Acts 15: Some Concerns

by Avram Yehoshua

The Lifting of the Veil is a delightful and insightful read that reveals what the New Testament says about the Law of Moses. Acts 15:20-21 is the theological center for the Law in the New Covenant. The Church interprets the four rules of James (v. 20) as table fellowship and so misses God's point completely. But understood from its Hebraic perspective the rules are the central pillar in the New Testament that upholds the Law for every believer. Truly 'a must read' book! If there's only one book you read this year…it should be this one! It's the perfect gift for you and your believing friends.

The Lifting of the Veil is $22.78 US (Canadian Dollar $22.78, €15.56, £11.76) and is 268 pages. The book is available from Trafford Publishing, click to purchase your copy now.



Before expressing Yakov’s Concern there are six subjects to cover that directly relate to Acts 15:20. The six are found in Acts 15:10, 19, 21 and 21:25, and the fact that the rules don’t appear in the same order the second and third time they’re recorded (Acts 15:29; 21:25). Most interpret three of these cites (15:10, 19; 21:25) as proof that the Law is not for believers today.

The first one (15:10) has to do with the ‘yoke’ that Peter speaks of that neither he nor his Fathers could bear. The second (15:19) is Yakov’s statement about ‘not troubling the Gentiles.’ The third and fourth (15:21) have Yakov declaring that Moses is taught in all the synagogues, and also speaks of those who preach Moses. The fifth deals with Yakov’s admonition that the Gentiles ‘observe no such thing’ (Acts 21:25). And the sixth looks at the rules not being written in the same order (Acts 15:20, 29, 21:25) and why Yakov might have done this.

Acts 15:10—The Yoke

The yoke that Peter speaks of in Acts 15:10 is the Law.1 Many see the Law as the yoke in and of itself but that’s not what Peter meant. Here’s what he said:

‘Now therefore why do you put God to the test by placing upon the neck of the disciples, a yoke which neither our Fathers nor we were able to bear?’

Bruce says ‘a proselyte, by undertaking to keep the law of Moses’ was said to ‘take up the yoke of the kingdom of heaven.’2 And that the Law was the burden the Fathers ‘found too heavy.’3 Obviously he wasn’t thinking of Father David4 otherwise known as the greatest king the world has ever seen, outside of his Son Yeshua. David said many things about the Law, none of which seem to correspond with what Bruce thought of it. Here’s a sample of what David thought:

‘The Law of Yahveh is perfect, restoring the soul. The testimony of Yahveh is sure, making wise the simple. The precepts of Yahveh are right, rejoicing the heart. The commandment of Yahveh is pure, enlightening the eyes. The fear of Yahveh is clean, enduring forever. The judgments of Yahveh are true, they are righteous altogether. They are more desirable than gold, yes, than much fine gold. Sweeter also than honey and the drippings of the honeycomb. Moreover by them Your servant is warned. In keeping them there is great reward.’ (Psalm 19:7-11)

David clearly extols the Law as something that is good and beneficial to him. His different ways of speaking of the Law (e.g. its precepts and judgments, etc.) are very Hebraic and found within the Law as describing its commandments.5 David sings much of the praise of Yahveh’s Torah (Ps. 1:2; 37:31; 40:8; 119:1, 77, etc.) because he knew the wisdom and understanding that were inherent in it (Dt. 4:5-8; 30:15, 19, 20; 32:47, etc.).

If the laws of God were holy and righteous for Moses, David, Isaiah and Jesus, why wouldn’t they matter after the Resurrection? Why would they be any less holy for the Gentile believer who has been grafted into the Family (Israel) of God (Rom. 11:13-12:5; Eph. 2:1-22; Gal. 6:16)?

Yeshua kept the Law all His life. And all the Jewish believers, many years after the Resurrection, kept the Law too (Acts 21:20, 24; 24:18; 25:8). Perhaps the Apostles didn’t understand ‘the yoke’ as Bruce presents it? Bruce errs because of his ‘law-free gospel.’6

The Wycliffe Bible Commentary states that the term yoke is not necessarily a negative word:

‘a yoke in Jewish thought does not necessarily mean a burden but designates an obligation.’7

The yoke Peter spoke of was the Law of Moses but if it wasn’t the burden then what was? Wycliffe lumps both the Law of Moses and legalism together, declaring the Law a burden in spite of what they just said:

‘Peter asserts that Jewish legalism was an obligation and a burden that the Jews were unable to bear. In contrast to the burdensomeness of the Law, salvation is through grace’.8

In making the Law a burden, Bruce, Wycliffe and all those who espouse such, make the God of Israel who gave it a very hard taskmaster. The Jews were saved out of Egypt, not by the Law but by God’s Grace. Did God save them out of Egyptian slavery only to place a different type of slavery and legalistic burden upon them at Mt. Sinai?

