
laws...)" etc. By the time you cross out anything that applies to the King,
a judge... and whatever other category does not apply to you, the
arbitrary number of "613" has been significantly reduced.
I was
encouraged to read a similar comment on a Bible study website that
I follow:
The common refrain ... is “There are 613 laws, we
can’t possibly keep them all!” This is pretty much always spoken by someone who
has never taken the time to read Leviticus and know that no one is asking us to
obey all 613 laws. Are you a Levitical priest? Are you a farmer? Are
you a woman? Are you a man? Are you a judge? Do you live in Jerusalem? Is there
an earthly temple right now? If you answered “no” to any one
of these questions then a large portion of those 613 don’t even apply
to you. Answer “no” to more than one? Even fewer.
Our duty can be summed up in what is
known as the Ten Commandments. If we set our hearts to follow those
and to remain in His word, seeking His guidance on our lives, all other
commandments (laws) that apply to us will naturally follow suit.
In contrast, there are so many laws in the United
States that they do not even have a count of them but estimates are that they
exceed 25,000. Most folks I know will proudly state that they are a law abiding
citizen of the United States.
And that’s
when the real reasons come out for why people don’t want to obey God: We feel we
are being “inconvenienced” when it comes to giving up things we want to
do, and can’t understand why God won’t let us do things like eat bacon or spare
ribs, go to a baseball game on Saturday, and other seemingly “harmless” things
that everyone else is doing, and they’re fine! So why shouldn’t I? God is not
that mean, God doesn’t care about such trivia; after all “Jesus Paid It All”
and it’s now all about Grace, Grace, Grace. I mean, "Jesus nailed all that
to the cross, right?"
Again - have
these same people actually read their Bibles? And again, my guess is:
"No." Because if they did, they would have read in Colossians 2:13-14:
When you were dead in your trespasses and in the
uncircumcision of your sinful nature, God made you alive with Christ. He
forgave us all our trespasses, having canceled the debt ascribed to
us in the decrees that stood against us. He took it away, nailing it to
the cross!
This is the
verse so many people quote, thinking that it means "Jesus nailed 'the
Torah' to the cross." But if you go back and read it again with fresh
eyes, not influenced by all the so-called doctrine you have heard all these
years, you can see for yourself that Jesus nailed our DEBT to the cross. It
simply does not mean the same thing!
Back in 2016, I posted about wearing tzitzit... in which I mused:
I don't need a "logical" reason. I need to do it because He asked me to.
In my mind, the same logic applies to our basic obedience to God's instructions for living a godly life. Because that is exactly what "The Law" is - God's instruction manual. It's not a set of arbitrary rules set down by a "mean God;" instead, they are principles to live by that will bring us blessing. That is what He promised, and that is what I believe is true.
If you don't agree with me, see for yourself what Jesus said about it.
(... and you may have noticed, I have already expounded on this same topic previously... but it keeps coming up!)