So Many Laws

Pretty Mosaic with Flowered Heart in the Middle
Genesis 18:19a has The Lord talking to the angels about Abraham and says, “For I know him, that he will command his children and his household after him, and they shall keep the way of the LORD, to do justice and judgment.” (Complete Jewish Bible translation.)
The first time I read this Scripture, my only thought was, “Can God say this about me?” How blessed to have God testify to the angels that He has found a subject He knows well enough to know the subject’s future holds not only personal lawfulness but also that the subject will teach lawfulness to others.
Today, my husband and I were in our Torah studies in Leviticus. (We’re a bit behind in the actual portion we should be reading, but we don’t want to skip around and miss valuable information.) For a few weeks now, we’ve been reading about the building of the wilderness tabernacle (also called The Tabernacle of Testimony). As I was listening to my husband read the words about all the laws concerning the tabernacle, sacrifices, offerings, etc., I remembered the words I had read earlier from Genesis. Then, something hit me; these laws came well after God called Abraham “one who would keep the Way of The Lord” (aka law keeper). And then I questioned in my mind, “I wonder what ways and laws of God Abraham was keeping?” I understood, even as I asked, that Abraham was not keeping specific laws, but he was keeping a lawful heart.
So, here we are in our current society looking to create law after law after law. Now (in April 2013), the focus is on gun laws and whether they violate our country’s foundational Constitution. But the gun laws, like the many other laws constantly in motion or discussion these days, are just a thin bandage. They will not create the answer so many hope they will because they do not fix the real problem: they do not fix what causes the need for laws in the first place—a need that comes from a general spirit of lawlessness.
So, Abraham not only had a lawful heart, but even before there was a law given, God knew he would teach those of his household to keep the way (law) of God. Already, he was teaching others to have a lawful heart and to yield to the instruction of God from pure obedience. Later in Scripture, we will read how it was necessary to create a priesthood and over 600 Levitical laws to direct people because their hearts had become lawless. As many have noted about these laws, and even several laws of our land now, they come with a big dose of bondage.
However, just imagine if we all strived to keep in our hearts the laws of yielding to a Higher Authority. We would automatically think of others before ourselves. We would not require instruction to not lie, not steal, not cheat, not murder, etc. We would not purposely do things to others that we would not want others doing to us. And if everyone lived that way, we would not need any other laws either from God or from man.
There is freedom in having a lawful heart because it releases us from falling under the bondage and condemnation of many external laws. Though we will not be perfect until we get to Heaven, just as King David was not perfect and failed God multiple times, we can be called a people after God’s own heart. In that way, each of us will not only be able to say we know Him, but He can testify to the angels, “I know that one!”
What a pretty background pattern, Crystal! 🙂
I look forward to the coming of Christ for this among other reasons; that He will teach us again to have lawful hearts, that we might live in peace with our neighbors on every side.
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Wow, that’s great thought for looking forward to His return. Learning to have lawful hearts right from Him without the chaos of distraction around us sounds great to me.
Oh, and thanks for the compliment to the background. I’m glad you like it.
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Reading this, I immediately thought of Jeremiah 33 (Hebrews 8 and 10): “The day will come…when I will make a new covenant with the people of Israel and Judah…I will put my laws in their minds so they understand them, and I will write them on their hearts so they will obey them. I will be their God, and they will be my people. And they will not need to teach their neighbors, nor will they need to teach their family…For everyone, from the least to the greatest, will already know me.”
And (the writer of Hebrews tells us) Christ has made this absolutely possible for those who believe – both the Jew and the Gentile. Unfortunately, we’re not quite to the point, as a society, where we can just quit worrying about sharing God’s Word with our neighbors. But that day IS coming! Praise God! 🙂
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I love how this post is inspiring people to think of a day when lawful-mindedness will be the norm. And I love that Scripture from Jeremiah. It also makes me think of the Scripture in Jeremiah 9:25-26 which can be paraphrased to say, “There will come a day when I will destroy the circumcision with the uncircumcision because neither are circumcised in heart.” It’s got a lot more words in it than that, but the meaning is quite clear. God definitely looks more on the heart than on the outside–and law keeping with an untrue heart is definitely an outside thing. Thanks for stopping by to comment.
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[…] I went another almost 4 months before posting again. That post on April 21st, 2013 called “So Many Laws” is about a lawful heart versus a lawless heart and how lawlessness it was actually creates […]
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