Williams too misses the point when he states that ‘any attempt to revert to a religion of law was to try to test God’.9 Stern also stumbles but rightly comes against the verse being used to disparage the Law of Moses:

‘Much Christian teaching contrasts the supposedly onerous and oppressive ‘yoke of the Law’ with the words of Yeshua, ‘My yoke is easy and my burden is light.’10

Stern makes two points about the Law. One, if a person thinks something is pleasant then one cannot project onto him that it’s not. But this can’t be used in defense of the Law or the yoke because it’s very subjective. Most Christians see the Law as a burden and if subjectivity is the criteria for judging, the Law is very oppressive. But the criteria is not how we think or feel about the Law but what God says about it (Dt. 4:1-8; 12:8; 29:29) specifically in the New Testament (Mt. 5:17-19; Rom. 3:31; 7:12, etc.).

For his second point Stern says the commandments are not oppressive. Although he’s right, Peter called something unbearable. Stern says the commandments are not ‘an oppressive burden any more than Yeshua’s yoke is.’ He correctly states the yoke of the Law is ‘acknowledging God’s sovereignty and his right to direct our lives’ and that if God has given commandments ‘we should obey them.’11 This is all very true. The Law is not a burden, God is sovereign and He does have the right to direct the lives of believers in Yeshua by His commandments. But Stern believes Peter’s yoke was legalism, the ‘detailed mechanical rule-keeping, regardless of heart attitude, that some’ Pharisees had. He states that it was this ‘yoke of legalism’ that was indeed ‘unbearable.’12 No flesh shall be justified by legalism? As true as that is, what is biblically true is, ‘No flesh shall be justified by doing the works of the Law’ (Gal. 2:16). One can’t be Born Again by doing good deeds (and that’s Paul’s point). No amount of good works will transform one’s nature into that of the Son of God (Gal. 4:21).

Witherington also believes the yoke was the Law. He states that Peter, as ‘a Galilean fisherman’ may not have liked parts of the Law that would have been a burden to him, such as going to Jerusalem three times a year for the annual Feasts (Ex. 23:17). This would have meant he couldn’t work to support his family.13

As logical as this may seem it totally misses the mindset of a Jew who was all too happy to leave work for a week or so on God’s ordained ‘holy vacations’ to go to Jerusalem and worship Yahveh in the midst of all his brethren. After all it was Yahveh who made him a fisherman and ultimately provided for him and his family. And this every Jew knew but Witherington, in failing to understand the divine place of the Law and the joy of celebrating the Feasts, stumbles. He also adds that the Gentile was being required to become a proselyte to Judaism.14 This was true but neither Peter nor his Fathers were proselytes so that can’t be the burden either.

Hegg believes the yoke was the Gentile becoming a proselyte also, with the traditional interpretation of Torah and the cumbersome man-made rules of the Pharisees attached to God’s commandments (Stern). The Gentile would have to be circumcised, become a proselyte and comply with all these in order to become part of Israel (to ‘get in’ to the ‘saved Jewish community’ as E. P. Sanders speaks of). In this, being part of Israel, the Gentile would be saved. He writes,

the “yoke they are unwilling to place upon the backs of the Gentile believers is the yoke of man-made rules and laws that required a ceremony to ‘get in’ and submission to untold number of intricate halachah.”15 (italics his)

Those Pharisaic believers who wanted the Gentiles circumcised (Acts 15:1, 5) were looking for them to become Jews (proselytes). That a proselyte was a Jew, part of the Jewish people, is seen in Nicolas being counted as such (Acts 6:5), and in Yeshua speaking of them (Mt. 23:15). Alfred Edersheim says that the children of a proselyte were ‘regarded as Jews’.16 He states that once the proselytes ‘were circumcised, immersed in water and offered a sacrifice’ they became,

‘children of the covenant’ ‘perfect Israelites’ ‘Israelites in every respect, both as regarded duties and privileges.’17

Herbert Loewe (1882–1940) in A Rabbinic Anthology adds that a ‘proselyte can say “God of our Fathers” because he is a full Jew’.18

The yoke though isn’t about becoming a proselyte with its ‘man-made rules’ and keeping the Law (symbolized in circumcision). Peter wasn’t a proselyte and he didn’t keep ‘man-made rules’ (Mt.15:2 by inference). This isn’t the burden he spoke of.

