Difference between revisions of "Category:Civil/Judicial Law"

From Theonomy Wiki
m (Mgarcia moved page Civil/Judicial Law to Civil/Judicial Law without leaving a redirect)
 
(9 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
''This is the temporary page for the Civil/Judicial Law. For now, it will just be a short description and a bulleted list of verses which belong to this category. In the future, we will add structured explanations for this division of the law.''
+
<languages /><translate><!--T:1--> In brief, the Civil/Judicial Law includes laws which are '''not''' fulfilled by Jesus in a way causing them to be impossible for Christians to break (as is the case with most of the {{:Translink|Category:Typological/Ceremonial Law}}). Laws in this category describe either the structure of government, or specific civilian behaviors which warrant a reaction by the civil government, whether it be penalty or commendation, and the scope of that reaction.</translate>
  
In brief, the Civil/Judicial Law includes laws which are '''not''' fulfilled by Jesus in a way causing them to be impossible for Christians to break (as is the case with most of the [[Typological/Ceremonial Law]]). Laws in this category describe either the structure of government, or specific civilian behaviors which warrant a reaction by the civil government, whether it be penalty or commendation, and the scope of that reaction.
+
{{:Oldversetopiclist|Civil/Judicial Law}}
  
Verses in this category include:
+
{{DISPLAYTITLE:<translate><!--T:2--> {{PAGENAME}}</translate>}}
  
* ''add verses here''
+
[[Category:Tripart Division]]

Latest revision as of 22:34, 21 August 2020

Other languages:
Bahasa Indonesia • ‎Deutsch • ‎English • ‎Kiswahili • ‎Nederlands • ‎español • ‎français • ‎italiano • ‎norsk bokmål • ‎português • ‎íslenska • ‎русский • ‎українська • ‎հայերեն • ‎עברית • ‎മലയാളം • ‎中文 • ‎日本語 • ‎한국어

In brief, the Civil/Judicial Law includes laws which are not fulfilled by Jesus in a way causing them to be impossible for Christians to break (as is the case with most of the Typological/Ceremonial Law). Laws in this category describe either the structure of government, or specific civilian behaviors which warrant a reaction by the civil government, whether it be penalty or commendation, and the scope of that reaction.

Associated Scriptures:

Subtopics: