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THE
TWO LAWS
BY BROTHER ANDREWS
"THERE is but one God, the Father, of whom are all things."
1Cor.8:6. From him all beings derive their existence. He who creates and upholds has
certainly the right to govern and control. Hence it is that he is represented in the
Scriptures as the one Lawgiver, who is able to save and to destroy. James 4:12. Existence
being derived from the benevolence of the Creator, all intelligent creatures are amenable
to his just government. Of all the creatures made by God to inhabit the earth, man alone
is capable of learning the distinction of right and wrong, and he alone is placed under
the control of moral law. Deriving his existence from a Being of infinite purity, he was
himself once innocent, pure, and upright. He was the creature and the loyal subject of
God, and God was the author of his existence, and his rightful Sovereign. But God did not
anything toward man the position of saviour and redeemer; for man needed not pardon.
As a creature owing all to God, the author of his existence, it is self-evident that he
was under the highest obligation to love him with all his heart. The existence of other
human beings originates a second great obligation; viz., to love our neighbors as
ourselves. This precept is also one of self-evident obligation; for others are equally the
creatures of God with ourselves, and have the same right that we also have. These two
precepts are the sum of all moral law. And they grow out of the fact that we owe all to
God, and that others are the creatures of God as well as ourselves.
In rendering obedience to the first of these two precepts, man could have no other god
before the Lord; nor could he worship idols; neither could he speak the name of God in an
irreverent manner; nor could he neglect the hallowed rest-day of the Lord, which was set
apart at creation in memory of the Creator's rest.
Equally evident is it that our duty toward our fellow-men comprehends our duty to our
parents, and the strictest regard to the life, chastity, property, character, and
interests, of others.
The moral law thus divided into two parts, and drawn out and expressed in ten precepts, is
of necessity unchangeable in its character. Its existence grows out of immutable relations
which man sustains toward God and toward his fellow-man. It is God's great standard of
right, and after man's rebellion, the great test by which sin is shown.
Where shall we look for the record of such a moral code as we have noticed? In the
earliest possible place in the Bible, certainly. And yet the book of Genesis contains no
moral code whatever. How can this mystery be explained? A few facts will remove the
difficulty. The book of Genesis was not written until about 2500 years after the creation.
As it was written long after the patriarchs were dead, it could not have been a rule of
life for them. It is a brief record of events that occurred during that period, and
contains several allusions to an existing moral code. But the book of Exodus, which brings
the narrative down to the author's own time, introduces this code under circumstances of
the greatest solemnity. In this book is found the law of God as given by himself in
person, and written with his own finger on stone. Indeed, the evidence indicates that no
part of the Bible was written until after the ten commandments had been spoken and written
by God, and consequently that code is the earliest writing in existence.
Such was the origin of the moral law, and such the character of its precepts. Its
proclamation by God himself, prior to his causing any part of the Bible to be written,
sufficiently attests the estimate which he placed upon it. From its very nature, it exists
as early as the principles of morality; indeed, it is nothing but those principles
expressed or written out. These principles do not owe their existence to the fall of man,
but to relations which existed prior to the fall.
But there is a system of laws that does owe its origin to sin; a system that could have
had no existence had not man become a transgressor. The violation of moral law was that
which gave existence to the law of rites and ceremonies, the shadow of good things to
come. There could be no sacrifices for sin until man became a sinner. In Eden, there could
be no types and shadows pointing forward to future redemption through the death of Christ;
for man in his uprightness needed no such redemption. Nor did God place upon man before
his fall the obligation of carnal ordinances, which look forward to the time of
reformation; for man was innocent and free from guile. That it was the violation of moral
law that caused the fall of man, may be seen at a glance. The motive set before Eve by
Satan was that they should become as gods if they ate of that tree, Gen.3; and as Adam was
not deceived (1Tim.2:13), it is evident that he chose to follow his wife rather than to
obey the Lord; an open violation of the first commandment in each case.
When man had thus become a sinner, and God had promised the means of his redemption, a
second relation toward God was brought into existence. Man was a sinner, needing
forgiveness; and God was a saviour, offering pardon. It is plain, therefore, that the
typical law, pointing forward to redemption through Christ, owes its origin to man's
rebellion, and to God's infinite benevolence. If man had not sinned, he would have needed
no types of future redemption; and if God had not determined to give his Son to die, he
would have instituted no typical system pointing forward to that great event. The
existence of such a code, therefore, is in consequence of sin, its precepts are of a
ceremonial nature, and its duration is necessarily limited by the great offering that
could take away sin. From the fall of Adam till the time of Moses, the typical system was
gradually developed and matured; and from Moses' time until the death of our Lord, it
existed as the shadow of good things to come.