The yoke that neither Peter nor his Fathers could bear was the keeping of the Law…for Eternal Life (salvation; justification before God). This is what circumcision ultimately implied despite objections to the contrary. And this is what the Council struck down: the false teaching that the Law was a vehicle for salvation19 (as well as the thought that Gentiles needed to become Jews in order to be saved). The yoke has nothing to do with ‘legalism’ or ‘intricate halachah’ or ‘mechanically’ keeping the Law. Stern, Hegg and much of Christianity miss it at this point.

Marshall adroitly perceives that the yoke Peter spoke of was the Law used for justification:

‘The point here is not the burdensomeness or oppressiveness of the law, but rather the inability of the Jews to gain salvation through it, and hence its irrelevance as far as salvation is concerned.20

Exactly! But this is how Jews thought one earned eternal life despite the New Perspective presenting Judaism as a faith based religion that didn’t look to the Law for salvation. Before Sanders, Judaism espoused the ‘joy of the commandment’ as an idea stressed by the Rabbis.21 And that ‘the Law must be fulfilled for its own sake and for the love of God and not for reward.’22 In other words, one kept the Law because one was already saved, responding to it from a sense of gratitude, not works of righteousness (doing the Law to be saved).

The New Perspective on Judaism, brought into Christianity by Sanders, Dunn and Wright, follows that line of thinking, believing that the Jew wasn’t concerned about salvation because he was part of the Chosen People, which guaranteed his salvation. So the Jew didn’t have to keep the Law for salvation. He just walked out his faith in gratitude, believing he’d be given eternal life. But this was an ideal never achieved.

Scot McKnight, summarizing this ‘new perspective’ on Judaism states,

‘Israel was elected by God, brought into the covenant and given the law to regulate how covenant people live.’23

And James Dunn, speaking of Sanders says,

‘the commandments are not a way of earning God’s favor but a way of showing how the people of God should live. That’s the basic point that had to be made in terms of the new perspective.’24

The Christian New Perspective thinking on Judaism is ‘off base’ at these points. Theoretically, the Law of Moses is ‘faith based’ with belief in God and that He would do His part and bless Israel (Lev. 27; Dt. 28–20) as they walked in His Commandments. By the days of the Rabbis though, it had come to be the vehicle for Paradise. Using the Law as a vehicle for salvation was never what God intended. The Rabbis were wrong.

The idea of the Rabbis, that eternal life was given if one was part of the Chosen People, was also wrong. There’s no Scripture to validate it. And it’s not what was practiced in Judaism. Loewe states that Judaism,

‘like Hellenism or Islam, can be expounded and understood without being followed in practice.’25

Rabbi Akiva (50–135 A.D.) whom Judaism revers, lived a generation after Yeshua. He knew the inherent dangers of relying on ‘being a covenant member’ to automatically garner Paradise. It’s written of him that he,

‘seemed to hold that the future life is a privilege to be gained through positive upright living, rather than an inherent right which can only be forfeited as a penalty. Sometimes he asserted God’s mercy to be such that a single meritorious act will win a man admission to the future world.’26

Meritorious acts or good deeds (of the Law) were seen as necessary for eternal life even if one were ‘in covenant.’ In the New Perspective on Judaism and Paul ‘works of the Law’ has taken on the connotation of being specific Jewish works such as keeping the Sabbath and circumcision, etc. The works of the Law for Dunn are ‘sociological markers’ of the Jewish community so that ‘works of the Torah’ were not ‘merit-seeking works’ but ‘boundary-marking works’ (things like the Sabbath and circumcision, etc.)27 N. T. Wright says that Dunn is ‘exactly right.’ For Wright the ‘works of the Law’ aren’t the,

‘moral works though which one gains merit but the works through which the Jew is defined over against the pagan.’28

He adds that the works of the Spirit are those things that show that one is ‘in Christ.’ This would be things like bringing people into the Kingdom.29

Contrary to this pristine myopic evaluation of first century Judaism, ‘works of the Law’ are all the good works (good deeds) that stem from doing the Law. It’s equally Sabbath observance as well as feeding the poor and caring for the widow and the orphan (compassion, justice and love of neighbor; Lev. 19:18; Mt. 5:16; Gal. 2:10; 1st Tim. 5:10; 6:17-19; Titus 2:11-14; 3:8, 14; Rev. 19:8), and the mighty works or miracles that Yeshua did (Mt. 11:2; Jn. 5:36; 15:24, etc.). All these stem from the Law’s commandments and the physical and spiritual freedom found in the Law and the Jubilee Year (Lev. 25:8-10; Is. 61:1-2; Lk. 4:18-19).

