BA53
Not Attributing Our Temptations to God

BA53

We are not to attribute our temptations to God.

Category: God & Yeshua

Type: Negative

Form: Explicit

Source dataset: New Testament

Uniqueness: Not unique

Classical commandment: No

New Covenant Literal Application

Applies to Person Categories: Not specified

Literal Application: Not specified

More explanation about the icons and New Covenant Literal Application

The New Covenant Literal Application Code (NCLA) is an interpretive guide used by the authors to indicate which person categories a mitzvah applies to, and at what level of literal compliance.

Each card above groups one application level such as mandated or optional. The three people icons show whether that application is meant for Jewish, K'rov Yisrael, or Gentile believers, and the male or female symbols show whether it applies to men, women, or both.

Jewish
Jewish
Used for instruction directed to Jewish believers.
K'rov Yisrael
K'rov Yisrael
Used for non-Jewish believers living closely with Israel and Torah practice.
Gentile
Gentile
Used for instruction presented as applying to Gentile believers more broadly.
Male and female symbols
These show whether the instruction is directed to men, women, or both.

This code reflects the authors' interpretive opinion and is provided for prayerful consideration. The icon view is only a visual summary; the detailed codes and source explanation remain available below for careful study.

Read the full explanation from the source

Bible references

Key NT Scriptures
  • James 1:13
Supportive NT Scriptures
  • 1 Corinthians 7:5
  • Mark 1:13
  • Matthew 4:1
Supportive OT Scriptures
  • Genesis 3:1-6

  • Genesis 39:7-12

  • Job 1:13-22

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Commentary

Rabbi Michael Rudolph

Temptations come to us from two sources – from Satan, and from the lusts and desires of our flesh. God sometimes uses these sources and our free will to test us through allowing us to be tempted, but God does not himself tempt us. But isn’t that just semantics? Isn’t that God tempting us indirectly? No, it is not. “Tempting” is intentionally luring and desiring a person to do something he would not ordinarily do (e.g committing sin), whereas in “testing” us, God gives us the opportunity to commit sin in order to find out whether we will; it is his hope that we will not.


Copyright © Michael Rudolph and Daniel C. Juster, The Law of Messiah - Torah from a New Covenant Perspective - Volume 3

Source and License

Based on The Law of Messiah - Torah from a New Covenant Perspective by Michael Rudolph and Daniel C. Juster.

Volume 1 & 2 | Volume 3

License: CC BY-ND 4.0 (Attribution required, NoDerivatives). CC BY-ND 4.0

Disclaimer: the original content is authored by Rabbi Michael Rudolph and Rabbi Daniel Juster; additional notes or implementation details on this website are not part of their original work and do not represent their views.

Record source: The Law of Messiah - Torah from a New Covenant Perspective - Volume 3

Copyright note: Copyright © Michael Rudolph and Daniel C. Juster, The Law of Messiah - Torah from a New Covenant Perspective - Volume 3