At Mount Sinai, as we have seen, God proclaimed the moral law, speaking it with his own
voice, and writing it with his own finger. By his direction, the two tables on which the
law was written were placed in the ark of the covenant, which was made on purpose to
receive it. Ex.25:10-22; Deut.10:1-5. And this ark, containing the law of God, was placed
in the second apartment of the earthly sanctuary -the most holy place. Ex.40; Heb.9. The
top of the ark was called the mercy-seat, because that man who had broken the law
contained in the ark beneath the mercy-seat could find pardon by the sprinkling of the
blood of atonement upon this place. The whole system of ceremonial law was ordained to
enable man to approach again to this broken law, and to typify the restitution of the
pardoned to their inheritance, and the destruction of the impenitent.
The law within the ark was that which demanded an atonement; the ceremonial law, which
ordained the Levitical priesthood and the sacrifices for sin, was that which taught men
how the atonement could be made. The broken law was beneath the mercy-seat; the blood of
sin-offering was sprinkled upon its top, and the pardon was extended to the penitent
sinner. There was actual sin, and hence a real law which man had broken; but there was not
a real atonement, and hence the need of the great antitype of the Levitical sacrifices.
The real atonement, when it is made, must relate to the law respecting which an atonement
had been shadowed forth. In other words, the shadowy atonement related to that law which
was shut up in the ark, indicating that a real atonement was demanded by the law. It is
necessary that the law which demands atonement in order that its transgressor may be
spared, should itself be perfect, else the fault would in part, at least, rest on the
Lawgiver, and not wholly with the sinner. Hence the atonement, when made, does not take
away the broken law; for that is perfect, but is expressly designed to take away the guilt
of the transgressor.
In the New Testament we find the great antitype of all the offerings and sacrifices - the
real atonement, as contrasted with the Levitical one. The death of our Lord Jesus Christ,
as the great sacrifice for sin, was the antitype of all the Levitical sacrifices. The
priesthood of our Lord Jesus Christ in the heavenly sanctuary is the great antitype of the
Levitical priesthood. Heb.8. The heavenly sanctuary itself is the great original after
which the earthly one was patterned. Heb.9:23; Ex.25:6,9. And the ark of God's testament
in the temple in Heaven, Rev.11:19, contains the great original of this law. And thus we
see under the new dispensation a real atonement, instead of a shadowy one; a High Priest
who needs not to offer for himself; a sacrifice which can avail before God; and that law,
which was broken by man, magnified and made honorable at the same time that God pardons
the penitent sinner.
We shall find the New Testament to abound with references to the essential difference
between these two codes, and that the distinction in the New Testament is made as clear
and obvious as it is made by the facts already noticed in the Old Testament.
Thus the one code is termed "the law of a carnal commandment," Heb.7:16; and of
the other, it is affirmed, "We know that the law is spiritual." Rom.7:14. The
one code is termed "the handwriting of ordinances," "which was contrary to
us," and which was nailed to the cross and taken out of the way, Col.2:14; the other
code is "the royal law," which James affirms that it is a sin to transgress.
Chap.2:8-12.
The first is a code of which "there was made of necessity a change," Heb.7:12;
the second is that law of which Christ says, "Till heaven and earth pass; one jot or
one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law till all be fulfilled." Matt.5:18. The
one law was a "shadow of good things to come," Heb.10:1, and was only imposed
"until the time of reformation," Heb.9:10; but the other was a moral code, of
which it said by John, "Whosoever committeth sin, transgresseth also the law; for sin
is the transgression of the law." 1John 3:4. The one is a yoke not able to be borne,
Acts 15:10; the other is that "law of liberty" by which we shall be judged.
James 2:8-12. The one is that law which Christ abolished in his flesh. Eph.2:15; the other
is that law which he did not come to destroy. Matt.5:17. The one is that law which he took
out of the way at his death, Col.2:14; the other is that law which he came to magnify and
make honorable. Isa.42:21. The one was a law which was disannulled "for the weakness
and unprofitableness thereof," Heb.7:18; the other is a law respecting which he
inquires, "Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid; yea, we establish
the law." Rom.8:31. The one is that law which was the middle wall of partition
between Jews and Gentiles. Eph.2:14; the other is that law, the work of which even the
Gentiles are said to have written in their hearts, Rom.2:12-15, and to which all mankind
are amenable. Rom.8:19.
The one is the law of commandments contained in ordinances, Eph.2:15; the other law is the
commandments of God, which it is the whole duty of man to keep, Eccl.12:13, which are
brought to view by the third angel, Rev.14:12, which the remnant of the seed of the woman
were keeping when the dragon made war upon them, Rev.12:17, and which will insure, to
those who observe them, access to the tree of life. Rev.22:14.
Surely, these two codes should not be confounded. The one was magnified, made honorable,
established, and is holy, just, spiritual, good, royal; the other was carnal, shadowy,
burdensome, and was abolished, broken down, taken out of the way, nailed to the cross,
changed, and disannulled, on account of the weakness and unprofitableness thereof.