Yahveh says of Yeshua, ‘You are My Servant Israel in whom I will be glorified (Is. 49:3).’30> Yeshua is the quintessential Israeli. He is the Example par excellence of one who is fully given over to God and walking in His ways (the Law). Torah is the verbal expression of Yahveh; Who He is, what’s He’s done for Israel, and His will for Israel. Yahveh has magnified and glorified His Law through Yeshua. Isaiah said,

‘Yahveh was pleased for the sake of His righteousness to magnify His Law and make it glorious.’ (Is 42:21)

Yeshua was like a prism through which the Law and the Holy Spirit were seen. He is the Living Torah, the Word of God (Rev. 19:13). The good and mighty healings Yeshua did sprang from the Law and Spirit within.31

The Holy Spirit is able to empower believers so they can do all the works of the Law as Yeshua did.32 These works all stem from the Power and Fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:22-24). Torah forms the internal grid-work for one to be ‘fully equipped for every good work’ (2nd Tim. 3:16-17).

Claude Montefiore (1858–1938) sums up Judaism’s concept of righteousness and therefore eternal life. He states,

‘There is no rigid or worked-out doctrine about Works and Faith. On the whole, the theory of justification by works is strongly pressed.33

Montefiore also speaks of the individual being regarded as a,

‘bundle of deeds. If he has done 720 good deeds and 719 bad ones, he is more righteous than wicked (with due consequences as regards divine punishment and reward)’.34

‘At the judgment in the world to come, paradise or hell is given according to the majority of good deeds or evil’.35

Is this a concept of Judaism that wasn’t there in the days of Yeshua and Paul? Has Judaism ‘gone backward’ in it’s thinking? Once they were saved by just being in covenant but today it takes the works of the Law?

Jewish thought in the days of Yeshua and the Apostles wasn’t like the monolithic religion of Roman Catholicism a thousand years ago. There were more than twenty different sects of what constituted ‘the proper way’ (e.g. Pharisee, Essene, Sadducee, Herodian, Zealot, etc.). But what was Peter calling a yoke? And is it possible to understand some kind of official Jewish thought about eternal life from the New Testament?

The Council met to see if the Gentile needed to become a Jew and to keep the Law of Moses, symbolized in circumcision, for eternal life, along with faith in Jesus. The Torah was being used or rather abused as a means of salvation by the Pharisees and Rabbis, etc. This was the common and official understanding for eternal life among the Jewish people in the days of Peter and Paul (Rom. 9:30-32), as well today.

Moses hadn’t placed this yoke upon the necks of the Fathers; the Pharisees had. God never intended this perverse use of His Law. This is what Peter and his Fathers (his genealogical fathers as well as the Elders of Israel), had been deceived into believing: that God would give them Eternal Life if they kept the Law. This is the yoke that no one could bear (Rom. 3:20, 28; Gal. 2:16-17). And this is exactly what Yeshua brings out when He speaks to the Jewish authorities (Jn. 5:10) and the Jewish people who looked for salvation from the doing of the Law. Yeshua said in John 5:39,

‘You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life, but it is they that testify of Me.’

Yeshua Himself, the highest authority in any matter, speaks of Jewish expectation for eternal life residing within the Torah. This is also brought out in John (7:43-49). The Pharisaic leaders and chief priests in the Sanhedrin said the common Jewish people were cursed because they didn’t know the Law (‘this multitude which doesn’t know the Law is accursed!’ v. 49).

All those ‘cursed’ folks were Jews ‘in covenant’ but Jews that didn’t know the Law the way the Pharisees, scribes and Sadducees did and so were obviously not candidates for Heaven, at least in their minds. This is a biblical insight into how the highest Jewish authorities at that time thought about blessings from God and eternal life. Obedience to the Law was righteousness as the Law and Paul state (Dt. 6:25; 24:13; Rom. 10:5). But extending it to eternal life wasn’t God’s way for eternal life.

This same Sanhedrin despised the man born blind whom Yeshua gave sight to. They said to the former blind man,

‘You were completely born in sins and are you teaching us?! And they cast him out.’ (Jn. 9:34)

The Sanhedrin, the highest religious authority in the days of Yeshua, reveals official Jewish understanding of which Jews would attain Heaven and which Jews wouldn’t (sinners). The man ‘born in sin’ even though he was obviously a Jew, circumcised on the 8th day, and part of the Chosen People, didn’t qualify even though his answers to them were excellent and exceptionally perceptive (Jn. 9:13-34).36 Their thinking on this subject is of greater value than what some Rabbis may have written in trying to idealize their religion. It also outweighs New Perspective Christian thinking about how the Jews perceived salvation for themselves. The truth was that one needed to keep the Law for Paradise.

