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'Written in stone' is an idiom we are all familiar with. It refers to something permanent, unchanging, or eternal. It is an allusion to the Ten Commandments which God inscribed on tablets of stone when He gave His Torah at Sinai. Most believers have bound themselves to these 'Jewish' commandments and affirmed their eternal value. These commandments have become the moral code by which billions of Christians lead their lives. That's good. Western culture has gone farther and adopted many other laws found in the Torah. Commandments concerning civil and judicial matters have been incorporated into our governmental structures. These commands have become such a cornerstone of our civilization that their eternity seems necessary for its continuation. Pomp and Circumstance But there is another type of commandment in the Torah, a type which has been less revered by the Body of Messiah for nearly two millennia. Ironically, only these commandments are specifically declared eternal by the mouth of God:
Between a Rock and a Hard Place One is immediately aware that almost all of these commandments are ritual or ceremonial. and relate specifically to the institution and services of the Temple. What is this!? How can it be? The idea repels us. After all, 'Jesus is the final sacrifice', 'Christ died once and for all.' Do we 'crucify Christ again' if we admit the permanence of these commandments? Or is God schizophrenic and abolished that which He had previously declared eternal? How do we respond to this? Why would God put us on the horns of such a dilemma? Why keep commandments which have no apparent reason for their existence? The answer, I think, lies in the nature of being human. It is easy to understand the eternal basis for a moral command. After all, moral commandments are an expression of the character of the Eternal God. But ceremonial and liturgical commandments seem wooden, empty, and transient and so are easily dismissed. Because of these tendencies God may have found it necessary to be emphatic. We are told that the Tabernacle was made after a heavenly pattern (Exodus 25:9, Revelation 7, 11, 14, 15), that the services of the Temple were given by God to Moses, and that David was given additional instruction for the Temple and its services by the Spirit of God (1 Chronicles 28.) Repeatedly, Yeshua and the Apostles use the Temple and its services as pointers to Him and the redemptive plan of God. God's has ordained these things to bring us corrupt mortals to Messiah, and having brought us to Him, to continually remind us of God's love and Kingship. Forever is a Long, Long Time But does forever really mean forever? Well...not necessarily. The Hebrew word olam is usually translated 'eternal' or 'forever.' Gesenius Hebrew-Chaldee Lexicon indicates that this word can also mean 'an epoch or age.' Here is a case where the sages of Israel and the New Testament converge. The sages divided the history of the world into two distinct ages: this Present World (olam hazeh) and the World to Come (olam haba, sometimes called the atid lavo or Time to Come). For example, consider the following quotes from the Talmud.
Parallels from the New Testament which refelct the use of this language include:
Bound or Loosed? What becomes obvious from these passages is that we are still living in the Present World. We may conclude that these eternal, ceremonial commandments will be binding until we reach the time of the World to Come. Can we still participate in these ritual commandments? Yes, and no. It is not possible to keep these commandments in biblically prescribed manner today because they depend on the existence of the Holy Temple and an Aaronic priesthood. Fortunately this does not prevent us from commemorating many aspects of Temple-related commandments through customary practices of Judaism. These customs preserve the memory of the Temple rituals and keep their tutorial elements alive for the next generation. Time Out of Mind The time is coming when there will be no more time. The book of Revelation tells us that after a thousand years of Messianic rest when there will be no more Temple. Humanity will experience the reality of the World to Come. The inhabitants of the New Earth are redeemed, incorruptible immortals. Sin and death have been abolished. There will no longer be the need for constant reminders of God's redemption because everyone on earth is perfect, complete, and untarnished. The very reasons for the existence of a Temple vanish. And so the Temple vanishes and we will find ourselves standing in the Garden of Eden.
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