Presented to Swift Current Corps of The Salvation Army, 28 July 2013
by Captain Michael Ramsay
I heard this on the radio the other week: A man was nervously walking down the street in New York. A large intimidating man approaches him and asks ‘do you know where Central Park is’
‘No”
“Then I’ll rob you here…”
A man in his car asked a police/by-law officer, ‘Is it alright if I park here?’
‘No’, the police/by-law officer replies
‘What about all of these other cars?’
‘They didn’t ask…”
In our pericope today we are speaking about the old Jewish Law. And just like Larry here enforces parking and other by-laws in our city, many of which probably didn’t exist 100 years ago, when The Salvation Army came to Swift Current; the Apostle Paul is saying that the old Jewish Law’s time has been fulfilled, it is no longer needed so they shouldn’t be enforcing it anymore. I’m going to read a few old Canadian Laws that have been fulfilled; some of which are still law on paper if not in practice:
Ø You may not pay for a fifty-cent item with only pennies (Canada).
Ø Citizens may not publicly remove bandages (Canada).
Ø It is illegal to kill a sasquatch. (BC)
Ø A law requires jailers to bring convicted debtors a pint of beer on demand. (BC)
Ø Driving on the roads is not allowed. (New Brunswick)
Ø Bylaw states that no more than 3.5 inches of water is allowed in a bathtub. (Ont.)
Ø Businesses must provide rails for tying up horses. (Alta)
Ø It is illegal to kill a sick person by frightening them. (Alta)
Ø If you have a water trough in your front yard it must be filled by 5:00 a.m. (Ont.)
Ø You can't drag a dead horse down Yonge Street in Toronto on a Sunday. (Ont.)
Ø If you are released from prison, it is required that you are given a handgun with bullets and a horse, so you can ride out of town. (Alta)
A lot of these old laws sound silly to the post-modern person, as they are no longer required because the world has changed significantly since they came into effect. And today, even if it still is ‘on the books’, I wouldn’t want to try giving an Alberta ex-con a loaded handgun outside the prison gates. I can’t see how that would end well for him or for you. And if you have a trough in your yard, I would be very surprised if Larry gives you a ticket for not having it filled with water by 5am.
In the previous chapter, Chapter 3 of Galatians, Paul explains quite nicely this very point as it pertains to the old Jewish Law through the analogies of a student and a child
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