The Rabbis knew better than to think that all Israel would be saved, even though Yahveh had saved them from Egyptian slavery and brought them into covenant. They knew Israel’s history was permeated with wicked Israelis whom Yahveh destroyed or whom the Scriptures speak of as evil.37 The Rabbis knew this side of Israel too and believed that obedience to the Torah was the key to inheriting eternal life in paradise, as Yeshua pointed out to their spiritual ancestors (Jn. 5:39; see also Rev. 20:12-13).

The mainstream rabbinic position was that those who kept the Law would inherit Life in the world to come. A rabbinic story reveals the problem the Rabbis faced with this concept. A great rabbi lay dying on his deathbed. All his students gathered around him and noticed that he was very sad. They asked him about his sorrow. He said,

‘I am soon going to be before the Holy One and I don’t know if I will be accepted.’ They said, ‘But you are a great rabbi! You have taught us how to walk in Torah and have kept Torah all your life!’ Whereupon he answered them, ‘To you I am great but in the eyes of the Holy One, every wicked thing is seen.’

This reveals the problem with trying to use the Law as a gauge to determine one’s fitness to stand in God’s presence on Judgment Day. There’s no amount of walking in, or doing of the Torah, or the doing of good deeds (works of the Law) that can give one eternal life or the assurance thereof.

It also brings out that just being ‘part of Israel’ wasn’t enough, even for a great rabbi. The Gentile ‘getting into’ the ‘covenant-saved people’ would still be expected to keep the Law for eternal life (Rom. 2:17, 25; Gal. 5:4). This was the burden that neither Peter nor his Fathers could bear. After Peter spoke of the yoke, his next words (Acts 15:11) declared that the Gentile was saved just as he had been:

‘But we believe that they’ (i.e. the Gentiles) ‘are saved just as we are, by the Grace of the Lord Jesus.’

In other words Peter could have also said,

‘We used to think that keeping the Law entitled us to Heaven (Jn. 5:39) but we’ve come to see that this was a perverse concept the Pharisees gave to God’s holy Law.’

The Council met because some believing Pharisees wanted to make Jews of the Gentiles and attach the Law to faith in Yeshua through circumcision (Acts 15:1, 5). In other words, they would say that salvation or entry into the Kingdom of Yeshua consisted of faith in Yeshua plus the keeping of the Law (symbolized in circumcision). And of course they would have thought that for themselves too. They hadn’t fully realized what the Blood of the Lamb was all about concerning entry into, and maintenance within, the Kingdom of the Son. This is what Peter is addressing. He’s not speaking against the Law. He’s coming against the Law being attached to faith in Jesus for salvation.

This was a new concept for those believing Pharisees and most everyone else. That’s what the Council was all about. The congregation in Antioch wanted to know what was required for Gentile salvation. In a very real sense it was logical for the believing Pharisees to think that way. This is how Gentiles became part of Israel before Messiah Yeshua, by being circumcised (Ex. 12:48) and keeping the Law (Ex. 12:49; Lev. 19:34; 24:22, etc.). But this was a new Kingdom and a new way of entering it.

Only after much debate in Jerusalem (Acts 15:7) did the outcome prevail that we read of. It most likely took several hours. Then Peter stood up and declared the council of God. It seems that Paul and Barnabas already understood this (Acts 15:1-2). But it wasn’t ‘a given.’

Yes, the Law had also become enmeshed with the Traditions of the Elders but the main point that Peter is making is that the Law cannot be attached to Jesus for salvation. Peter and the other Apostles only came to see this after they realized how God had given them eternal life: through faith in His Son plus nothing else. This was the entry point, the middle point and the end point, although led of the Spirit, good works are a spiritual by-product of faith in Yeshua.38

Now, once in the Kingdom, does it matter if one sins against God or not? Here is where the Law comes to the forefront. It declares what is right and holy, sin and abomination in Yahveh’s eyes for Jew and Gentile.

Before Peter and Paul had known Yeshua, they too had been deceived into thinking that the keeping of the Law would merit them eternal life with God. But now in Acts 15:10 Peter was setting the record straight, something that Paul would do in Rom. 3:31 where he writes of establishing (the place of) the Law in the life of every believer.

