Sunday, January 11, 2026

Saturday 1/10/26: New Laws of Jesus on Marriage/Divorce

Theme series in the form of this question: Did Jesus actually change the Law of Moses?

  • The point is to see whether Jesus was merely repeating Moses…or whether, as the New Covenant lawgiver, he changed and even overturned Torah at certain points:

  • Today we look at marriage/divorce and whether or not Jesus changed that law.


What Was Said? Deut. 21:10-14; 22:28-29; 24:1-4; Ex 21:7-11

  • NET Study Bible: The Pharisees were all in agreement that the OT permitted a man to write a certificate of dismissal and to divorce his wife (not vice-versa) and that remarriage was therefore sanctioned. But the two rabbinic schools of Shammai and Hillel differed on the grounds for divorce. Shammai was much stricter than Hillel and permitted divorce only in the case of sexual immorality. Hillel permitted divorce for almost any reason (cf. the Mishnah, m. Gittin 9.10).

  • Deuteronomy 21:15–17 addresses inheritance rights when a man has two wives, ensuring the firstborn son (even from the less favored wife) receives his double portion.

  • Examples: Abraham (Sarah, Hagar, and later Keturah); Jacob (Leah, Rachel, Bilhah, Zilpah); David (multiple wives, including Michal, Abigail, Bathsheba); Solomon (700 wives and 300 concubines, though criticized for excess and foreign alliances).

  • Polygamy: The Torah does not explicitly prohibit a man from having more than one wife. Instead, it regulates the practice in several places;

  • Later, Mal 2:13-16 a prophetic rebuke about misuse of divorce and covenant unfaithfulness;

  • Addendum: Deut. 17:17 limits kings from "multiplying" wives warning it could lead their hearts astray (as happened with Solomon).


But I Say: Matt 5:31-32; 19:1-12

  • Note Antithesis vv.8-9, cp. Mark 10:5 Moses "wrote this commandment for you because of your hard hearts. 6 But from the beginning of creation He made them male and female."

  • Jesus echoes Malachi ("I hate divorce," Mal 2:14–16) and grounds marriage from Genesis (Mal 2:10, 15; Gen 1:27; 2:24), opposing divorce as violations of God’s original design.

  • Under Torah Adultery was typically understood as a sexual relationship involving a married woman (Deut 22:22; Lev 18:20).

  • But Jesus broadens the definition of adultery to cover any sexual relationship between a married man and a woman who is not his wife, regardless of whether the woman herself is married.

  • Polygamy explicitly outlawed;

  • The exception to divorce (for pornea) not a hard rule, i.e., couple can agree to forgive, reconcial in order to continue the marriage.


Post-Resurrection: Mark 12:18-27; Matt 22:23-33

  • Even though Jesus roots his overall argument in the Torah (proving life after death), it is consistent with Jesus as the new covenant lawmaker.

  • Jesus' statement that we will be "like the angels in heaven" must not be generalized to mean that humans will be like angels in every respect.

  • This confirms "sons of God" were angels, i.e., fallen angels because "they saw that the daughters of humankind were beautiful. Thus they took wives for themselves from any they chose," (Gen 6:2) producing a race of giants (“Nephilim”) whose power and notoriety intensified the world’s corruption. Hence, the worldwide Flood;


Apostolic Additions: 1 Cor 7:10-40

  • Paul is not repeating Torah divorce law; he is under the Law of Messiah (1Cor 9.21), which itself goes beyond Moses back to creation;

  • Although 2Cor 6:14 echoes Torah prohibitions against unequal yoking (Deuteronomy 7:3–4; Exodus 34:15–16; Ezra 9–10; Nehemiah 13:23–27);

  • In 1 Cor 7 Paul extends marriage/divorce to new situations (like mixed marriages; seperation not divorce);

  • They are characteristic of Jesus’ stricter standard, not found in Torah.

  • The “Not I, but the Lord” vs. “I, not the Lord” doesn’t mean Paul’s words are less authoritative; he is a legitimate apostolos, aka shaliach of Jesus himself which means his words are Jesus!

  • Torah treated unbelief as a form of spiritual incompatibility or "fornication" (Greek: porneia), which could justify separation to preserve holiness and produce godly offspring (Malachi 2:15);

  • But Paul is not putting Christians “back under” the intermarriage laws of Moses.

