by jimwalton » Thu Mar 22, 2018 1:55 pm
> A common Christian excuse for the uncivilized or savage Mosaic Laws is that God was utilizing progressive revelation in an attempt to gradually civilize the Israelites.
This is incorrect. I don't know where you got this, so possibly your whole case is resting on a faulty foundation.
The Torah is contingent on the tabernacle and was designed to prevent a repeat of the fall, which was when access to God's presence was lost. It is also to provide a means for Israel to survive in such close proximity to the intrinsically dangerous presence of YHWH.
In Israel, the Torah contained in both ritual and societal responsibilities, all of which were designed to define cosmic order and to give shape to holiness. As such, the Torah gave direction concerning how to maintain access to God's presence and to the relationship that God's presence facilitates, in addition too how to preserve his favor so that God's identity will be well reflected by the people. Torah can therefore be seen as the foundation for YHWH's presence because it gave Israelites guidelines for living in the presence of a holy God.
As I said, the Torah was contingent on the temple and not the other way around. It was designed for the temple venue and cannot be extrapolated to a universal context outside the temple. The Torah was incumbent on each Israelite because, in theory, an individual's neglect or violation of the Torah could potentially result in the removal of God's presence from his people. In this sense, each person had a role in maintaining God's presence, and God's presence brought order to the cosmos and to Israel. Blood rituals such as those that were part of the sin and guilt offerings were designed to cleanse sacred space from impurity that, if left to build up, could result in YHWH's departure or danger to the community.
Therefore the ancient law codes are generally not legislation, but rather they are circumscribing the nature of cosmic order, particularly with regard to justice in society. These legal lists are not provided so that people will conform their behavior to them, but so that scholars, elders, judges, and magistrates might become informed in the wisdom/knowledge they are called to exercise. When justice is maintained in society, the resulting order brings legitimation to the kinds and order in the cosmos (including society as well as nature), which God desired. The result of all this is that society will conform to the decrees of God that are used to maintain order. This creates an ordered society that conforms to their perceptions of morality. The texts do not construct morality, however, they operate according to the moral sense the society already has.
The Torah was to show people how to live in God's presence. It was a temporary measure—God wanted to tell His people that they should have certain attitudes. He did that by commanding actions (the law) with the idea that they would see the attitudes behind them. They failed. Jesus, on the other hand, preached the attitudes (Matthew 5) but more importantly lived an example of the proper attitudes (Philippians 2.5-8) as well as the proper actions (John 8.46), thus accomplishing what the law failed to accomplish.
The Torah loses its primary significance if there is no abiding presence of God, which is the main reason the NT views the law as having lost its role after Pentecost. After all, once the HS descended, God's presence dwelled in his people, who became the temple, rather than in a geographical location (1 Cor. 3.16; 6.19; 2 Cor. 6.16).
> A common Christian excuse for the uncivilized or savage Mosaic Laws is that God was utilizing progressive revelation in an attempt to gradually civilize the Israelites.
This is incorrect. I don't know where you got this, so possibly your whole case is resting on a faulty foundation.
The Torah is contingent on the tabernacle and was designed to prevent a repeat of the fall, which was when access to God's presence was lost. It is also to provide a means for Israel to survive in such close proximity to the intrinsically dangerous presence of YHWH.
In Israel, the Torah contained in both ritual and societal responsibilities, all of which were designed to define cosmic order and to give shape to holiness. As such, the Torah gave direction concerning how to maintain access to God's presence and to the relationship that God's presence facilitates, in addition too how to preserve his favor so that God's identity will be well reflected by the people. Torah can therefore be seen as the foundation for YHWH's presence because it gave Israelites guidelines for living in the presence of a holy God.
As I said, the Torah was contingent on the temple and not the other way around. It was designed for the temple venue and cannot be extrapolated to a universal context outside the temple. The Torah was incumbent on each Israelite because, in theory, an individual's neglect or violation of the Torah could potentially result in the removal of God's presence from his people. In this sense, each person had a role in maintaining God's presence, and God's presence brought order to the cosmos and to Israel. Blood rituals such as those that were part of the sin and guilt offerings were designed to cleanse sacred space from impurity that, if left to build up, could result in YHWH's departure or danger to the community.
Therefore the ancient law codes are generally not legislation, but rather they are circumscribing the nature of cosmic order, particularly with regard to justice in society. These legal lists are not provided so that people will conform their behavior to them, but so that scholars, elders, judges, and magistrates might become informed in the wisdom/knowledge they are called to exercise. When justice is maintained in society, the resulting order brings legitimation to the kinds and order in the cosmos (including society as well as nature), which God desired. The result of all this is that society will conform to the decrees of God that are used to maintain order. This creates an ordered society that conforms to their perceptions of morality. The texts do not construct morality, however, they operate according to the moral sense the society already has.
The Torah was to show people how to live in God's presence. It was a temporary measure—God wanted to tell His people that they should have certain attitudes. He did that by commanding actions (the law) with the idea that they would see the attitudes behind them. They failed. Jesus, on the other hand, preached the attitudes (Matthew 5) but more importantly lived an example of the proper attitudes (Philippians 2.5-8) as well as the proper actions (John 8.46), thus accomplishing what the law failed to accomplish.
The Torah loses its primary significance if there is no abiding presence of God, which is the main reason the NT views the law as having lost its role after Pentecost. After all, once the HS descended, God's presence dwelled in his people, who became the temple, rather than in a geographical location (1 Cor. 3.16; 6.19; 2 Cor. 6.16).