The Big Lie Of Christianity In One Short Proof
- Ariel Moyal

- 4 days ago
- 3 min read
By: Rabbi Ariel Moyal, Esq.
One of the largest fundamental problems in the Christian faith arises from the fact that they accept the written Torah (“Five Books of Moses”) as the word of God. This creates many problems for Christianity. If Christianity claimed that the Five Books of Moses was a fabrication of the Jewish imagination and that their "new book" was the true word of God, this discussion would be of a different nature. Since Christianity claims, however, that the original Five Books of Moses are Divine and God simply abandoned the Jews and the Mosaic Covenant at a later point in time, the burden of proof to show that God nullified His covenant with the Jews rests on them.
It is no secret that Christianity changed the laws of the original Mosaic Covenant. However, the Five Books of Moses, which Christianity itself holds to be the word of God, states:
“You shall not add to the word that I command you, nor shall you subtract from it, to observe the Commandments of the Lord your G-d, that I command you” (Deuteronomy 4:2).
The moment God states that no Commandments can be added or subtracted, the covenant is eternally sealed. The later self-proclaimed prophet, Jesus (and his followers), abrogated almost all the existing Torah Laws and added many of their own laws. The language in many of the Torah’s laws makes it clear that the law can never be changed:
Regarding the holiday of Passover:
“And this day shall be a remembrance for you and you shall celebrate it for God all your generations an eternal law, seven days shall you eat Matzos” (Exodus 12:14).
Regarding the prohibition of eating blood and chelev (type of animal fat):
“You shall not eat chelev or blood, it is an eternal Commandment for you in all your generations, in all your dwelling places” (Leviticus 3:17).
Regarding the holiday of Yom Kippur (Day of Atonement, most holy Jewish Holiday):
“And this shall be for you an eternal Commandment to atone for the Children of Israel from all their sins once a year” (Leviticus 15:34).
“You shall not do work on this day, an eternal Commandment in all your dwelling places for all your generations (Leviticus 23:21).
Regarding the holiday of Sukkoth:
“And you shall celebrate this festival seven days out of the year an eternal Commandment for all your generations, in the seventh month shall you celebrate it” (Leviticus 23:41).
These are just a few examples of Commandments which the Torah specifically states to be eternal. The Torah emphasizes this point a total of twenty-four times, in different places throughout the Five Books of Moses. The final admonition in Chapter 29 of the book of Deuteronomy, states that these Commandments are incumbent upon and relevant “to us and our children forever”.
Most Christians who claim the “Old Testament” is the word of God have never even heard of most of these Commandments. Only the Jews celebrate Passover, Yom Kippur, and Sukkoth; it is only the Jews who refrain from eating blood and chelev. God, by definition, is eternal, all knowing, and omnipresent. The notion that Christians would have you believe that God simply “changed His mind” after explicitly stating that the law cannot be changed, negates the very essence of God, and is in direct conflict with God’s Commandments.

Rabbi Ariel Moyal, Esq. is a licensed attorney in both the State of California and the State of Israel. Attorney Moyal studied in Yeshivat Ohr Yisrael in Monsey, New York and continued his Judaic studies in Israel. Attorney Moyal lectured for the renowned Arachim organization for a period of seven years on various Jewish topics, such as Jewish philosophy, personality development, psychology, moral and ethical issues and lectures related to evidence for the validity of the Torah and Jewish tradition.

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