Saturday, January 3, 2026

Saturday 1/3/26 New Law of Jesus: On the Sabbath

 Part 4: On the Sabbath, Matthew 12; John 5

Theme series in the form of this question:

Did Jesus actually change the Law of Moses?

  • The point is to see whether Jesus was merely repeating Moses…or whether, as the New Covenant lawgiver, he changed and even overturned Torah at certain points:

  • Today we look at the Sabbath law and whether or not Jesus changed that law.

  • As before, first read what God had originally required from His covenant people.

  1. What was said? Exodus 16

  • Ex 16:22-30, takes place before the formal giving of the Law at Sinai, represented by the 10 commandments: 

"Tomorrow is a Sabbath rest, a holy Sabbath to the LORD. Bake what you will bake today."

READ: Ex 20:1-10, the 10 words given at Sinai: 

"You must not do any work—you, your son or daughter, your male or female slave, your livestock, or the foreigner who is within your gates." Cp. Lev. 23:3; Deut 5.12-15 where the 10 are repeated.

  • Later prophets like Jeremiah 17:19-27 add: 

vv. 22, 24: "You must not carry a load out of your houses on the Sabbath day or do any work." Cp. Nehemiah 13:19.

  • Punishment for breaking the Sabbath? Numbers 15:30-36.

  • v.30 "sins defiantly," (NIV) "brazenly violate the LORD’s will," (NLT) Heb. literally reads “with a high hand," i.e., Hebrew expression or idiom meaning doing something deliberately, premeditated, malice of aforethought hence with an arrogant attitude towards God's law.

  • Group questions:

  1. What is the one thing you cannot do on the Sabbath?

  2. Did "work" include basic "humanitarian" needs like food (cooking+eating), tending to your family, your livestock?

  1. Jesus Healing at Bethesda: John 5:1-23

  • Jesus deliberately heals a man on the Sabbath (contra Num 15:30-36) and rather brazenly commands him to carry his load (contra Jeremiah 17:21);

  • The Jewish leaders’ accusation is grounded in Scripture, not their "traditions";

  • John had said Jesus "was doing these things on the Sabbath.” John 5:16;

  • Therefore right to conclude Jesus was "breaking the Sabbath.” John 5:18a;

  • Jesus did not deny the charge but even doubled down saying:

“My Father is always at his work to this very day [which day?], and I too am working [on what day?].” John 5:17

  • Again, what was the one thing you could not do on the Sabbath according to Torah?

  • Judaism acknowledged God never kept the Sabbath!

  1. God always gives life on the Sabbath (births occur).

  2. God always takes life on the Sabbath (death occurs).

  3. Genesis 2:2 The NET Bible note:

The Hebrew term שָׁבַּת (shabbat) can be translated “to rest” (“and he rested”) but it basically means “to cease.” This is not a rest from exhaustion; it is the cessation of the work of creation.

Addendum: John 5:18b “Making Himself Equal with God”:

  • In context "equal with God" = Authority, not some Trini ontological statement;

  • The Sabbath was a divine prerogative and by claiming the right to work as God "always works," Jesus claims that same authority over the Sabbath, see NET Bible John 5:17 footnote.

  • Like Moses doesn't mean the same as Moses, Deuteronomy 18:18–19 (LSB)

“I will raise up for them a prophet like you… and I will put My words in his mouth… I Myself will require it of him who does not listen to My words.”

  1. Christian Lawbreakers: Matthew 12:1-8

  • Jesus makes OT exceptions the new rule, Matthew 12:5;

  • And mercy (Hos 6:6) the new spirit-led standard over "the letter of the law."

  • All points to the deeper meaning found later in the NT, 1 Peter 2:

But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people who are God’s own possession, so that you may announce the excellence of Him who called you out of darkness into His wonderful light.  

10 In time past you were not a people, but now you are the people of God. You had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy. (Gal. 3:28; 6:16; Rev. 5:9-10).

The Core Paradigm Shift

  • Jesus had authority to break the Sabbath, and by extension so did his apostles.

  • This does not make them “sinners” or lawbreakers, because they were operating under a different covenant law.

  • Jesus was uniquely given mastery—ownership, aka lordship—of the Sabbath by God Himself.

  • It is this authority, not the act of breaking the Sabbath in and of itself, that explains his actions.

Mark 2:27 "The Sabbath was made for people, not people for the Sabbath. 

28 So the Son of Man is lord even of the Sabbath.”

New Covenant Implications

  • Under the New Covenant (subject to the Law of Messiah, 1Cor 9:21), Christians are no longer required to keep the Sabbath.

