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Reason: None provided.

Moving from admiralty/statutory law to common law. We sloppily just call them both “law”. There are some other things involved in jurisdictions as well, but I’m a novice at this.

Just like how in the Bible, one big reason for a lot of confusion in the New Testament is that several different things are referred to with the word “law”, but as best as I’ve been able to tell, only one was fulfilled and “nailed to the cross” - the law of sin and death.

So what did that law encompass, specifically?

(Side note on Bible comment: we use the word “law”, but “Torah”, or “Genesis to Deuteronomy” - ignore the oral “torah”, lowercase t - is more accurately translated as “teaching”)

117 days ago
1 score
Reason: None provided.

Moving from admiralty/statutory law to common law.

Just like how in the Bible, one big reason for a lot of confusion in the New Testament is that several different things are referred to with the word “law”, but as best as I’ve been able to tell, only one was fulfilled and “nailed to the cross” - the law of sin and death.

So what did that law encompass, specifically?

(Side note on Bible comment: we use the word “law”, but “Torah”, or “Genesis to Deuteronomy” - ignore the oral “torah”, lowercase t - is more accurately translated as “teaching”)

117 days ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Moving from admiralty/statutory law to common law.

Just like how in the Bible, one big reason for a lot of confusion in the New Testament is that several different things are referred to with the word “law”, but as best as I’ve been able to tell, only one was fulfilled and “nailed to the cross” - the law of sin and death.

So what did that law encompass, specifically?

117 days ago
1 score