General Equity Theonomy: Difference between revisions
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General Equity Theonomy | '''General Equity Theonomy''' is a [[theonomic]] theological position in Christian ethics that argues the civil laws given to Old Testament Israel (the Mosaic civil laws) are still morally binding today in their "general equity," meaning their underlying principles of justice, but not necessarily in their exact letter or cultural form. The Reformed Confessions generally point to the general equity of such laws only being of modern use (rather than binding). |
Latest revision as of 19:09, 10 July 2025
General Equity Theonomy is a theonomic theological position in Christian ethics that argues the civil laws given to Old Testament Israel (the Mosaic civil laws) are still morally binding today in their "general equity," meaning their underlying principles of justice, but not necessarily in their exact letter or cultural form. The Reformed Confessions generally point to the general equity of such laws only being of modern use (rather than binding).