Rom 7:12 So then, the law is holy, and the commandment is holy, righteous and good.
Since I have begun a path of eclectic spirituality, I have gained a renewed
respect for the law. While I am primarily a Jesus follower, the reason being, it was the belief system that I was born in and raised in, and consequently I
developed a relationship with Jesus that is unique and special. However,
early on in my life I was quite certain that Christianity as I was taught and
understood it was not correct. It was a feeling and impossible to prove.
I was taught a legal constitutional reading of scripture. I was taught that
the scripture was the Word of God, and it was to be the map and formula for
living. Further, beyond this, it was infallible and inerrant and contained the
absolute and complete truth. This led to the concept that it was necessary to
fulfill and obey the law perfectly at all times. However, it was also taught
that one could not fulfill and obey the law perfectly and that Jesus did that
for us. So, if we believed that about Jesus, we would receive his righteousness
as a gift, and the Holy Spirit would help us live the law and when we did not, we
could confess our sin and God would forgive us for the sake of Jesus. The
bottom line was that the law was necessary to please God and gain his love and
acceptance. I was also taught that breaking God’s law was much more serious
than breaking the law of the city, state, or country; it could mean that I
would separate myself from God. This is one of the sources of toxicity and trauma
that causes spiritual abuse.
This is why I am certain that the law is not the problem with legalism. If
one views the law as the perfect guide for loving others, and not an instrument
that can separate us from acceptance of God and God’s love, it does not have to
be an instrument of guilt and shame. Now, when I refer to the law, I am
speaking of the Ten Words, and not the entire Torah. I personally do not see
value in many of the 613 of Judaism. They were geared toward an archaic
culture. There is absolutely no value in instructions for selling one’s
daughter as a sex slave as an example. There is absolutely nothing wrong with Jesus’s
amplification of the law in the Sermon on the Mount, and it too has value as a
guide for loving one another.
After all, the Ten Commandments and Jesus teachings are akin to the
eightfold path of Buddhism. Right understanding, right intent, right speech,
right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, and right concentration
as they are explained and understood are beneficial as long as they do not
become a dogma or doctrine that establishes one’s acceptability to Source or if
not followed entirely always, a reason for punishment and separation from
source.
It is the dogma and doctrine that is the culprit of legalism. The Buddha
warned against making the eightfold path a dogma, and it is dogma and doctrine
that causes the toxicity of legalism. The freedom from legalism resides in right
understanding. It is understanding the teaching of Jesus to be saying that the
Father-Mother, Source already accepts, forgives, and does not keep a record of
wrongs. It is favor and acceptance that brings peace, and the presence of peace
with the Source, produces love for the source and one another, and from this
place of right understanding, laws become a guide for developing into a loving
individual that emulates the characteristics of the divine as described by Paul
in the First Letter to the Corinthians chapter 13. If the source is love, then
it is a description of the characteristics of the divine.
One cannot have right understanding without the awareness of the indwelling
divine nature in all. One can use the indwelling divine nature to discern that
which is aligned with the definition of love and the fruit of the spirit, but
even then, it must be a guide and not a mandate. When it becomes a mandate it
becomes toxic legalism.
1 comment:
Spot on, brother Joe!
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