  • Read, Col 2:16-23: In other words, not just let no one tell you to observe sabbath but condemn you for not obeying God!

  • As a matter of fact Paul now regards keeping the Jewish calendar tantamount to gnostic-heresis!

  • These are all described as "elementary principles of the world" that enslave believers. The Jew-Gentile Gnostic Heresy – Kingdom Gospel

Summary

  • The Messiah uniquely exercised a new, divinely granted authority, thereby establishing the new covenant and granting his followers that same authority.

  • As a result, the strict requirement to observe the Sabbath was not merely being questioned or challenged but completely changed.

  • The church is now called to acknowledge Jesus, the Son of Man, as "lord even of the Sabbath" (Mar 2:28) the one who now holds authority over the day on which one rests.

  • Through this authority, all debates and fine distinctions about Sabbath keeping are brought to an end.

Baptism of Cornelius and his whole household.

Acts 10:34 Opening his mouth, Peter began to speak: “I now truly understand that God does not show favoritism, 35 but He welcomes from every nation the person who fears Him and does what is right. 36 You know the Gospel-word which He sent to the Israelites, proclaiming the Gospel of peace through Jesus Messiah — he is lord of all."

Monday, December 29, 2025

Calvin the Serial Killer!

From Rives, Did Calvin Murder Servetus?

Calvin believed any disagreement with any of his theological writings was an attack on God’s word. It was not that you disagreed with a plain point of scripture. Rather, you disagreed with Calvin’s words on how to interpret Scripture. Your disagreement was thought by Calvin to be an insult on God. This raises the dilemma about Calvin’s sanity: how can anyone believe this and be sane?

Let’s now review how Calvin’s prior behavior revealed this insane self-importance. Calvin’s behavior listed below is so akin to how modern fanatical cult-leaders operate that we must keep such a comparison in our mind as we read the next discussion.

Criminal Prosecutions at Geneva Prove ‘Insults’ Of Calvin Were Treated as an Attack on God

There are many examples prior to and subsequent to the Servetus Affair where the crime charged at Geneva was an insult of Calvin’s doctrine, and yet the writings/thoughts were treated as an insult of God Himself. Calvin and Calvin’s doctrine were treated as sacrosanct as God Himself and indistinguishable from God’s words given by the Spirit in the Bible itself. An insult of Calvin’s teaching was, in other words, treated as an insult of God. There was no recognition that Calvin was a mere man who merely offered educated insights into the truths of God, and was fallible.

Here are a few examples of this treatment:

  • We read in Francois Wendel [pro-Calvin],[1] Calvin: The Origins and Development of His Religious Thought (New York: Harper & Row, Publishers, 1963) at 85, 86: “About the month of January 1546, a member of the Little Council, Pierre Ameaux, asserted that Calvin was nothing but a wicked man… who was preaching false doctrine.[2] Calvin felt that his authority as an interpreter of the Word of God was being attacked; he so completely identified his own ministry with the will of God that he considered Ameaux’s words an insult to the honour of Christ. […] After Calvin was satisfied with the first two months in prison of Ameaux, and payment of a $60 fine,[3] the Magistrates offered to make the culprit beg Calvin’s pardon on bended knees before the Council of the Two Hundred, but Calvin found this insufficient…. On April 8, Ameaux was sentenced to walk all round the town, dressed only in a shirt, bareheaded and carrying a lighted torch in his hand, and after that to present himself before the tribunal and cry to God for mercy.

  • In Geneva, a man who protested Calvin’s doctrine of predestination was “mercilessly flogged at all the crossways of the city, and then expelled.” (Zweig, The Right to Heresy, supra, at 230.)

