Episode Title: What Torah Cannot Do for Us: The Mystery of Lawlessness — Part 5 of the “What Torah Can and Cannot Do for Us” series.
Episode Summary: Beloved, in this concluding installment, we bring this series home by putting Torah in its proper, Yah-given place in the life of the redeemed. Torah is holy, righteous, good, and covenantally necessary, but Torah cannot save us, justify us, or cancel the sin debt that stands against us in the Court of Heaven. Only the shed blood and atoning work of our Master, Yehoshua HaMashiyach, can satisfy that certificate of indebtedness. And when we truly receive that gift by trusting faith, the only proper response is obedience, repentance, teshuvah, and a renewed commitment to walk in Yah’s ancient paths.
Key Teaching Themes
- Torah cannot save or justify us: Torah reveals Yah’s righteous standard and exposes our transgressions, but it was never designed to pay the deadly sin debt that we rack up against ourselves.
- Yeshua alone cancels the debt: Colossians 2:13–15 is not about Torah being abolished, beloved. It is about the hostile record of our transgressions being nailed to the execution stake with our Master.
- Faith is an action word: Hebraically speaking, believing is not merely agreeing with a set of religious facts. True trusting faith produces obedience, covenant loyalty, repentance, and works that line up with the Kingdom.
- The mystery of Torahlessness was already at work: Shaul warned the Thessalonian assembly that lawlessness was already moving within the Body of Mashiyach, and that same anti-Torah spirit continues to trouble the Body today.
- Sin is lawlessness: Yochanan tells us plainly that sin is transgression of Yah’s Torah. In other words, sin is missing Yah’s established mark of righteousness.
- There is a difference between ignorance and rebellion: Torah distinguishes unintentional sin from high-handed sin. Ignorance still requires atonement and correction, but willful rebellion is a far more dangerous place to remain.
- The ancient paths remain Yah’s pathway home: Jeremiah 6:16 and Matthew 11:28–30 call us back to Yah’s good way through the yoke, halachah, and example of Yeshua Messiah.
Biblical References Cited or Discussed
| Passage | Why I Brought It Into This Teaching |
| Colossians 2:13–15 | This is our anchor passage for understanding the certificate of indebtedness that stood against us and how Yehoshua triumphed over the rulers and authorities by nailing that debt to the execution stake. |
| Colossians 1:13–14 | This passage reminds us that Yah has delivered us from the power of darkness and transferred us into the Kingdom of His dear Son. |
| Matthew 11:28–30 | Master’s invitation to take His yoke upon us shows that discipleship involves learning His halachah and walking in the Father’s ways. |
| Matthew 7:22–23 | This sobering text warns us that religious activity without covenant relationship and obedience may still be lawlessness. |
| James 2:14–26 | Ya’achov reminds us that true faith is never dead, idle, or merely intellectual. Real faith shows up in obedient works. |
| 2 Thessalonians 2:7–9 | Shaul alerts the Body that the mystery of lawlessness was already at work in his day. |
| Jude 3–4, 16, 18 | Jude sounds the alarm about false teachers who turn Yah’s grace into licentiousness and undermine the faith once delivered. |
| John 10:10 | Yeshua reveals the enemy’s agenda: to steal, kill, and destroy. |
| Amos 3:3 | This simple prophetic question reminds us that we cannot truly walk with Yah unless we are in agreement with Him. |
| Luke 13:27 | This passage warns of the tragic end awaiting those who work unrighteousness and remain outside true covenant relationship. |
| Matthew 5:17–20 | Yeshua did not come to destroy Torah but to fulfill it and teach us what true righteousness looks like. |
| Deuteronomy 28 | This chapter gives us the covenant framework of blessings for obedience and curses for disobedience. |
| 1 John 3:4 | Yochanan defines sin plainly as lawlessness or transgression of Yah’s Torah. |
| Romans 3:23 | Shaul confirms that all of us have sinned and fallen short of Yah’s glory. |
| Numbers 15:27–31 | Torah distinguishes sins of ignorance from high-handed, defiant rebellion. |
| Hebrews 10:26–29 | This text warns us about the danger of continuing in deliberate sin after receiving the knowledge of the truth. |
| 1 John 1:9 | Yah remains faithful and just to forgive and cleanse us when we confess our sins. |
| Isaiah 64:4–6 | The prophet reminds us that our own righteousness is as soiled garments before a holy Elohim. |
| Jeremiah 18:1–10 | The potter and clay passage shows Yah’s sovereign response to repentance or rebellion. |
| Romans 1:28 | This passage warns that persistent rejection of Yah can result in being given over to a reprobate mind. |
| Jeremiah 13:23–27 | Jeremiah reveals the shame and judgment that come from entrenched wickedness and refusal to return. |
| Jeremiah 6:16 | Yah calls His people to ask for the ancient paths, walk in the good way, and find rest for their souls. |
Scholarly and Lexical Research Notes
Colossians 2:14 — cheirographon and the “certificate of indebtedness.” Beloved, the Greek term cheirographon is generally understood as a handwritten bond, note of debt, or legal record that stands against a debtor. That is significant because it supports what we have been saying throughout this teaching: the thing nailed to the execution stake was not Yah’s holy Torah, but the hostile record of our transgressions against Torah. Kyu Seop Kim’s Tyndale Bulletin study helps nuance this discussion by showing that cheirographon could refer to handwritten declarations, receipts, loans, contracts, and oath-related documents in ancient papyri. Even with that nuance, the force of Colossians 2:14 still points to the removal of the hostile document that stood against us, not the removal of Yah’s righteous instructions.
