Jesus' statement that he came not to abolish the law but to fulfill it is an idiom that refers to properly interpreting and obeying the Torah as God intended, rather than undermining it. Paul argues that Gentiles are saved apart from observing the Torah, but that love fulfills the law by being the overriding principle that shapes how all laws should be obeyed and through loving one's neighbor one achieves the goal of all God's commandments.
1. What Does It Mean to "Fulfill the Law"?
by Lois Tverberg
Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets; I did not come to
abolish but to fulfill. Matthew 5:17 (NASB)
A difficult passage for many Christians is Jesus' saying in Matthew 5:17 that he "came not to
abolish the law but to fulfill it." A traditional way of interpreting it is to say that when Jesus
"fulfilled the Law" he brought it to an end, even though in the next several verses, Jesus says
quite forcefully that this isn't true. The key is that the phrase "fulfill the Law" is an idiom, and
found several other places in the New Testament and in Jewish sayings from Jesus' time. By
studying these passages we can understand the saying more fully. Moreover, we can read Paul's
important writings about "fulfilling the law," and see what they mean for us.
"Fulfill the Law" as a Rabbinic Idiom
It will help us greatly to know that the phrase "fulfill the Torah" is a rabbinic idiom that is still
in use even today. The word we read as "law" is torah in Hebrew, and its main sense is
teaching, guidance and instruction, rather than legal regulation. It is God's instructions for
living, and because of God's great authority, it demands obedience and therefore takes on the
sense of "law." The Torah is often understood to mean the first five books of the Bible, but
also refers to the Scriptures in general. In Jesus' time, and among Jews today, this is a very
positive thing - that the God who made us would give us instructions for how to live.1
The rabbis
made it their goal to understand these instructions fully and teach people how to live by it.
The translation of "to fulfill" is lekayem in Hebrew (le-KAI-yem), which means to uphold or
establish, as well as to fulfill, complete or accomplish.2
David Bivin has pointed out that the
phrase "fulfill the Law" is often used as an idiom to mean to properly interpret the Torah so
that people can obey it as God really intends. The word "abolish" was likely either levatel, to
nullify, or la'akor, to uproot, which meant to undermine the Torah by misinterpreting it. For
example, the law against adultery could be interpreted as specifically against cheating on one's
spouse, but not about pornography. When Jesus declared that lust also was a violation of the
commandment, he was clarifying the true intent of that law, so in rabbinic parlance he was
"fulfilling the Law." In contrast, if a pastor told his congregation that watching x-rated videos
was fine, he would be "abolishing the Law" - causing them to not live as God wants them to live.
Here are a couple examples of this usage from around Jesus' time:
If the Sanhedrin gives a decision to abolish (uproot, la'akor) a law, by saying for
instance, that the Torah does not include the laws of Sabbath or idolatry, the
members of the court are free from a sin offering if they obey them; but if the
Sanhedrin abolishes (la'akor) only one part of a law but fulfills (lekayem) the
other part, they are liable. 3
Go away to a place of study of the Torah, and do not suppose that it will come to
you. For your fellow disciples will fulfill it (lekayem) in your hand. And on your
own understanding do not rely. 4
(Here "fulfill" means to explain and interpret the
Scripture.)
Fulfilling the Law as Obedience
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2. There is another sense of the phrase "fulfill the Law", and it is to carry out a law - to actually
do what it says. In Jewish sayings from near Jesus' time, we see many examples of this second
usage as well, including the following:
If this is how you act, you have never in your whole life fulfilled the requirement
of dwelling in a sukkah! 5
(One rabbi is criticizing another's interpretation of the
Torah, which caused him not to do what it really intends.)
Whoever fulfills the Torah when poor will in the end fulfill it in wealth. And
whoever treats the Torah as nothing when he is wealthy in the end will treat it as
nothing in poverty. 6
(Here it means "to obey" - definitely the opposite of "fulfill
in order to do away with.")
Interestingly, these two usages of "fulfill" seem to be key to understanding Jesus' words in
the passage in Matthew 5 that begins with him speaking about "fulfilling the law."
...Anyone who breaks one of the least of these commandments and teaches others to
do the same will be called least in the kingdom of heaven, but whoever practices and
teaches these commands will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. (Matt. 5:19)
Here the two actions of "practicing" and "teaching others to do the same" are an exact parallel
to the two idiomatic senses of "fulfill," while the words "break" and "teach others to break"
are the idiomatic senses of "abolish." So, Jesus' statement about fulfilling and abolishing the
Torah is a parallel to this sentence. Parallelism was a very common way of emphasizing an idea
in the Bible, and especially for Jesus.7
By understanding the idiom we see that Jesus was
emphatically stating his intention, which was to explain God's word and live by it, and not to
undermine it.
