godelian wrote: ↑Tue Jul 30, 2024 6:17 am
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2024 3:52 pm
godelian wrote: ↑Mon Jul 29, 2024 4:35 am
We are finally -- at last -- Praise the Lord! -- getting to the point.
What would 'the point' be? I wasn't aware we were trying to head for anything.
What you are saying, is not actionable, and can therefore never be law.
What is that, to the point? Why is the human attempt to follow various laws such a great thing? It always fails.
The Bible says the problem with the Law is that nobody is able to keep it. That's the point Christ was making in the Sermon on the Mount, too...if you think you've done all the Law requires of you, as the Pharisees did, then, says Jesus, you don't know what you're talking about. The Law requires you not merely to follow the letter of what is written, but also complete the spirit in which it was sent -- such as not merely to love your friends (which everybody pretty much does anyway, because it's rewarding) but to love, show mercy to, and even pray for your enemies, for hating people is a form of mental murder; or not merely not to sexually assault women, but not even to indulge the common male propensity for dwelling on such imaginings, since that is like
"committing adultery with her already in his heart," as Jesus pointed out.
So the problem with the Law is twofold: one, that men think it's too easy...that all they have to do is to stick to doing or not doing one thing at a time, and all the associated evils are overlooked; and two, that because we all fail at it, ultimately, all it succeeds in doing for mankind is pointing out how corrupt we are, and how far short of the ideal we've all come, whether we want to recognize it or not. And it's in that sense that "the Law brings a curse": like a CAT scan or MRI, all it can do is show you how badly things have gone wrong, but cannot correct any of them for you.
For example, loving your neighbor is a recommendation.
According to you, perhaps. Not according to Jesus Christ. For Him, it's one of the two greatest commandments that establish the whole Law. (See Matthew 22). And he explicitly identifies it there as a
"commandment," not as a suggestion or recommendation. And I think His insight on the Law is going to be considerably better than ours, don't you?
It can never be law.
That's exactly what Christ says it is: a commandment, and a summary of the whole Law.
How could a violation of that even be dealt with?
Well, here's a difference between Islam and Christianity, really. If your version of Islam is correct, you suppose that the Law depends on whether or not men can enforce it. In Christianity, the attempts of any men to fulfill the Law are recognized as deficient, and the only One who can trutly uphold the Law is the Lawgiver Himself, God. So whether the Law stands violated or upheld will not be decided by lawyers, or policemen, or judges, or priests or imams: it depends on God.
Christ made recommendations only.
You can see, this is not how Jesus Christ Himself saw it. He said He had come not just to obey the Law, but to complete it -- by explaining the full range of its implications, which in Moses's writings had been misunderstood by the Pharisees (John 5:45-47), who thought of themselves as the ultimate Lawkeepers, but could now be explained as requiring nothing less than
moral perfection -- a perfection that no natural man has, but for which he must apply to God Himself for both forgiveness and enabling.
And those who have no relationship to God? As for fulfilling the Law, they may as well try to drink the Pacific Ocean. Despite the Pharisees self-confidence, the thing cannot be done that way.
You may not agree with all this. But you can certainly see it's miles away from what you've been describing. It's safe to say that what Jesus Christ taught in the gospels is not what you've been representing as the practice of Islam. For the Islam you present seems to understand itself as confident it's "submitted" and "obeying the Law," whereas outsiders can see not only how guilty of falling short of that it has been, but its violent and bloodthirsty character, and can be troubled by its hatred of its enemies, and its rapacious attitude to women and children, and wonder how such a religion could consider itself safely obedient to the Law of God.