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Apologia for the Law Pt 2 with Roger Hadad - JL 223

Jacobs Ladder Podcast

Release Date: 10/14/2024

JL 236 - Work as the Meaning of Life - PPP 117 show art JL 236 - Work as the Meaning of Life - PPP 117

Jacobs Ladder Podcast

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Apologia for the Sabbath with Roger Hadad - JL235 show art Apologia for the Sabbath with Roger Hadad - JL235

Jacobs Ladder Podcast

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Jacobs Ladder Podcast

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Lessons from Parenting at Work with Adam Malone - JL233 show art Lessons from Parenting at Work with Adam Malone - JL233

Jacobs Ladder Podcast

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Lessons from Dark Matter - JL232 - PPP115 show art Lessons from Dark Matter - JL232 - PPP115

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Content Selflessness Purpose Choices Flesh vs Spirit Repentence

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On Getting Out of Bed Pt2 with Alan Noble - JL231 show art On Getting Out of Bed Pt2 with Alan Noble - JL231

Jacobs Ladder Podcast

We aren't always honest about how difficult normal human life is.   In this 2nd part of a 2 part interview, we discuss that for the majority of people, sorrow, despair, anxiety, and mental illness are everyday experiences. While we have made tremendous advancements in therapy and psychiatry, the burden of living still comes down to mundane choices that we each must make—like the daily choice to get out of bed.   In this deeply personal essay, Alan Noble considers the unique burden of everyday life in the modern world. Sometimes, he writes, the choice to carry on amid great...

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JL 230 - Mental Health - PPP114 show art JL 230 - Mental Health - PPP114

Jacobs Ladder Podcast

Tips on Providing Help for Those Struggling with either Mental Health Challenges or Mental Health Disorders

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On Getting Out of Bed Pt1  with Alan Noble - JL229 show art On Getting Out of Bed Pt1 with Alan Noble - JL229

Jacobs Ladder Podcast

We aren't always honest about how difficult normal human life is.   In this interview, based on Alan Noble's book we discuss that for the majority of people, sorrow, despair, anxiety, and mental illness are everyday experiences. While we have made tremendous advancements in therapy and psychiatry, the burden of living still comes down to mundane choices that we each must make—like the daily choice to get out of bed.   In this deeply personal essay, Alan Noble considers the unique burden of everyday life in the modern world. Sometimes, he writes, the choice to carry on amid great...

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JL 228 - Lessons from the Movie Here - PPP113 show art JL 228 - Lessons from the Movie Here - PPP113

Jacobs Ladder Podcast

Look for the positive message not hung up on something's that makes you said. Honor your parents-friend shared how he and his wife were caring for his father who was in the early stages of dementia, his only wish not to go in a nursing home “Honor your father and your mother, so that you may live long in the land the Lord your God is giving you. https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Exod.20.12&version=NIV Stop worrying (verses) "Therefore do not worry about tomorrow, for tomorrow will worry about its own things. Sufficient for the day  its own trouble. NKJV Pursue your...

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Are We Doing Church Wrong with Jason Pierce-JL227 show art Are We Doing Church Wrong with Jason Pierce-JL227

Jacobs Ladder Podcast

For professional management: [email protected]   You teach classes on having a vision for your life and it struck both of us as we were talking recently that you don’t hear this message about casting a vision for your life, often if ever in the Christian church. Why do you think that is? What are the consequences of this, I.e. how is this lack of direction from church messaging on vision affecting the way we “do” Church as well as the way we as believers live our lives outside the church? How might Christianity be different if this dynamic were to change? Is this Biblical? If not,...

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More Episodes
There is another New Testament writer of just one
book, who sometimes seems to counter Paul’s arguments relating to the law. I’m talking, of course, about the book of James, written by the brother of the Master, though I understand his real name was Jacob or in Hebrew Ja’akov.  You make the point that many of James arguments mirror those of the Master, and that James did not have a pharasaical background as Paul did.  Why is this important and what can we learn from James about our understanding of the law?
 
Your chapter titled “The Sacred Law” begins perhaps ironically with a quote from Paul, Romans 7:12 “So then, the law is holy, and the commandment is holy, righteous and good”. You then devote about 11 pages to just a portion of the many scriptures that describe the law as good, holy and something we should try to keep. Not to bore our listeners who don’t get excited about arguments based on the original Greek and Hebrew meanings, but you make a fascinating point about the use of the Greek words nomos and entole referring to the law and the commandments.  Walk us through this observation and it’s implications for our understanding.
 
You are intellectually honest, as they say, in your book, and note that modern Christianity’s understanding of the law is not without reason.  You list several verses commonly used to support a certain viewpoint.  I’d like to read these verses and then ask you to respond. 
The first verse is 2 Cor 5:17 “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; old things have passed away; behold all things have become new”
The next verse is Hebrews 8:13 “In that He says a New Covenant, he has the made the first obsolete. Now what is becoming obsolete and growing old is ready to vanish away”
And third is John 13:34 “A new commandment I give to you that you love one another; as I have loved you, that you also love one another”.
What is your response to these verses?
 
When asked for the greatest commandment, Christ said basically to love God and love others.  Why is it a mistake to think of this love as an emotional love?
 
No debate on this topic is complete without a reference to Acts 15.  Talk to us about what happened in Acts 15 and what we should learn from it as it relates to our relationship with the law?
 
Another phrase used in this debate is the New Covenant.  Now, I realize we could devote multiple podcast episodes just talking about the concept of a covenant and all its uses in the Bible, but to cut to the chase what is your understanding of what the New Covenant is and how it should impact our faith and our understanding of the law?
 
You use an interesting analogy of a Rubik’s cube to describe the puzzle of understanding what Christ described as weightier matters of the law, those of justice, faith and mercy.  What is the relationship of these three concepts to each other?