I hear what you are saying, and yet, Jesus explicitly said, "It has been said but I say..." For me the obvious interpretation is that Jesus is correcting/changing/rewriting what was said. I think there is ample evidence that his hearers certainly experienced it that way. (And this wasn't a one off motif but an ongoing pattern of teaching by Jesus, the perfect revelation of God.)MattY wrote: ↑Thu Nov 07, 2024 10:44 am Also, superseding the law of Moses and having the law of Christ written on our hearts is one thing. Making OT depictions of God (e.g. wrath against his enemies, or his commands for Israel to wage war on the Canaanites) into something that was misunderstood or not true, and has to be reinterpreted because of the Sermon on the Mount, is definitely another thing. That would be where sitting in judgment on the OT comes in. The progress of revelation from the OT to the NT - and all through Scripture, in the progress of the OT itself, is from less to greater revelation, not to correction of past revelation. The God depicted in the OT is the same as the God depicted in the NT, not least because the NT also shows the wrath and judgment of God - and of Christ Himself, and the OT also shows the great compassion and patience of God. The nonresistance/nonviolence and sacrificial love of Christ show his love for his enemies. But that's not the sum total of what Scripture has to say about sin and rejection of Christ. Ultimately, if people continue to reject Christ, there is not nonresistance and nonviolence for them to look forward to, "but a terrifying expectation of judgment and the fury of a fire about to consume the adversaries." (Heb. 10:27).
As for who God is, we needn't wonder or speculate regarding how a text depicts him or how we should interpret said text. He came in the flesh and dwelt among us and we beheld his glory. He was revealed to us, literally, Emmanuel, God with us. If we saw him we saw the Father. Jesus came to reveal to us who God was/is. He is the fulness of God, the perfect revelation, the complete picture, the image of, God. God is Love. The way of the cross, the path of suffering love, is the way of the Father. Any seeming contradiction, misunderstanding, etc etc - are resolved in the person of Jesus Christ, God with us.
As far as the eschatological question/s, perhaps that is fodder for another conversation.