Hence the charge of blasphemy when he forgave sins and called himself the son of God.
IMO this would have been the only legitimate reason for their accusations. This is because they understood that calling Himself “Son of God” meant He was saying He was equal to God or was God the Word (the Memra…google it) which meant YHVH manifest.
Thus if this were not true it was indeed blaspheme but if it were (which it was) then they were incorrect and He was in violation of nothing.
And as we all know, or should know, there are other examples of Jesus breaking the law as relates to no work on the Sabbath.
Remember when he healed the withered hand of a man on the Sabbath in Mark 3:1-6?
See again, not to offend you my sister, but you are incorrect here. Doing and working are not the same in Torah, only in their post-Babylonian Pharisaic traditions.
Nothing in Torah says you should not heal someone or set a broken leg or administer ones medicines, etc., on the Sabbath. It is not
unlawful to do good on the Sabbath. Doing such a good is not “work” (get a lexicon and explore the word).
God says care for the sick and infirmed…and that does not cease on the Sabbath. He says to feed the hungry…it is a command. You do not violate one command to keep another, that’s ludicrous! Does God cease to continue to do good, cause it to rain or make the sunshine, or cause your cells to continue repairing of a wound, etc., on the Sabbath just because it is Sabbath? He neither slumbers nor sleeps.
In the Lord’s
Shaw-bath of Genesis 2, He ceases from His work of creating and making (yatzar), that’s all….Shaw-bath is to cease or desist from something. From what? From working. Healing a lame man when in the synagogue (which even being there itself is already not Torah) is not a violation. Yeshua was YHVH in the flesh…He was teaching them who had strayed from the heart of Torah who were already outside what was taught about it just by being there, that there man-made (and I do mean of MEN) additions were already tainted and misplaced.
His actions weren't those demonstrated by a mere mortal and blasphemer! When Jesus worked on the Sabbath, and violated Torah law, he healed a man right in front of witnesses that would otherwise have found him in violation of the law of God.
But that’s it! He did not violate God’s Sabbath laws. It was not a violation of anything said about Sabbath commanded in Torah! It was a matter of how THEY interpreted what “work” meant and “added to” it (which is in violation of God’s prescribed hermeneutic). This action was not “work” it was grace! Tzedakah and chesed are not to stop on the 7th day Sabbath (do you know what I am talking about?).
“mele’kah” (work) is a Hebrew feminine noun, and it means workmanship, occupation, doing business…it has nothing to do with these things they cited as violations. God’s “work” which He ceased and desisted from, was a production not an action…He ceased from His “WORK OF’ Creating and Making.
Do you think if your child stabbed themselves by accident that you should not bind their wound on the Sabbath according to the Torah? (God forbid!) Or if your elderly parents were starving to death that you should not carry them bread? (God forbid!) The Pharisees of Shammai’s school (those Yeshua opposed) would say NO you should not, because to them even travelling there is “work”! How absurd…they totally missed the point! Those of Hillel’s school would have been there in a moment…hence the reason for why they were always in dispute…
And yes, it was a New Covenant which was being brought forth and established and in the New Covenant the laws take on a deeper and more true meaning. The law you quoted does not say one should not heal the sick on the Sabbath (unless one is a paid physician and this is your occupation or business…then maybe….). There is no law in the Torah that says you cannot grab a handful of corn and eat it.
There is a law against blaspheme however, but if He was who He said He was, then He was not violating that law either….Shalom…