Those who rightly divide the word of truth will never confound these essentially different
codes, nor will they apply to God's royal law the language employed respecting the
handwriting of ordinances.
That the ten commandments are a perfect code of themselves, appears from several facts: 1.
God spake them with his own voice, and it is said, "He added no more,"
Deut.5:22, as evincing that he had given a complete code. 2. He wrote them alone on two
tables with his own finger, another incidental proof that this was a complete moral code.
3. He caused these alone to be placed under the mercy-seat, an evident proof that this was
the code that made an atonement necessary. 4. He expressly calls what he thus wrote on the
tables of stone, a law and commandments. Ex.24:12.
The precepts of this law are variously interspersed through the books of Moses, and
mingled with the precepts of the ceremonial law. And the sum of the first table is given
in Deut.6:5; and that of the second, in Lev.19:18; but there is only one place in which
the moral law is drawn out in particulars, and given by itself with no ceremonial law
mixed with it, and that is in the ten commandments.
An examination of the royal law in James 2, and of the handwriting of ordinances in Col.2,
will further illustrate this subject; the one is in force in every respect, while the
other is abolished.
"If ye fulfill the royal
law according to the scripture, Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself, ye do well; but
if ye have respect to persons, ye commit sin, and are convinced of the law as
transgressors. For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, he is
guilty of all. For he that said, Do not commit adultery, said also, Do not kill. Now if
thou commit no adultery, yet if thou kill, thou art become a transgressor of the law. So
speak ye, and so do, as they that shall be judged by the law of liberty." James
2:8-12.
The law here brought to view is an unabolished law; for it convinces men of sin who
transgress it. 2. It is an Old-Testament law - it is taken from the Scriptures. 3. The
second division of the law is quoted because he was reproving sin committed toward our
fellow-men; and hence he takes the second of the two great commandments, the sum of the
second table, Matt.23:36,40; Rom.13:9, and cites his illustration from the second table of
stone. 4. His language shows that the ten commandments are the precepts of the royal law;
for he cites them in illustrating the statement that he who violates one precept, becomes
guilty of all. This is a most solemn warning against the violation of any one of the ten
commandments. 5. He testifies that whoever violates one of the precepts of this code,
becomes guilty of breaking the whole code. 6. And, last of all, he testifies that this law
of liberty shall be the rule in the Judgment. The unabolished law of James is therefore
that code which God gave in person, and wrote with his own finger.
"Blotting out the
hand-writing of ordinances that was against us, which was contrary to us, and took it out
of the way, nailing it to his cross." "Let no man therefore judge you in meat,
or in drink, or in respect of an holy day, or of the new moon, or of the Sabbath days,
which are a shadow of things to come; but the body is of Christ." Col.2:14,16,17. If
this handwriting of ordinances is the same as the royal law of James, then Paul and James
directly contradict each other. But they wrote by inspiration, and each wrote the truth of
God. We have seen that James' unabolished law refers directly to the ten commandments.
Hence it is certain that the law which Paul shows to be abolished, does not refer to that
which was written with the finger of God. It is to be noticed that the code which is done
away, was a shadow extending only to the death of Christ. But we have already seen that
the law shut up in the ark was not a shadow, but the very code that made it necessary that
the Saviour should die. Not one of the things abolished in this chapter can be claimed as
referring to the ten commandments, except the term Sabbaths; for the term holy day is,
literally, feast day (Gr. ), and there were three feasts appointed by God in each year.
Ex.23:14. The term Sabbath is plural in the original. To refer this to the Sabbath of the
fourth commandment, is to make Paul contradict James. What are the facts in the case?
The ceremonial law did ordain at least four annual Sabbaths; viz. the 1st, 10th, 16th, and
23d days of the seventh month. These were besides the Sabbath of the Lord, and were
associated with the new moons and feast days. Lev.23:23-39. These exactly assure Paul's
language. Hence it is not necessary to make Paul contradict James.
But the Sabbath of the Lord was "set apart to a holy use" (this being the
literal meaning of sanctify) in Eden. It was "made for man" before he had
fallen. Hence it is not one of the things against him and contrary to him, taken out of
the way at Christ's death.
It was not a shadow pointing forward to the death of Christ; for it was ordained before
the fall. On the contrary, it stands as a memorial pointing backward to creation, and not
as a shadow pointing forward to redemption.
It is plain, therefore, that the abrogation of the hand-writing of ordinances leaves in
full force every precept of the royal law, and also that the law of shadows pointing
forward to the death of Christ, must expire when that event should occur. But the moral
law was that which caused the Saviour to lay down his life for us. And its sacredness may
be judged of by the fact that God gave his only Son to take its curse upon himself, and to
die for our transgressions.
Reader, are you in rebellion against the law of God? If so, I beseech you to lay down your
arms, and seek pardon in the blood of Jesus, before the curse of the law falls upon you. |
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