Septimus wrote:(i.e. C.S. Lewis agreed with me, yo?)
While I am neither agreeing nor disagreeing with your argument, appeal to authority does not work. C.S. Lewis is not God and doesn't know everything, and C.S. Lewis could have been completely and utterly wrong. Just because you agree with him does not make you correct, and it doesn't make him correct either.
you didn't even read my argument.
I did read your argument. You said "These parts of the Law apply but these parts don't." Not in those words, but that is what you said.
I stated that the morality of the law is in fact restated by 1.) Jesus
As far as I recall, Jesus said there were two commandments: love God, and love others. Jesus never specifically said any parts of the Law were still applicable. He said murder and adultery were bad, but so what? Most other civilizations at the time said the same thing. They may have had different definitions of what murder and adultery were, but I can't think of any civilization that said you can kill whoever you want, or you can have any woman you want. That's from Mere Christianity, by the way. :p
Jesus may have been talking about moral obligations, but He wasn't talking specifically about the Law. After all, murdering someone is hardly loving them (would break the second commandment Jesus said). This is also part of why Jesus said that hating your brother was just as bad as murder...because if you hate someone, you can't love them.
2.) Paul
Paul said that if it wasn't for the Law he wouldn't know what sin was, but this is in no way an endorsement of "These parts of the Law are still applicable but these aren't." In fact, it further destroys your argument. If Paul says the Law tells us what sin is, well, the Law says wearing a poly/cotton blend shirt and eating shrimp is a sin. Paul had a lot to say about the Law and grace, and it boiled down to "We're under grace, so the Law isn't important." He never said "These parts of the Law you should follow but not these parts." Paul just said "Don't worry about the Law." I can find verses if you like, but I trust I don't have to.
3.) James (a lot... read James... just read the whole book and quit snarking).
I have read all of James. I find it a bit rude and condescending you would accuse me of not having read it. Also, I don't see how that destroys the verse I quoted. If you follow only some of the Law but break other parts, you've broken the whole Law, so it's pointless to only follow some of the Law. Follow all of it or none of it, you can't do things halfway.
James goes on after that to talk about how faith without deeds is dead, but he doesn't quote any of the Law, but rather one of the commandments Jesus spoke about. Love others. Feed those who are hungry. Clothe those who are naked. It in no way is an endorsement of any moral parts of the Law, it's an endorsement to help the less fortunate in keeping with what Jesus said earlier about the goats and the sheep (the famous "Whatever you did for the least of these people you did for me" thing).
Oh... Mere Christianity is good too. >.>]
Good but not great. How good you find an author is is subjective anyway.
EDIT:
... you think people were saved by sacrificing sheep? REALLY? ... wow... How is that any different than paganism?
Who you're sacrificing the sheep to would make quite a bit, I think. I might as well say "You think people are saved by chanting some magic words? REALLY?" If I say the sinner's prayer but say it to Superman instead of God, that makes a whole lot of difference, even if the rest of the words are exactly the same. It makes a difference who I'm saying it to, and it made a difference who the sheep were sacrificed to.
Also, if people in the OT were not saved by sacrificing sheep, were they all condemned? Jesus had not yet been born nor had God's great plan of salvation by Christ's death and resurrection occurred yet. The people of Israel certainly didn't know who Jesus was.
While I'm not going to say "The sheep's blood was totally what saved them" the point is, what was different about the Israelites as compared to other nations? The other nations broke the law, same as the Israelites...how is it the Israelites were saved despite breaking the Law, and other nations weren't? I would say the sacrifice of the animals to God. Again, whether or not that specifically saved them gets tricky theologically but when God Himself told the Israelites to do that I don't see how you can argue it was a pointless action.