2 Thessalonians 2:7 — the mystery of lawlessness. When Shaul speaks of the “mystery of lawlessness,” he uses the Greek mysterion, which has to do with something once hidden but now being revealed, and anomia, which points to lawlessness or Torahlessness. The apostle was not talking about some harmless doctrinal disagreement. He was warning the Body that rebellion against Yah’s righteous standards was already working beneath the surface in the apostolic era.
James 2:14–26 — faith and works. Ya’achov makes it painfully clear that faith without works is dead. He points us to Avraham and Rahab, both of whom demonstrated their trust through obedience. And yes, the Book of James has had its share of controversy in church history, including Martin Luther’s famous “epistle of straw” remark. But beloved, the plain sense of the passage remains: trusting faith that does not produce obedience is not the living, covenantal faith of Scripture.
1 John 3:4 — sin as anomia. Yochanan does not leave us guessing as to what sin is. He tells us plainly that sin is lawlessness. The Greek anomia speaks to a disregard for law, rebellion against divine authority, and a refusal to walk according to Yah’s revealed standards. In other words, sin is not simply a mistake or personal weakness; it is a deviation from Yah’s established way of righteousness.
Numbers 15:27–31 — unintentional versus high-handed sin. Torah makes a distinction between sins committed unintentionally and sins committed with a high hand. That high-handed posture is one of conscious defiance, contempt, and open rebellion against Yehovah’s authority. This distinction matters greatly because ignorance calls for correction, atonement, and repentance, while willful rebellion places a soul in a very dangerous covenantal position.
Hebrews 10:26–29 — deliberate sin after knowledge of the truth. The writer of Hebrews warns that if we continue sinning deliberately after receiving the knowledge of the truth, we are not dealing with a simple stumble. We are dealing with a settled, dangerous posture of rebellion. That warning lines up with Torah’s treatment of high-handed sin and reminds us that we dare not trample underfoot the Son of God or insult the Spirit of grace.
Replacement theology and supersessionism. Replacement theology, also known as supersessionism, generally teaches that the Church has replaced Israel as Yah’s covenant people. I reject that notion. Yah has not discarded Israel, nor has He abolished His Torah. The Body of Mashiyach is called into covenant faithfulness through Yeshua, not into a manmade religion that claims the promises while rejecting the covenant responsibilities.
Jeremiah 6:16 and Matthew 11:28–30 — ancient paths and Yeshua’s yoke. Jeremiah calls Yah’s people to ask for the ancient paths and walk in the good way so that they may find rest for their souls. Centuries later, our Master calls the weary and heavy laden to take His yoke upon them and find rest for their souls. That connection is not accidental, beloved. Yeshua’s yoke is not Torahlessness. It is the rightly taught, rightly walked, Spirit-empowered way of Torah as modeled by the Son of the Most High.
Recommended Research References for Further Study
- Kim, Kyu Seop. “The Meaning of Cheirographon in Colossians 2:14 Revisited.” Tyndale Bulletin 68.2.
- Harris, W. Hall III, ed. The Lexham English Bible. Bellingham, WA: Lexham Press, 2012.
- Lake, Michael. Spiritual Warfare and Kingdom Authority course handbook.
- Zodhiates, Spiros. The Complete Word Study Dictionary: New Testament.
- Coenen, Lothar; Beyreuther, Erich; and Bietenhard, Hans, eds. New International Dictionary of New Testament Theology. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.
- Foord, Martin. “The Epistle of Straw: Reflections on Luther and the Epistle of James.” Themelios 45.2.
- Vlach, Michael J. “Various Forms of Replacement Theology.” The Master’s Seminary Journal.
- Standard biblical commentary resources on Colossians 2:14, 2 Thessalonians 2:7, 1 John 3:4, Numbers 15:27–31, Hebrews 10:26–29, Jeremiah 6:16, and Matthew 11:28–30.
Listener Reflection Questions
- Beloved, am I trusting in my Torah-keeping to save me, or am I trusting in the Person and ministry of Yehoshua HaMashiyach?
- Does my trusting faith actually produce obedience, repentance, and Kingdom works?
- Have I treated any of Yah’s instructions as optional, outdated, or too burdensome for me to walk in?
- Have I confused Yah’s amazing grace with permission to continue in Torahlessness?
- Are there sins of ignorance in my life that I need Yah, through His Ruach HaKodesh, to reveal and correct?
- Are there high-handed, willful sins in my life that I need to confess, repent of, and teshuvah from post-haste?
- What would it look like this week for me to ask for the ancient paths, walk in Yah’s good way, and find rest for my soul?
Suggested Listener Takeaway
Beloved, Torah reveals Yah’s righteous standard, exposes our sin, and shows us the covenant pathway of life. But Torah cannot erase our debt or justify us before the Court of Heaven. Only Yeshua’s atoning sacrifice can cancel the certificate of indebtedness that stood against us. Therefore, our proper response to Yah’s grace is not Torahlessness, but faithful, Spirit-empowered obedience, repentance, teshuvah, and a wholehearted return to Yah’s ancient paths through our Master, Yehoshua HaMashiyach.
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