Bob, thanks for your further explanation. I read your previous post, and your argument seemed to boil down to this:
Jesus was talking about bread, not about foods previously declared unclean. Let me examine your post, point-by-point, lest that be an oversimplification of your view.
#1. If God's Word can be reduced to "ethnic customs" then you would be right - "customs change" and so would His Word.
We are agreed that the Word of God does not change with cultural trends. There are certain commands in Scripture that are based in the culture of the day and must be redefined accordingly, such as Paul's (in)famous command to "greet one another with a holy kiss." I get the feeling that wouldn't go over so well at my church, but you're more than welcome to come try it, since they don't know you here.
I'm not sure, though, whether the Jewish dietary laws were confined only to the Jewish nation or not. One evidence that they were so confined I find in Acts 15, where the Jerusalem Counsel writes a letter to the church in Antioch, commanding the Gentiles there to abstain from food offered to idols, strangled foods, and blood. Obviously, these rules are dietary in nature, but if all Christians were to follow the kosher laws of the Old Covenant, would not the Jerusalem Counsel have also said (even in brief), "Eat only animals that chew the cud and have a cloven hoof, and fish with fins and scales"?
Thus, the Jerusalem Counsel didn't see the need to put the Gentiles under the full extent of the Jewish dietary laws, so perhaps those laws were confined to the Old Covenant Jewish nation?
Further evidence of the "don't eat unclean animals" laws being confined to the Jews is found in Genesis 9. The preacher to which Claudia referred me mentioned that clean and unclean animals were already distinguished from one another then, probably for the purposes of sacrifices. In Genesis 9:2-3, God says to Noah, "And hte fear of you and the dread of you shall be upon every beast of the earth, and upon every fowl of the air, upon all that moveth upon the earth, and upon all the fishes of the sea; into your hand are they delivered. Every moving thing tht liveth shall be meat for you; even as the green herb have I given you all things." God says to Noah that he can eat
any animal (but, in the next verse, again, no blood).
So, in the Bible, looking at the Scriptures as a whole, I see a couple of universal principles concerning food: no strangled things and no blood. I see the majority of the dietary laws being confined to the Jews, though.
#2. Some have argued that God's Word was nailed to the cross so we need not be concerned with it -- your reference to Mark 7 is a reference to an incident BEFORE the cross - BEFORE ANYTHING even COULD be nailed to the cross -- is it your claim that apart from the cross and BEFORE the cross - God's Word was abolished??
If God intended those parts of His Word to apply only to the Old Covenant Jewish people, then Jesus was abolishing nothing, but merely saying that they were fulfilled.
#3. In Mark 7 the "issue" was NOT the eating of rats, or cats, or bats, or dogs, or horses ...etc. The issue was the eating of bread - in this case of wheat - with hands that were not "ceremonially clean".
This statement seems to be the crux and foundation of the rest of your argument concerning this chapter, though I could be wrong.
That ceremonial cleansing was "a man made tradition" according to Christ in Mark 7. That man-made tradition stated that food was "unclean" by virtue of "sin" sticking to the hands - touching food contaminating it with "sin" and then when eaten - resulting in "sin in you".
I see your point with Mark 7. You've presented a good, solid, Biblical case for it, and I'll agree to your position concerning that chapter, until I see a good reason to do otherwise (I'm really not that wishy-washy with my beliefs, but if someone presents a view on a passage more Biblical than your own, then not accepting it can only be attributed to pride).
Now what have you proven to me? You've demonstrated, using Scripture, that the Jews were under Mosaic law, not under man-made traditions, and Jesus did not change that, at least not in Mark 7.
Let's count that point as granted and move on to the other Scriptures I cited.
To summarize quickly:
I'm proposing that we count as granted that Mark 7 does not free the Jews from the Jewish law.
I submit that Genesis 9, Acts 15, Romans 14, and others support my view that we are freed from kosher laws under the New Covenant because they were confined to Old Covenant Jews.
I look forward to reading your replies.
Michael