By Andrew Stoddard
Monopoly is a great game to play if you have seven hours to kill and you’re looking to lose a few friendships and most of your dignity along the way. It usually starts out civil, but before you know it, you’re yelling at your grandma and throwing the dice across the room.
In fact, I think it’s safe to speculate that the ratio of those who have started a game of Monopoly to those who have finished one is staggeringly askew. Sometimes it’s best for everyone’s sanity that the game is called off before completion.
If we’re not careful, we can start to think that the law is a lot like Monopoly. God thought it was a great idea at first, but after a few shouting matches and a bunch of hurt feelings, He realized it was probably best to just call the whole thing off. In this scenario, He sent Jesus to help extricate us from a flawed game and pronounce us all friends and winners.
The trouble with this way of thinking is that Jesus directly contradicts this notion in the midst of the Sermon on the Mount. Jesus didn’t come to abolish the law or show up as a plan B to remove unfair rules and arbitrary regulations. Rather, in His own words, He came to fulfill it (Matthew 5:17).
Matthew 5 is a very special passage because we see Jesus carefully re-calibrating His listeners’ understanding of the law. Where there was so much emphasis on outward piety, Jesus drills down and applies God’s principles to the heart. What’s also fascinating about this moment is we see a direct resonance with Moses’s original reception of the law on Sinai. We see a leader of God’s people—this time, God incarnate—standing on a mountain, revitalizing the hearts and lives of His listeners, offering a way to fulfillment that never existed before.
Through His fulfillment, Jesus offers release and reprieve for the heavy-laden. He offers rest for the weary. He brings grace and restoration for those who need it most: us. In other words, in the Monopoly analogy, Jesus didn’t show up to calm us all down and shelve the game. He came to complete the game that, literally, no one else could even come close to finishing rightly. And we get to participate in His victory, not because the law was flawed and needed ending but because we were incapable of being faithful to it.
His love for us is one of the reasons that He didn’t abolish the law. Truthfully, the law was not the problem—our sinfulness, selfishness, and disobedience was. He walked this life all the way through, perfectly and righteously on our behalf. And in His victory, He frees us from the law to be made co-victors with Him.
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