RickD wrote:Byblos wrote:
And of course I agree with all of that. It's just that none of it says that the law is imperfect but points to our inability to be justified by it.
Byblos,
Maybe there's a disagreement between you and me on what "perfect" means in this instance. The law cannot justify anyone. Obeying the law cannot save anyone. The law is incomplete in at least that regard. Therefore it's not perfect. The law was perfect in as much as it was perfect for Israel to be set apart from the other nations. The law is perfect in pointing all to Christ.
If the law was perfect(could save anyone) then there's no need for Christ. So by saying the law is perfect(is completely able to save), then it's the same as saying the cross of Christ is unnecessary.
Yes, so far as salvation is concerned the law is death. It is perfect to do the job of destroying sin, but not in saving the poor sinner.
The presence of God upholds the universe, but if the universe gets some sort of rot in it, His presence will destroy the rot. But with the intervention of the plan of salvation, the rot in our case can be fixed without annihilating the sinner.
So the law is perfect on its own, and only useful if Christ identifies Himself with sinners, so that they can live in the presence of God without being destroyed by His brightness. It remains the standard of God's character and means of rule, but only the Living Christ can make that law part of His recreation of our hearts. "I will write my laws into their hearts."
The law condemns a heart of stone, but Love turns the heart to flesh, fulfilling the demands of the law.
While the stone tablets describe the outer limits and boundaries of love by negatives - "thou shalt not" - the spirituality of the law is a heart that does not want to kill, steal, cheat, etc. Not only that, but the heart of Christ is more than "not stealing," it fulfills the spirituality of the law which says "You will not steal, in fact, you are going to be really generous as well."
So the law defines the platform for the generous super abundant overrunning Love of God. That's why the Psalmist says "the law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul."
'Not stealing" is not a conversion proper, being generous is. Only the spiritual value of the law counts as Jesus pointed out to the Jews by saying "even by hating someone you have killed."
That's what the new covenant is "a new and better way" than the letter of the law.