Cecil,
I have some questions for you. You said:
Of those which Moses wrote out, all are indeed moral. God didn't tell him to write no immoral stuff. However they are in a different class.
How does that square with this other statement of yours earlier in that same post?
Not as a moral law (10 Commandments, spoken by God from Sanai), fer sure.
Did not Moses write/record the entire law code in Scripture? As you say, he could not write any immoral stuff. So if that is the case who decides with authority which laws are moral laws and which ones are ceremonial and thus not morality issues? Is it not true that if someone broke a ceremonial law that was indeed also a violation of the law and thus immoral? I am unclear as to how you can claim or support an idea that purposeful disobedience to any law no matter what it is classed as would be anything but a moral violation or a breach of duty and order before a holy and righteous God. For example, was there not a penalty imposed for failing to offer the right sacrifices and even in the right place at the right times (see Leviticus 17:4, & 8-9)? Was it not true that failing to even obey some ceremonial laws like washing would result in death (Exodus 30:20)?
I'm not wanting to derail this thread into a discussion on the law but there is a point I have that will go back to the original point of this thread after I figure out how to figure your comments into the whole. I'm confused as to your dual statements and your division of the law into moral and non-moral as ceremonial while there are still penalties associated with each of the laws, even the ones you call moral and the others that would I guess fall into your ceremonial classification. (?)
If you feel better about it we can move this over to the debate thread so it is not dangerous to the original intent of this post. Either way is fine as I'm not out to make a scene over these points with you but I sure am confused as to how your comments can all align and fit harmoniously and then even apply back to the original idea being discussed here.
**Special note: if you are reading this and you're not Cecil how about let him answer these questions as I do not want to get too far off into a debate over this and not be able to get back to the original thread subject; there is a related point from this but before I add that I'd like to get Cecil's clarification on his own position before moving along.**
Maybe even along that vein is a more proper question: how many law classifications do you see in the Bible? I know you have referenced the moral law, the ceremonial law, the dietary law, and natural law.
You also say that a "should" is not the same as a "shall." Where is that supported in the Hebrew terms? For example in Exodus 35:1 we find the "should" that translates the Hebrew term asah which parsed is in the Qal Infinitive construct (an active voice verb). This is the verb after the idea of God "commanding" which is from the tsvah which when parsed is in the Piel perfect tense and means a command that is to be obeyed. Yet too even in what would be ceremonial sacrificial laws we see that the Hebrew term shall is only such by its verbal ending. Many many words are translated with the verb shall added to the root: For example: Exodus 30:9 is alah, and it is attached to a sacrificial ceremonial law. Also "rachats" in Exodus 30:20 is another verb with the shall added to the root and applied to the law of washing lest they die for not doing so. But that too was a ceremonial aspect so would that not in your theology mean that even ceremonial shoulds and shalls are still binding?
I know you have said that ceremonial law can change but not God's moral law. But where do you find that disobedience to ceremonial law was still not considered immoral? The penalty for a violation of not washing, a ceremonial aspect, was indeed enough for one to die over. In your words you say a violation of some laws, like ceremonial (?) maybe as you class them, is not as serious as a moral classification but does not that conflict with the overall data of terms, even in regard to the shall connected to the Exodus 30:20 washing law? In your words it seems like yoyu're saying some laws, like ceremonial shoulds are not as important as moral shalls. Or in your words:
it wasn't a life or death issue like having sex with your favorite goat
How do you justify internally from the Bible the various classifications of laws into moral, civil, and ceremonial and then claim that one class is moral yet disobedience to let's say a ceremonial is not also an immoral act? The way it looks to me a command of God is a command of God. A should or a shall is a law as both imply a moral obligation or principle of ought on the ones it is spoken to and thus where do you find room to divide the two consistently? If you are saying "shall"s apply to all moral laws which carry the death penalty for violation then how would that square with the fact we have "shalls" connected with ceremonial laws that you seem to be saying do not carry the same weight of a death penalty?
I guess I am sitting here hoping you should enlighten me but hoping you shall not if you're right that shalls always carry the high penalty of a moral violation like death. Or maybe it does not matter either way and whether you should and do or shall and will it all boils down to the same :shock: :? Just kiddin there. But I am seriously curious as to how you harmonize all of that consistently.