  • Gruet was executed in 1547 for sedition. Several charges revolve strangely on merely insults of Calvin’s personage or his writings. “Jacques Gruet [d. 1547] was racked and then executed for [allegedly] calling Calvin a hypocrite” (Zweig, The Right to Heresy, supra, at 230).[4] Gruet also was found at fault for annotating the margin of a book by Calvin against the Anabaptists with the words “All trifles.”[5] Incidentally, the accusation was that Gruet posted an anonymous placard calling Calvin a “gross hypocrite,” and adding that Calvin was the representative of the “devil and his renegade priests” who have come to Geneva. This placard also was viewed as seditious, because it implied a desire for an involuntary end to Calvin’s influence at Geneva.[6] "[Gruet] was arrested by Calvin, tortured for a month and burned at the stake on July 26, 1547."[7] Although many assume Gruet actually put up the anonymous placard, he admitted this only under torture.[8] When we open our minds by ignoring such unreliable evidence, we find Calvin himself admitted that the placard “was not in Gruet’s handwriting.”[9] Hence, Gruet’s execution qualifies as another murder by Calvin when we use Christian standards which are universal and timeless. Gruet was legally innocent of sedition because the evidence was so tainted. Incidentally, Calvin in 1550 wrote a defense of this killing, much like one he had to do after having Servetus killed in 1553.[10] In this defense, Calvin claimed to have found three years after the execution proof of papers in Gruet’s home that he was an atheist. As to these records, Calvin said “juridically, by good examination of trustworthy men, [these writings were] recognized to be that of Gruet.”[11] Calvin then had these writings burned by the hang-man, and thereby prevented anyone else from examining these so-called belated proofs. Such posthumous and now destroyed evidence is once again dubious to consider. Regardless, in Gruet’s case, Calvin relied upon political sedition and atheism to justify a death penalty. It was only in Servetus’ case that a death penalty would be for the first time applied in Calvin’s Geneva to a Christian only guilty at most of mere heresy.

  • The list of those punished for criticizing Calvin continues with Belot, an Anabaptist.[12] He was arrested for passing out tracts in Geneva and also accusing Calvin of excessive use of wine. With his books and tracts burned, he was banished from the city and told not to return on pain of hanging. (J.L. Adams, The Radical Reformation (Westminster Press, 1967) at 597–598.)

  • Jérôme Bolsec (c.1524–84) was a French physician from Paris. He became a Protestant in the late 1540’s. Bolsec also was a close friend of one of Calvin’s friends who lived just outside Geneva. Bolsec voiced his objections to Calvin’s theology of predestination in October 1551. He was imprisoned and put on trial for heresy. Although he received some support in letters from neighbouring cantons (especially Berne that criticized Calvin’s doctrine of predestination),[13] Bolsec was found guilty and exiled for life from Geneva on December 23, 1551. He later disagreed profoundly with the burning of Servetus.

  • Sebastian Castellio was for a long time a die-hard follower of Calvin, and a one-time roommate of Calvin. By 1544, Castellio’s stature is clear from the fact that he was a master of the public school at Geneva. Hence, he was of high rank in the Calvinist party. However, in 1544, Castellio came to doubt the correctness of Calvin’s interpretation of the doctrine of predestination. For simply rejecting Calvin’s doctrine of predestination, Calvin “forced [Castellio] into exile,” also “striving to have him driven from Basel” to where he removed himself.[14] This “forcing,” however, was not by a legal compulsion. Calvin just made it impossible for Castellio to find employment at Geneva.

  • Finally, an episode from 1559 bears mention: “To impugn Calvin’s doctrine, or the proceedings of the Consistory [of which Calvin was president], endangered life. For such an offence, a Ferrarese lady was condemned in 1559 to beg pardon of God and the magistrates, and to leave the city in twenty-four hours on pain of being beheaded.”[15]

In 1552, Melanchthon (Luther’s closest aid) aptly commented on how these episodes proved a “madness” was raging in Geneva where Calvin became a new Zeno.[16] He wrote to Camerarius:

“See the madness of the age! The Allobrogian (the Genevese) controversy on the stoical doctrine of Fate [i.e., predestination], rages to such a degree, that people are cast into prison if they do not hold the same views on the subject as Zeno.”[17]

To Peucer, Melanchthon likewise near in time wrote:

“Laelius writes to me, that the controversy respecting the stoical fate [i.e., predestination] is agitated with such uncommon fervor at Geneva, that one individual is cast into prison because he happened to differ from Zeno.”[18]

Footnotes

[1] Wendel is reputed to have provided one of the most “monumental” summaries of Calvin and his doctrine, in a complimentary manner. A thorough review of Wendel’s book can be found at Walking Together Ministries http://www.walkingtogetherministries.org/FullView/tabid/64/ArticleID/38/CBModuleId/401/Default.aspx (2/26/2008).

[2] Ameux' complaints further: "Calvin was reluctant to ordain Genevans, preferring to choose pastors from the stream of French immigrants pouring into the city for the express purpose of supporting Calvin's program of reform. When Pierre Ameaux complained about this practice, Calvin too it as an attcks on this absolute authority..."