Paul’s saying that the place of the Law is not for eternal life as he had previously thought, unregenerate Pharisee that he was. But now, it was the criteria for knowing God’s view on what is sin and what is right living (Rom. 7:7, 12, 14; 1st Cor. 7:19, etc.) even and especially when a person enters the Kingdom by faith in Yeshua. Was Paul writing to the Sanhedrin, or to believers in Rome and Corinth?

Religious traditions that nullify God’s Word are very hard to perceive when one grows up in them. This is true for those Jewish believers back then and for so many in the Church today. Tradition blinds people into thinking that it’s of God. When one looks at the Pharisees, locked in mortal combat with the Son of God, one sees how tradition can bring one to fight against the Living God Himself. Only the Holy Spirit can bring Light that reveals the deception, and desire to motivate for change.

Paul fought this false teaching on salvation (of combining circumcision with faith in Jesus) in his letter to the Galatians. He now understood the difference of using the Law for salvation, and the Law as a means for divine living. Here is his conclusion of the matter, on using the good deeds of the Law (symbolized in circumcision) for justification in Gal. 5:4:

‘You have been severed from Christ, you who are seeking to be justified by Law! You have fallen from Grace!’

Some of the Galatians were seeking to be justified by faith in Messiah and the Law. Anything attached to, or added to Yeshua denies the sufficiency of Who He is and What He did. But once in the Kingdom, does it matter if we obey the King? His laws are meant to be for our lifestyle in His Kingdom just as they were for Him, and to set us apart (i.e. make us holy and distinct) from the world of darkness just as they did with Him. They’re for our protection and blessing (Lev. 26; Dt. 28–30). God didn’t give the Law to Israel because He hated her or wanted to enslave her. He was sharing His wisdom and character with her. He’d like to do that with us too.

Yahveh never intended that the Law would be a means of eternal life. Nowhere within the Law does God say that if it’s obeyed, the reward will be eternal life. No one can be ‘justified’ or ‘Born Again’ by the keeping of the Law. The Law was never intended as such. The Law gave Israel the holy rules for covenant relationship with Yahveh and with their fellow Hebrews after they were delivered or saved from Egyptian slavery. Once delivered and saved from Satan’s Kingdom of slavery to him, sin and death, the Law is the holy guideline for the Gentile too.

The yoke that neither Peter nor his Fathers could bear wasn’t the Law. The Law is a holy Gift from Above (Lev. 18:5; Dt. 4:5-8; Rom. 7:12). It wasn’t circumcision. Peter was circumcised and neither he nor his Fathers found that unbearable. It wasn’t being or becoming a Jew. Peter and his Fathers were Jews. They realized that God had been very gracious to them and had chosen them out of all the peoples on the face of the Earth.39

The yoke that neither Peter nor his Fathers could bear was the keeping of the Law for salvation symbolized in circumcision. This is a tremendous burden (Mt. 11:28-30), as the story of the great rabbi illustrated. And works righteousness nullifies the Person and Work of Yeshua.

Acts 15:10 cannot be used to prove that the Law is the yoke that Peter spoke of and therefore ‘not for the Gentiles.’ It’s a verse that reveals the bankruptcy of trying to keep the Law for salvation (Rom. 9:30-32). The New Testament doesn’t negate Mosaic Law (Mt. 5:17-19; Rom. 3:31; 7:7). Peter wasn’t doing away with the Law either. He said the keeping of the Law for salvation was a yoke that neither he nor his Fathers could bear. He had found the True Yoke (Mt. 11:28-30).




ENDNOTES (The book has footnotes)

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1. Knowling, The Acts of the Apostles , p. 320. It’s a ‘metaphor common among the Rabbis, and also in classical literature,’ cf. Jer. 5:5; Lam. 3:27; Ecclus. 51:26 (Zeph. 3:9) and Matt. 11:29 (Luke 11:46) Gal. 5:1. ‘Possibly in’ Jer. 5:5 ‘reference is made to the yoke of the law, but Psalms of Solomon ’ 7:8 cf. 27:32 ‘present undoubted instances of the metaphorical use of the term “the yoke” for the service of Jehovah. In Sayings of the Jewish Fathers ’ 3:8 ‘(Taylor, second edition, p. 46), we have a definite and twice repeated reference to the yoke of Thorah’. ‘It would seem therefore that St. Peter uses an almost technical word’ for the Law of Moses.

