9-7 To Fulfill And Not To Destroy The Law (Mt. 5:17)
The Lord Jesus said that he had come not to destroy “the
Law and the prophets” but to fulfil them (Mt.5:17). Does this
mean that the Law of Moses in its entirety is therefore binding
on believers today? First off, let’s note that the Lord doesn’t
only talk about the law here- He speaks of “the law and the
prophets”. A glance at the uses of pleroo [to fulfil] in Matthew’s
gospel leave us with no doubt about the context. Time and again,
13 times in all (the majority of occurrences in Matthew), the word
is used about Jesus fulfilling the Old Testament prophets (Mt. 1:22;
2:15,17,23; 4:14; 8:17; 12:17; 13:35; 21:4; 26:54,56; 27:9,35).
He said that He came in order to fulfil them- therefore the fulfilment
of Law and Prophets was during His first ‘coming’, and
not, as some claim, only in the future Kingdom of God.
The Greek for "destroy" here means strictly to unloose
or start to disintegrate. He fulfilled the law in his death as the
perfect sacrifice on the cross (Col. 2:14-17), but until then he
never advocated the unloosing or negating of even the smallest commandment:
"One jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law,
till all (i.e. of the law) be fulfilled" (Mt. 5:18). However,
His speaking of fulfilling the law implies that the Law was a prophecy
which he was soon to fulfil. To read Mt. 5:17 as meaning that the
Law is unfulfilled and must still be kept would therefore require
the keeping of every ‘jot and tittle’, i.e. every part
of the Law. Which includes of course sacrifices, a priesthood system,
there ‘ceremonial law’, etc. So nobody was free at the
time Jesus spoke those words to disobey the Mosaic Law- because
the Torah was in force right up until Jesus “took it out of
the way” through His death on the cross. Then the “heavens
and earth” of the Mosaic system ended. This phrase must be
symbolic because the literal earth and heaven will not be destroyed-
God will not destroy His own abode, and His eternal Kingdom is prophesied
to come here on earth (Ecc. 1:4). If we say that the ceremonial
law has been done away but the 10 commandments haven’t been,
then by quoting Mt. 5:17 we are forced to assume that “the
law” meant only the ten commandments. And yet it is clear
from the usages of the phrase “the law” in the New Testament
that it clearly refers to the entire law. We’d be forced to
conclude that sometimes “the law” refers to the 10 commandments,
sometimes to the rest of the Law. How could we decide which definition
to apply? There is no Biblical warrant for this. These legalistic
distinctions are purely artificial and man-made. They cannot be
sustained from the Bible text.
Fulfilling The law
The idea that the Lord Jesus ended the Law of Moses on the cross
needs some reflection. That statement only pushes the question back
one stage further- how exactly did He ‘end’ the Law
there? How did a man dying on a cross actually end the Law? The
Lord Jesus, supremely in His death, was “the end of the law”
(Rom. 10:4). But the Greek telos [“end”] is elsewhere
translated “the goal” (1 Tim. 1:5 NIV). Note that pleroo
, translated “fulfil” in Mt. 5:17, is also translated
“ended” (e.g. Lk. 7:1 “When He had ended His sayings”,
Acts 7:30 “When forty years were ended”, Acts 19:21
“when these things were ended”). The character and person
of the Lord Jesus at the end was the goal of the Mosaic law; those
613 commandments, if perfectly obeyed, were intended to give rise
to a personality like that of the Lord Jesus. In this sense the
sabbath was intended for man, i.e. for man's spiritual development;
man wasn't naturally made in a way that automatically kept the sabbath.
There's no internal clock within the human body that forcibly makes
us stop working every Friday sundown. And the Lord Jesus goes on
to describe Himself, in this context, as therefore being
"Lord of the sabbath" (Mk. 2:27,28). In His personality
and character, the intend effect of the Sabbath legislation had
come to its full term.
We’re wrong to see the Law as somehow onerous and purposefully
awkward. It was designed to elicit a culture of kindness, thoughtfulness
for others, selflessness, justice etc. All the commandments are
“briefly comprehended in this saying, namely, You shall love
you neighbour as yourself” (Rom. 13:9). When Jesus of Nazareth
reached the climax of His personal development and spirituality,
in the moment of His death, the Law was “fulfilled”.
He taught that He “came” in order to die; and yet He
also “came” in order to “fulfil” the Law
(Mt. 5:17). And this is why studying, coming to understand, obeying
and fulfilling the spirit of the Mosaic Law is not irrelevant for
us today- for it still leads us to Christ. A personality like His
is the “end” of the Law. This approach would explain
the link between Mt. 5:17 and Gal. 5:14: “For the whole law
is fulfilled in one word, even in this: Thou shalt love thy neighbour
as thyself”. To love our neighbour as ourselves is the end
result of the Law; and the death of the cross was the ultimate exemplification
of loving our neighbour as ourselves. Quite simply, “he who
loves another has fulfilled the law” (Rom. 13:8). Greater
love had no man than Jesus when He died, and thus His death, a death
of love, was the fulfilment of the law in Him. Because “love
works no ill to his neighbour, therefore love is the fulfilling
of the law” (Rom. 13:10). I believe that Paul was constantly
alluding to the Lord’s teaching in his writings. He offers
another allusion and commentary upon Mt. 5:17 in Rom. 3:31: “Do
we then make void [a related Greek word to that translated “destroy”
in Mt. 5:17] the law through faith? God forbid; yes, we establish
the law”. The life of faith in Christ is not opposed to the
Law; in fact, it is an establishment [Gk. ‘to hold up’]
of the Law. A life of faith in the Messiah upholds the essence of
the Law. The righteousness of the law is “fulfilled in us,
who walk… after the spirit” (Rom. 8:4). So we should
have no problem in accepting that the Law was fulfilled in Jesus
at His first coming. Yet we are only empowered to fulfil the Law
because of the condemnation of the power of sin by Jesus in His
death- He did and achieved “what the law could not do”
(Rom. 8:3). The essence of the Law in this sense will be fulfilled
in the future Kingdom of God; but it was supremely fulfilled in
the person of Jesus, who in His personality showed what the Law
'ended' in. 'Pleroo' ['fulfil] can also carry the meaning of 'to bring to realization'. If a person were to keep every one of the Mosaic commandments to perfection, that person would've been perfect- for the Law was "holy just and good" and designed to bring about perfection if it were completely obeyed. Hence to disobey just one law was to break it all. Only in the character of Jesus was this 'realized' or fulfilled.
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