Hebrews anyone?
How do we decide what we keep and what we throw away?
Asking "what parts do you keep and what parts do you throw away?" begs the question of whether the law applies to non-Jews in the first place. And frankly, my personal opinion, trying to sort it out into two categories, keepers and tossers, is a bit of a "one foot on the boat, one foot on the pier" situation—eventually it's going to end badly. Pick one and make a commitment.
I think we Greeks (I'll take it. It works for me) and Hebrew roots folks are looking at the question in a bit of a different context...
...For us (well, me) it isn't a matter of which laws to keep and which ones to throw away, as we (well, I) never intended to keep any of them in the 'observant' sense of the word. Anything beyond staying away from blood, idols, and sexual immorality, really.
For me, the Law was a schoolmaster to bring me to Christ. Now that I've been brought to Christ, and have become His disciple, I do not recognize the Law's authority any more than I recognize my 8th grade homeroom teacher's authority. I've graduated from that.
Acts 15:21 “For Moses has been taught through many generations in every city, being read in the synagogues every Sabbath.”
Well yes, that would be the part that satisfied the Pharisee sect that rose up.
The others in the assembly who were not interested in making gentiles follow the law were satisfied with:
God, who knows the heart, acknowledged them by giving them the Holy Spirit, just as He did to us, 9 and made no distinction between us and them, purifying their hearts by faith. 10 Now therefore, why do you test God by putting a yoke on the neck of the disciples which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear?
And the thing is, these Gentiles were already disciples. Whose disciples? Well none other than Jesus. This Pharisee sect of Christians were trying to negate that by inserting their own opinion into the training of another man's servants. Which, by the way, the only Pharisee involved in actually preaching the gospel to the gentiles at this time was Paul. These guys didn't go out and preach to gentiles and now wanted to make it harder for them to come to Christ. It seems like they hadn't changed much from when Christ was addressing them personally:
13“Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You shut the door of the kingdom of heaven in people’s faces. You yourselves do not enter, nor will you let those enter who are trying to.
Of course we actually agree that those 4 things are necessary, but not sufficient, assuming we both mean 'to please Jesus' not 'to be saved'.
I am mystified how trying to keep the law a strictly as I can pleases Jesus, who said "Upon these two commandments hand all the law and the prophets"
Why don't I try to actually love God with all my heart, mind and strength, and love my neighbor as I love myself? I mean, it's a real possibility now that I am clean before God and have become a temple of the Holy Spirit, right?
My heart is flesh now, isn't it? And if I succeed, all the law and prophets were only trying to get me to behave EXACTLY as I am already doing, so why would I submit myself to following all the dictates therein?
Now I see great worth in studying the law as I am able, to define terms as God would define them, to correct my thinking. But only as it touches and helps me love Him and My neighbor. The feasts don't please God. He hates the feasts of the sinners and would rather see Justice and Righteousness. He desires mercy, not sacrifice.
Now therefore, why do you test God by putting a yoke on the neck of the disciples which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear?
...these Gentiles were already disciples
I am mystified how trying to keep the law a strictly as I can pleases Jesus...
The feasts don't please God...
...He hates the feasts of the sinners and would rather see Justice and Righteousness.
And if it was God's Law the their forefathers were unable to bear then God's Law was unjust and so God was unjust
Then you haven't raised a child, or applied the lesson, perhaps.
Well what was Peter talking about there? The context doesn't leave much open to the imagination. Peter said this in regards to circumcision and keeping the law of Moses.
...the only way to get life is to keep the law perfectly, and if one does not, the law will never justify you
No, pretty good. (And, honestly, you couldn't possibly 'break' all of it, even if you tried.)Did I miss something?