2. Bruce, The Book of the Acts , p. 290.

3. Ibid.

4. David is called πατριαρχου (Patriarch; Father) in Mk. 11:10 and Acts 2:20.

5. Words like judgments and statutes, etc., are synonymous with God’s Law and speak of His holy Instruction or Teaching (Torah) to Israel (Dt. 4:44-45; 5:1-22; 7:11, etc.). For testimony see: Ps. 78:5; 119:88; 132:12; Is. 8:20, etc. For testimonies: Dt. 4:45; 6:17, 20; Ps. 25:10; 78:56; 99:7, etc. For judgments: Lev. 18:4, 5, 26; 25:18; Dt. 4:1, 5, 8; 5:31, etc. For ordinances: Ex. 21:1; 24:3; Lev. 19:37; 20:22; 26:15; Num. 9:3, etc. For statutes: Ex. 18:20; Lev. 10:11; 18:4, 5, 26; 19:19; 20:8; Dt. 6:1, etc. For commandments: Ex. 15:26; 16:28; Lev. 22:31; Num. 15:22; Dt. 6:17, etc. For fear of Yahveh: Ex. 9:30; 18:21; 20:20; Lev. 25:17; Dt. 4:10; 5:29; 6:2, 13, 24; Mt. 10:28, etc.

6. Bruce, The Book of the Acts , p. 285.

7. Pfeiffer, WBC , p. 1151.

8. Ibid.

9. Williams, Acts , p. 264.

10. Stern, JNTC , p. 276.

11. Ibid.

12. Ibid.

13. Witherington, The Acts of the Apostles , p. 454.

14. Ibid., pp. 453-454. He also speaks of the possibility that Peter spoke of the ‘priestly requirements of the Law’ that the ‘Pharisees and the Qumranites’ were wanting all Jews to walk in as well as suggesting that Jesus may have thought the Law to be heavy (Mt. 11:30). It wasn’t the glorious Law that Yahveh had given to Israel (Dt. 4:5-8; Rom. 7:12) that Yeshua spoke of as heavy, but the weight of sin and guilt upon each person (Rom. 7:7).

15. Hegg, The Letter Writer , pp. 265; 280-281f. Halachah means ‘the way to walk’ and is used by the Rabbis to describe their rules for living in this world.

Hegg is quite mistaken on the ability of a Gentile to be circumcised. He teaches that Timothy was a Gentile (pp. 113, 285), and because he realized that his faith saved him, he could be circumcised. This is pure conjecture but Hegg uses his view to build a theological position that Gentiles can be circumcised, for the right reasons (p. 114). But why would Paul circumcise Timothy if he taught against it (Acts 16:4; 1st Cor. 7:17-19, 24; Gal. 2:3; 5:2)?

Timothy is not an example of Gentile circumcision. He didn’t ask to be circumcised (and there’s not a hint of Gentile circumcision in the N.T. either). Paul circumcised Timothy because he wanted Timothy to go with him. Timothy was seen as a Jew. Acts 16:3 states, ‘Paul wanted this man to go with him and he took him and circumcised him because of the Jews who were in those parts, for they all knew that his father was a Greek.’ Why would Jews care if a Gentile boy was circumcised? The verse only makes sense if Timothy was seen as a Jew by those Jews (and Paul), and hadn’t been circumcised when he should have been (at eight days old; Gen. 17:10-14). His mother was Jewish (Acts 16:1), and this seems to be the criteria that Paul went by (despite some information from the Mishna to the contrary that Hegg presents; p. 113, notes 232-233). In Orthodox Judaism, if the mother is Jewish, the child is too.

There’s no place in the New Testament that even hints that a Gentile (or his new born son), should receive circumcision if he understood that he wasn’t doing it in order to be saved. The New Testament never speaks of it or authorizes it. On the contrary, a number of places in the N.T. explicitly state (or imply), that the Gentile isn’t to be circumcised (Acts 15:1-21; Rom. 3:30; 4:7-12, 16; 1st Cor. 7:17-19, 24; Gal. 2:3; 5:2). But didn’t God realize what He said to Abraham and Moses about circumcision (Gen. 17:14; Ex. 12:48)? It seems that the ‘circumcision made without hands’ by Messiah Yeshua (Col. 2:11; Phil. 3:3), pictured in Dt. 30:6, has superseded physical circumcision for the Gentile, and places every believer in the New Jerusalem (Gal. 6:16), where Yeshua is King. (See also Rom. 2:26-29; 4:9-12.)

