Name:
Location: Springfield, Missouri, United States

I am a Master of Divinity student with a love-nay, obsession-for writing and theology. I write science fiction based on biblical stories and theology, and I love to sit and muse on theologial points and life in general in writing. I have often wished I had a way to communicate these musings to people who enjoy the same sort of thing; thus a blog.

Tuesday, January 23, 2007

The Law is holy, righteous, and good?

I learned something fascinating about the Law a day or two ago. Galatians 3:23-29 talks about people under the Law being like children and only coming to maturity in Christ, and verse 24 says, “So the law was put in charge of us until Christ came that we might be justified by faith.” In Greek the bit about the law being put in charge of us actually says, “The law was our paidagogos.” A Greek or Roman paidagogos was a slave assigned to take care of his master’s son. He made sure the child behaved and was his bodyguard and guide in proper behavior, and the term eventually came to mean teacher—pedagogue. To be a paidagogos was to care for and teach someone by leading, guiding, and disciplining him until he was old enough to do it for himself.

Christians have this tendency to misconstrue the Old Testament Law in several ways. We can see it as a harsh, cruel taskmaster to be servilely obeyed in everything in an attempt to get God’s good will, an attitude that raises the Law from its proper place as God’s tool for guidance and maturation to a god in itself that keeps people as immature children instead of grown and mature adults, able to guide themselves in right living. Or we can see it as this evil thing that enslaved the poor Israelites until Jesus came to show them how they really ought to live in freedom like we do, rather than, as before, that useful servant God gave for our maturation which eventually serves its excellent purpose and is no longer needed because we know how to live as He desires. It would be slavery to try to go back to the Law’s domination as adults because that is not its Proper Job, so to speak. The Law was good. It taught right from wrong and guided people along good paths. But as it would be absurd for adults to stay under the absolute rule of their parents or preschool teachers or nannies, it would be absurd to stay under the Law when we have the maturity of Christ and the life of the Spirit.

If all people lived exactly as God desires, solely to honor Him and love one another, I doubt there’d be any need for human rules and laws at all because people would live in such a way as to make them null and void. Laws are specific instances that illustrate finite points about a proper way to live for people who aren’t mature or godly enough to understand the deeper meaning behind them. For instance, The Commandment “Thou shalt not kill” and the American laws prohibiting specific methods of killing are not necessary to me because I comprehend God’s love for humanity and the value He has placed on human life. It would be absurd for someone to come to my house and harshly demand that I not kill anyone or preach hellfire and brimstone down on me if I break that commandment or put guilt trips on me for not thinking about it all the time and worrying that I might accidentally break it. I don’t have to go around in mortal fear of the punishment promised by the Commandment. My whole philosophy in life precludes it. I live it naturally, as part of who I am. I have become mature in that respect. And that is the difference between life under the rule of the Law and life under the rule of the Spirit.

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3 Comments:

Blogger Maggi said...

Yes, his job that moved us to the capital.

Yay, a new post, now I'm going to read it! Hehe!

12:04 AM, January 24, 2007  
Blogger Maggi said...

I've always seen the Law as God's plan and foreshadowing of salvation. Jesus' death and resurrection were just the fulfilling of the Law. Kinda like going to elementary school isn't just learning to read and write and do math, but prepares people to work, to plan, to be productive. You don't go to elementary school when you're 25, but you apply skills and principles you learned from that time.

That's not the illustration I was thinking of originally, but my brain is has gone away to become my baby's brain and refuses to work for me anymore.

12:09 AM, January 24, 2007  
Anonymous Paul said...

Hi there---I found your blog a few months ago and really like it. Just dropped in to catch up and came across this post. Very interesting. I actually think there's more to the term paidagogos.

check out the rendering of the Greek in the NIV: Gal 3:23-25--"23Before this faith came, we were held prisoners by the law, locked up until faith should be revealed. 24So the law was put in charge to lead us to Christ[a] that we might be justified by faith. 25Now that faith has come, we are no longer under the supervision of the law."

This version seems to indicate a more nudging, pointing, leading role of the paidagogos...As if to say, God gave the law to show us something, to expose something, to point out something. Namely, our need for a savior, Christ!

This translation of the passage echos the same teaching about the law found in other places in Scripture:
-->Romans 3:20 "...no one will be declared righteous in his sight by observing the law; rather, through the law we become conscious of sin."
-->Romans 7:7 "Is the law sin? Certainly not! Indeed I would not have known what sin was except through the law. For I would not have known what coveting really was if the law had not said, "Do not covet.""
-->Romans 7:13 "so that through the commandment sin might become utterly sinful. "

So, I'd add to this great discussion by saying that the purpose of the law was to drive the Israelites to cry out to God to save them. Looking into the pure law of God is like a mirror directed at our soul. We should see our utter inability to keep God's perfect holy standard and run to the city of refuge(Christ!) to be saved from his wrath against our sin.

Check out www.livingwaters.com for a great explanation of the proper use of God's law in evangelism today. Ray Comfort and Kirk Cameron are really on to something there. Fantastic stuff.

Keep blogging! We love to read! Blessings to you!

2:57 PM, May 27, 2009  

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