Thursday, March 22, 2018

The Law of Greatest Love: First and Foremost

"The LORD our God made a covenant with us in Horeb. The LORD made not this covenant with our fathers, but with us, even us, who are all of us here alive this day. The LORD talked with you face to face in the mount out of the midst of the fire...saying, I am the LORD thy God, which brought thee out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage." (Deuteronomy 5:2-6)

First and Foremost

Before God delivers any of the Ten Commandments to Israel, He establishes the basis of this Law. He rehearses for Israel what God has brought them through; what He has done among them. This is highly significant as we try to understand the nature of God's Law and our relationship to it. 

The Law of Moses is Gracious

A common misconception in large portions of evangelicalism is the idea that God's Law, specifically the Ten Commandments, are given through Moses as a list of commandments that Israel must keep in order to have a relationship with God. We view the Law given through Moses the same way we might view the Law given to Adam. The Westminster Confession says, "God gave to Adam a law, as a covenant of works, by which He bound him and all his posterity, to personal, entire, exact, and perpetual obedience, promised life upon the fulfilling, and threatened death upon the breach of it, and endued him with power and ability to keep it." (WCF 19.1) In other words, when Adam received commandment from God, he received it with the promise of life for obedience and the threat of death for disobedience. Adam disobeyed God, broke the Law, and here we are. 

We are mistaken if we think that the Law given through Moses functions the same way. To lump Moses in with the same covenant of works that Adam was under is mistaken. The reason this is so important is that, as Christians today, if we ask the question, "Does a Christian need to keep the Ten Commandments?" the answer is YES! But we automatically import this idea that the need is relative to being made right with God. So if I asked a random person in an evangelical church, "Do Christians need to keep the Ten Commandments?" their answer would probably be something like, "No. We are justified by faith alone, not by keeping the Ten Commandments. Keeping the Ten Commandments is legalism." We hear the question about Christians keeping the Ten Commandments, and we automatically assume that we are asking, "Do Christians need to keep the Ten Commandments in order to be justified before God?" The answer to that question is an adamant NO. But that is a different question than, "Do Christians need to keep the Ten Commandments?"

The Significance of Order

Consider what God does in giving the Ten Commandments. First, He establishes and rehearses the history of His relationship with Israel. He emphasizes two things in this preamble to the Ten Commandments: 

1. His enduring, personal covenant with Israel ("The LORD made not this covenant with our fathers, but with us, even us, who are all of us here alive this day. The LORD talked with you face to face in the mount out of the midst of the fire" 

2. His salvation and deliverance that He has already provided for them ("I am the LORD thy God, which brought thee out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage.")

Only after God has established and rehearsed His relationship with Israel does He then give them the Ten Commandments. He 

So another way to say it in contemporary "Christianese" is that God gives the Law to His people, because they have a personal relationship with Him through Jesus. God doesn't give His Law to Israel so that they can earn His love, but because they have already graciously received His love. The Law instructs them in how to live in this loving relationship with God. He already has a personal relationship with them. He has already accomplished their deliverance from Egypt. And, in light of this grace He has already given Israel, He then gives them the Law as a gift, not a curse.
+ Blessings in Christ +