[3] More details on this first incident confirm again Calvin’s belief in his own divine stature and infallibility: “Pierre Ameaux was a man of wealth and a member of the Council of Two Hundred. Information was given that this person, at a supper in his own house, had spoken disrespectfully of Calvin. He was committed to prison, and after two months was brought to trial before the ordinary council, two ministers who had been among his guests…. Ameaux apologized for the words that escaped him, and pleaded that he uttered them when heated with wine. In addition to the imprisonment which he had already endured, he was sentenced to a fine of sixty dollars. Calvin, however, appeared before the Council at the head of the ministers, and demanded that the sentence should be cancelled as too mild. ‘By a second sentence was condemned to the degrading punishment called the amende honorable; namely, to parade the town in his shirt with bare head and a lighted torch in his hand, and to finish by making on his knees a public acknowledgment of his contrition.’”

(“Lives of Calvin,” London Quarterly (March 1809) at 287–88.) See also, Thomas H. Dyer, The Life of John Calvin (1855) at 203.

[4] Calvin-defenders typically maliciously refer to all opponents of Calvin’s influence at Geneva as “libertines.” There was no such party so-named. It was an evil epithet. Gruet similarly received this defamatory abuse. However, no Christian historian should borrow malicious labels such as libertine as if true. There must be proof, not innuendo. Sadly, many Calvin-leaning historians lack objectivity, and simply call Gruet a “libertine.”

[5] John Mackinnon Robertson, A Short History of Freethought, Ancient and Modern (J. Watts & Co.: 1915) at 443.

[6] “John Calvin,” Wikipedia, available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Calvin (2/26/2008).

[7] “Jacque Gruet,” Wikipedia, available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacques_Gruet (2/26/2008).

[8] Further details on Gruet involve Calvin accusing Gruet of atheism, but the evidence is dubious: “Papers were discovered which, if Calvin is to be believed, proved beyond any doubt that Gruet was an atheist. He apparently held the Bible in open contempt, his religious tenets were blasphemous and his political propositions were treasonable. The evidence adduced in his subsequent trial (where he defended himself with vigor and ability) was destroyed following his execution on 26 July 1547.” C. Scott Dixon, The Protestant Reformation: religious change and the people of sixteenth-century Europe (1997), available at http://www.worc.ac.uk/CHIC/reformat/biograph.htm (2/26/2008).

[9] John Mackinnon Robertson, A Short History of Freethought, Ancient and Modern (J. Watts & Co.: 1915) at 442.

[10] This volume recently was auctioned, and it was “the justification of the condemning to death of Jacques Gruet by Calvin. Composed in May 1550 it was entitled Consultation théologique addressée au Sénat de Genève signed by Calvin. It is of enormous significance as Gruet was the first person Calvin asked to be condemned to death….” http://www.tyndale.org/TSJ/25/pressgleanings.html (2/26/08).

[11] John Mackinnon Robertson, A Short History of Freethought, Ancient and Modern (J. Watts & Co.: 1915) at 444.

[12] An Anabaptist was a derogatory label used by their opponents of any sect which believed Catholic infant baptism was invalid and that rebaptism as an adult was necessary.

[13] See text accompanying Footnote 828 on page 438.

[14] John Mackinnon Robertson, A Short History of Freethought, Ancient and Modern (J. Watts & Co., 1915) at 446.

[15] “Lives of Calvin,” London Quarterly (March 1809) at 286–287, citing Dyer: 144 as its source.

[16] There are two Zenos of history. One was the Stoic philosopher Zeno of Citium (336–264 BCE). Melancthon most likely meant this Stoic Zeno. However, the “madness” he mentions is not of this Zeno or his followers. They never employed persecution. Hence, Melancthon is saying Calvin’s Geneva has a “madness” where Calvin’s words are treated as if from a god.

[17] Paul Emil Henry, D.D. (trans. from German by Henry Stebbing), The Life and Times of John Calvin, the Great Reformer (R. Carter & Bros., 1852) at 143, citing Corpus Reform (ed. Br. T.) (letter dated February 1552) Vol. VI at 390.

[18] R.S. Foster, Objections to Calvinism as it is (Swormstedt & Poe for the Methodist Episcopal Church, 1854) at 8.

Saturday, December 27, 2025

Saturday 12/27/25

 Part 3: Hate Your Enemy, Matthew 5:43-48

  • Series Theme in the form of this question: 

Did Jesus actually change the Law of Moses?


