xxxalexxx(sub female) |
4 years ago •
Apr 20, 2020
4 years ago •
Apr 20, 2020
xxxalexxx(sub female) • Apr 20, 2020
LordofPain56 wrote: Shiro wrote: Collosians 2:13-14 Having canceled the written code, with its regulations, that was against us and that stood opposed to us; he took it away, nailing it to the cross.
I've read the entire bible under prayer that I would understand. There's a lot of bullshit interpolations in the bible. It actually states here through Colossians that the Ten Commandments are null and void. Actually, the Ten Commandments are not void and never will be, as Jesus himself said "not one jot or tittle of the Law shall pass away before the end of the world". Rather, it is the Levitical ceremonial rituals and ordinations, which was written by Moses and laid beside the Arc of the Covenant that ARE null and void (because Jesus himself had fulfilled those laws by His own work in the Sanctuary. Please do not think the Ten Commandments are void. We will all be judged by the Lord in the end by our observance of all the Ten Commandments. actually the Levitical laws are not null and void either. It says in Mathew 5:17, "Don't think that I came to destroy the law or the. prophets. I didn't come to destroy, but to fulfill." there is a distinct difference in abolishing and fulfilling. in fact, fulfilling means that Jesus participates in it himself. why would he participate in something and then say its wrong to do. if it was wrong wrong to do that would make it a sin, and if Jesus is sinless then that would have to make the leviticals laws still okay to do. he participated in passive, he didn't create it. same thing with Purim, rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, and Sukkot. Jesus was Jewish and he lived in a Jewish way. the only thing ever taken away is sacrificing animals because he specifically says that he is the sacrificial lamb for all and you can not get more obvious to that. so no, they are not null and void either. |
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