Where does Jesus himself, your Messiah and mine, ever say the law is dead? I could show you multiple verses where he says the exact opposite. The verses people try to use are Him simplifying the concept of the law, or making it personal in a powerful way.
The book of Hebrews is Paul, not Jesus. His letters are essentially correspondence between churches, and he talks an awful lot about himself to be honest. You have to make a choice. Either follow Paul's concept of Jesus, a man he never actually heard preach during His Earthly ministry, or Jesus, Son of God and the Word and Law and Prophecy made flesh. You are following a singular person's imperfect and often confusing musings twisted into falsehoods and enshrined into tradition, friend.
Jesus never said the Law was dead. But the whole point of the New Testament is a New Covenant. The OT is for the Old Covenant, which required the law, sacrifice, purification, and various other rituals and paraphenalia. The New Covenant supercedes the old - as better promises have now become available - and for all men, who choose to believe in Jesus.
Jesus operated under the Old Covenant Laws until his Ascension - and after Pentecost... there is no mention of the disciples ever celebrating anything Jewish, ever again.
Where does Jesus himself, your Messiah and mine, ever say the law is dead? I could show you multiple verses where he says the exact opposite. The verses people try to use are Him simplifying the concept of the law, or making it personal in a powerful way.
The book of Hebrews is Paul, not Jesus. His letters are essentially correspondence between churches, and he talks an awful lot about himself to be honest. You have to make a choice. Either follow Paul's concept of Jesus, a man he never actually heard preach during His Earthly ministry, or Jesus, Son of God and the Word and Law and Prophecy made flesh. You are following a singular person's imperfect and often confusing musings twisted into falsehoods and enshrined into tradition, friend.
Jesus never said the Law was dead. But the whole point of the New Testament is a New Covenant. The OT is for the Old Covenant, which required the law, sacrifice, purification, and various other rituals and paraphenalia. The New Covenant supercedes the old - as better promises have now become available - and for all men, who choose to believe in Jesus.
Jesus operated under the Old Covenant Laws until his Ascension - and after Pentecost... there is no mention of the disciples ever celebrating anything Jewish, ever again.