  • The point is to see whether Jesus was merely repeating Moses…or whether, as the New Covenant lawgiver, he changed and even overturned Torah at certain points: 
  • Today examine Torah in relation to “hating your enemy.”



READ: Matthew 5:43-48

Many Christian readers (following the majority opinion of some scholars) claim that the second half of Jesus’ command in Matthew 5:43 (“hate your enemy”) is nowhere explicitly commanded in the Torah. 


According to this view, Jesus is merely correcting a popular Pharisaic misinterpretation of the Law rather than overruling the Law itself. 


But a closer examination shows that Jesus is indeed doing something novel: he is consciously surpassing and superseding the Torah, replacing the old covenant’s limited "love your neighbor" with an absolute enemy-love command—a new law with no true roots in the Old Testament.



  1. “Love your neighbor” = “Fellow Israelite" 
  • Leviticus 19:15-19 (LSB) – “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.”
  • Leviticus 19:30-37 (LSB) – The command to love the peaceful resident alien.
  • Exodus 23:1–5 (LSB) – returning a stray animal of an enemy.
  • Proverbs 25:21–22 (LSB) – feeding a hungry enemy.
  • These are pragmatic or humanitarian commands, not unqualified expressions of enemy-love.
  • Because the Law never commands loving national enemies or persecutors unconditionally.
  • Remember Israel was, at times, even commanded to destroy enemies (Deut 7:1-6).
  • v.2 NET "annihilate"; CEV “must destroy them without mercy.”



  1. Was “Hate Your Enemy” a Reasonable Summary of these laws? 

Jesus saying “hate your enemy," is not in the letter of Torah as such, but was an obvious result of commands to kill the enemy:

  • Deuteronomy 7:1-6 (LSB) – Israel commanded to “utterly destroy them" "without mercy";
  • Deuteronomy 30:1-10 (LSB) – God promising to put curses on Israel’s enemies.
  • If you’re allowed to kill the enemy, could you hate them?
  • Psalm 26:5 (LSB) – David, “I hate the assembly of evildoers.”
  • Psalm 139:21–22 (LSB) – David says, “Do I not hate those who hate you?”


The NET Bible note on the word "enemy," Matt 5:43:

  • “Jesus’ hearers (and Matthew’s readers) would not have been surprised by the statement. It is the antithesis Jesus gives in the following verses that would have shocked them.”
  • That's why Jesus uses "hate your enemy" as a legitimate summary of “what was said” (Matt 5:43), not as some Pharisaic corruption or misguided added commentary of the written Law.



  1. Jesus’ Antithesis

“But I say to you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.”Matthew 5:44

  • This is a new command, fundamentally changing the Torah.
  • Matthew 5:44–45 – God now shows benevolence to both evil and good.
  • Matthew 7:28–29 – Jesus speaks with a new unique authority, not rabbinic commentary; he is not interpreting the written Law! 
  • Cp. Matthew 19:3–9 – Jesus appeals to Genesis to overrule Moses on divorce.
  • Showing Jesus as the New Moses, giving a New Law, not reaffirming the Sinai covenant.



  1. The New Law grounded in Genesis, Not Moses
  • Jesus reasons from God’s character and Genesis, not the Sinai law.
  • Genesis 1:26–27 (LSB) – all humans bear God’s image.
  • Genesis 9:6 (LSB) – post-flood reaffirmation of human value.
  • Matthew 5:45 – God sends rain on the just and unjust.
  • Because all humans reflect God’s image—and God treats all with benevolence;
  • Jesus requires enemy-love, the highest expression of the New Law.




  1. Old Vs New 
  • John 13:34–35 – “I give you a new commandment: love one another.”
  • 2 Corinthians 3:7–11 – The Mosaic covenant “engraved on stone” is fading.



  1. Summary 
  • Jesus was not a disciple of Moses (John 1:17).
  • Jesus is not merely giving rabbnic commentary. 
  • He was greater than Moses, the new Lawgiver.
  • His commandments constitute the Law of Messiah (Gal 6:2; 1 Cor 9:21).
  • The New Law grounded in God’s universal benevolence;
  • Because humanity is the image of the invisible God. 


Every would-be follower of Jesus is now placed under the unqualified command to “love your enemies”—a genuinely new and decisive paradigm shift from the Old Covenant Torah to the New Covenant law of Messiah.


"I am giving you a new law: love one another. Just as I have loved you, you must also love one another. This is how everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.” (
John 13:34-35)