Inseparable: Commandments Of God And Faith In Yeshua
This teaching reflects on conversations with Christians who struggle to see Torah (God’s instruction) and faith in Yeshua as inseparable, arguing that this tension stems from later church theology detached from its Hebrew roots rather than from Scripture itself. By examining Moses’ promise of a prophet like himself, the biblical definition of a false prophet, Yeshua’s own words about Torah, the apostolic instructions in Acts, and the language of commandments (entolē) in the New Testament, the case is made that Yeshua neither abolished Torah nor taught against it, but rightly interpreted, embodied, and taught it. From a first-century Jewish framework, fulfilling Torah meant living it out faithfully, not ending it, and the apostles continued this expectation for both Jews and Gentiles as part of one covenantal walk. Ultimately, Scripture consistently presents God’s commandments and faith in Yeshua as united realities, and the resistance to this idea often arises not from the text itself, but from the discomfort of confronting long-held theological assumptions that call for real change in how one lives and obeys.
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