With Timothy being circumcised, boys born to a Jewish woman should be considered Jewish. And even if ‘only’ the father is Jewish, the child should still be circumcised. This transcends rabbinic tradition (i.e. only the mother ‘makes’ the child Jewish). But Tamar wasn’t a Jewess, yet who would say that Perez wasn’t a Hebrew (Gen. 38:29; 46:12)? And Asenath was an Egyptian (Gen. 41:50f.), but both her sons, Efraim and Manasa, literally become two of the Tribes of Israel (Gen. 48:1-5; Num. 1:10). Therefore sons born to a Jewish parent should be seen as Jews and circumcised on the eighth day.

16. Alfred Edersheim, The Life and Times of Jesus The Messiah (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, 2000), p. 1015.

17. Ibid., p. 1014.

18. C. G. Montefiore and H. Loewe, A Rabbinic Anthology (New York: Shocken Books, 1974), p. lxxxv.

19. Marshall, Acts , p. 250. ‘What the legalists were trying to do was to place the yoke of the law on the Gentiles, a yoke which the Jews themselves had never been able to bear successfully’ ‘as far as salvation is concerned.’

20. Ibid.

21. Montefiore, ARA , p. 202.

22. Ibid., p. xxxvi. Italics are Montefiore’s.

23. McKnight: http://www.jesuscreed.org/?p=2690. Aug. 9th, 2007.

24. Wright: The Paul Page , http://www.thepaulpage.com/Conversation.html, p. 2. Oct. 25th, 2004.

25. Montefiore, ARA , p. lvii.

26. Ibid., p. 664 note 13.

27. McKnight: http://www.jesuscreed.org/?p=2688. Aug. 7th, 2007.

28. N. T. Wright: New Perspectives on Paul at http://www.ntwrightpage.com/Wright_New_Perspectives.htm, p. 4, Aug. 26th, 2003.

29. Ibid., p. 11, Aug. 26th, 2003.

30. Jn. 14:10-12; 12:28; 16:14; 17:1, 5; 21:19.

31. Mt. 11:4-6; 23:23; Jn. 5:36; 9:3-4, etc.

32. Mt. 5:16; Jn. 14:12; Acts 4:8; 8:6-7, etc.

33. Montefiore, ARA , p. xxxv.

34. Ibid., p. xxxv.

35. Ibid., p. 596.

36. The Sanhedrin was confronted with the Messiah and they knew it. That’s why they made doubly sure that the man had been born blind (by asking his parents to come; Jn. 9:18-23). There was a legend at that time that a righteous man could open the eyes of a blind man, but only the Messiah could open the eyes of one born blind. And here was this man who had been born blind looking right at them as they tried to discredit Yeshua. It shouldn’t be overlooked though that some members of the Sanhedrin (like Nicodemus and Joseph of Arimathea, etc.) voiced their opinions. It states that even though it was the Sabbath when the miracle had been done, because the miracle was so incredible, they questioned the party line that Yeshua was a sinner (Jn. 9:16).

37. Ex. 32:1-35 is the sin of the Gold Calf; Num. 16:1-40 esp. v. 26 is the sin of Korah; Num. 16:44-45 is the sin of Israel in wanting to stone Moses and Aaron saying that they had murdered Korah. Num. 13:1-14:45 esp. 14:26-38 is the sin of the entire Camp in believing the ten spies and turning Israel against Yahveh and His promise to bring them into the land of Canaan for which they wandered in the Wilderness for 40 years (see also Num. 17:5, 10; 18:5). The sins of all the kings of the northern kingdom of Israel, for which Yahveh finally annihilated it through the king of Assyria in 721 B.C. And the sins of most of the kings of the southern kingdom of Judah, with many being destroyed and a tiny remnant being led away into Babylon captivity.

38. Mt. 25:31-46; Rom. 2:5-8, 13; Eph. 2:10; 1st Tim. 2:10; 5:9-10; 6:18; 2nd Tim. 2:21; 3:14-17; Titus 1:16; 2:6, 13-14; 3:1, 8, 14; James 2:14-26; Rev. 2:2-5, 9; 13:13.

39. Ex. 14:4-30; 19:5; 33:12-17; 34:8-11; Lev. 20:24, 26; Num. 33:50-56; Dt. 4:5-37; 14:2; 26:18-19; 1st Kgs. 8:53; 2nd Kgs. 21:7-8; Ps. 132:13-18; 135:4; 144:15; Isaiah 27:2-6; 41:8-9; 42:1; 43:3, 4, 15, 20, 21; 44:21, 22; 45:4, 17, 19, 25; 46:3, 4, 13; 49:14-16; 52:8:18; Jer. 46:27-28; 50:11, 18-20, 33-34; 51:19, 24, 45, 49; Ezk. 20:6; Zech. 2:8; 8:2-8; Rom. 9–11; Rev. 21, etc.

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