Todd writes,“So if the Mosaic Law cannot be used as a political blueprint of laws for common grace nations outside a theocracy appointed by God, and the New Testament is silent concerning such civil laws, the conclusion must be that the Lord has not chosen to reveal such things to us in his Word. Thus pastors, as heralds of the Word only, cannot instruct the government on public policy questions without going beyond the Word of God. So the Law of Moses, because of its religious purpose in the history of redemption, cannot be used as a legal guide for all nations, and that most directly addresses the theonomic critique of E2k.”
2.) Note that Todd calls the Law, “the Law of Moses.” In all actuality it was the Law of God handed down to Moses. The reason that this is important to point out is that what Todd, and all R2K, is telling us is that the Law of the Old Testament God is not valid in the New Testament God’s world. This R2K theology gives us a Marcion and non-immutable God. Orthodox Reformed theology has always taught that God changes not. R2K theology is giving us a mutable god and this only on the barest and most contrived hermeneutic. It has always been understood that God’s law is His character but Todd tells us that God’s character, while emblazoned upon the pages of the Old Testament, has been strangely muted in the New and better covenant.
I’ve been trying to think of pithy ways to say all of this.
R2K — The theology where Christ dies to save us from God’s law for the public square
R2K — The theology where the New Testament God is more social order friendly then the Old Testament God
R2K — Christ dying to make bestiality safe for the public square
R2K — Where the Old Testament was a better covenant because the Kingdom ethic wasn’t yet taken away as intrusion
R2K — The theology that allows Theologians to envision laws allowing sodomite unions
Maybe my readers can improve on distilling R2K even more succinctly.
Perhaps a little broad, but here goes:
With holiness outside our way,
Amidst the world and blending,
We welcome fifty shades of grey,
Common there disguised our sin.
Sorry, left out a word:
With holiness outside our way,
Amidst the world and blending in,
We welcome fifty shades of grey,
Common there disguised our sin.
Outstanding Cuke!
But Todd sees holiness as only being for the Church realm.