βDesiring to be teachers of the law; understanding neither what they say, nor whereof they affirmβ (I Timothy 1:7).
Since βwe are not under law, but under graceβ (Rom.Β 6:15), what possible motive could someone have to teach the law? Well, in Paulβs day, the men most likely to desire to cling to the law were Jews (Acts 15:1). Speaking of them, Paul told Titus:
ββ¦there are many unruly and vain talkersβ¦of the circumcisionβ¦who subvert whole houses, teaching things which they ought not, for filthy lucreβs sakeβ (TitusΒ 1:10,11).
The thing that these circumcision Jews βought notβ to have been teaching was the law, which they taught for the same reason men teach the law todayβbecause there isΒ money in it.Β Satan always makes sure that undispensational truth isΒ popular, and teaching what is popular is always a lucrative endeavor!
For instance, in time past, Godβs message to Israel was that He was going to use Nebuchadnezzar to conquer the nation to chasten her for her iniquities (Jer. 25:9). But false prophets in Israel were assuring Godβs people it would never happen, that they would continue to enjoy peace (Jer.Β 23:17). Which of those two messages do you think was more popular, and thus more lucrative?
Of course, when Israel was obedient to Godβs law, His message to themΒ wasΒ a message of peace, but when they rebelled against His law, that message becameΒ one dispensation too late. Well, todayΒ the lawΒ is one dispensation too late, but it is as popular and as profitable as undispensational teaching has always been. People are religious by nature, and the law appeals to their religious βfleshβ (Gal. 3:3). And that which appeals to a manβsΒ religiousΒ flesh is always going to be as popular and as lucrative a business as that which appeals to hisΒ carnalΒ flesh (II Cor.Β 11:20).
When Paul added that those teachers of the law understood βneither what they say, nor whereof they affirm,β that was a polite way of saying they didnβt know what they were talking about! All because they were one dispensation too late in their teaching. Whatβs that say about all those βdesiring to be teachers of the lawβ in our own day?
Maybe you are thinking, βIf the goal of the law is to get us to love God and our neighbor (I Tim. 1:5), and weβre not under the law, does that mean God doesnβt want us to love God and our neighbor?β Of course He does! But now such loving charity is the goal of aΒ newΒ commandment. You see, when Paul said that βthe end of the commandment is charityβ (I Tim. 1:5), he wasnβtΒ justΒ referring to the goal of theΒ tenΒ commandments.
Remember, Paul opened this epistle by insisting that he was an apostle βby theΒ commandmentΒ of Godβ (I Tim. 1:1), and in the dispensation of grace, the goal ofΒ thatΒ commandment is charity out of a pure heart. The goal of Paulβs God-ordained apostleship is to get people saved and loving God and their neighbor, just as it was under the law. The difference is, in this dispensation, βthe love of Christ constraineth usβ to serve Him (II Cor.Β 5:14), not the fear of what will happen to us if we disobey Him, as was the case under the law. Thatβs the motivation of love, not law! Thatβs the motivation of grace. source
[β¦] we are not under that kind of conditional blessing because we are not under the law, we are under grace (Rom. 6:14,15). Today God blesses usΒ up front with βall spiritual blessingsβ in Christ [β¦]