What does this mean for us?
In the past, the idea that "Christ brought the Law to an end by fulfilling it" has been the
traditional rationale of why Christians are not obligated to keep the laws of the Old Testament.
We overlook the fact that in Acts 15, the early church declared that Gentiles were not
obligated to convert to Judaism by being circumcised and taking on the covenant of Torah that
was given to Israel. They are told instead that they must simply observe the three most basic
laws against idolatry, sexual immorality and murder, the minimal observance required of Gentile
God-fearers.8
The reason Christians have not been required to observe the Torah was not
because it has ended, but because we are Gentiles.
Paul, of course was zealous in saying that Gentiles were not required to observe the Torah,
when some were insisting that they become circumcised and take on other observances. He
himself still observed the Torah, and proved it to James when asked to do so in Acts 21:24-26,
but he still maintained that Gentiles were saved apart from observing it. He supported this by
pointing out that they were filled with the Holy Spirit when they first believed in Christ, not
after they had become more observant of the Torah (Gal. 3:2-5). He also used the example of
Abraham, who also was a Gentile who never observed the laws of the Torah that were given
400 years later, but was justified because of his faith. (Gal. 3:6-9) 9
Paul's use of "Fulfill the Law"
The question then becomes, if the Torah is God's instructions for how to live, then are Gentiles
entirely excluded from its wonderful truths? Surprisingly, in both Romans and Galatians, after
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3. Paul has spent a lot of time arguing against their need to observe the Torah, he actually
answers this question by speaking about how they can "fulfill the Law." He says:
Let no debt remain outstanding, except the continuing debt to love one another, for he
who loves his fellowman has fulfilled the law. The commandments, "Do not commit
adultery," "Do not murder," "Do not steal," "Do not covet," and whatever other
commandment there may be, are summed up in this one rule: "Love your neighbor as
yourself." Love does no harm to its neighbor. Therefore love is the fulfillment of the law.
(Rom. 13:8-10)
For the whole law is fulfilled in one word, "You shall love your neighbor as yourself."
(Gal. 5:14; NASB)
If Paul is using first idiomatic sense of "fulfill the Torah" discussed above, he is saying that
love is the supreme interpretation of the Torah - the ultimate summation of everything that God
has taught in the Scriptures. He is reiterating Jesus' key teaching about loving God and
neighbor that says "All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments" (Matt.
22:40). The two laws about love are not just more important than the rest, they are actually the
grand summation of it all. A later rabbi put it this way: "Love your neighbor as yourself - this is
the very essence (klal gadol) of the Torah." 8
Love is the overriding principle that shapes how
all laws should be obeyed.
Love as Fulfilling the Torah
Paul also seems to be using the second idiomatic sense of "fulfill the Torah" to say that loving
your neighbor is actually the living out of the Torah. When we love our neighbor, it is as if we
have done everything God has asked of us. A Jewish saying from near that time has a similar
style:
If one is honest in his business dealings and people esteem him, it is accounted to
him as though he had fulfilled the whole Torah. 9
The point of the saying above is that a person who is honest and praiseworthy in all his dealings
with others has truly hit God's goal for how he should live. He didn't cancel the Law, he did it
to the utmost! Similarly, Paul is saying that when we love our neighbor, we have truly achieved
the goal of all the commandments. So instead of saying that the Gentiles are without the law
altogether, he says that they are doing everything it requires when they obey the "Law of
Christ," which is to love one another. For him, the command to love is the great equalizer
between the Jew who observes the Torah, and Gentile who does not, but who both believe in
Christ. Paul says,
"For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision nor uncircumcision has any value. The only
thing that counts is faith expressing itself through love." (Gal. 5:6)
Other New Testament writers also highlight it the commandment to love as the central law that
all must follow. James says, If you really keep the royal law found in Scripture, "Love your
neighbor as yourself," you are doing right (James 2:8). And finally, John sums up everything in
terms of love:
This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his
Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins. Dear friends, since God so
loved us, we also ought to love one another. No one has ever seen God;
but if we love one another, God lives in us and his love is made
complete in us. 1 John 4:7-12
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