Saturday, July 18, 2026

The God Culture: Can the Law Be Abolished If Sin Still Exists?

Timothy Jay Schwab who is The God Culture has a new Foundations lesson.  Actually it's not new. It's the same message repackaged. Now he is asking whether the law can be abolished if sin still exists. Let's take a look. 

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📖 Can the Law Be Abolished If Sin Still Exists?

FOUNDATIONS | WEEK 27

Key Texts:

Hebrews 10

1 John 3:4

Jeremiah 31:31–33

Hebrews 8:10

Many discussions about the New Covenant begin with assumptions rather than Scripture's own definitions.

So let's begin where the Bible begins.

What is sin?

John answers plainly:

> "Sin is the transgression of the law."

> (1 John 3:4, KJV)

If Scripture defines sin as transgression of the Law, then the Law provides the standard by which sin is recognized. To abolish Law is to abolish sin. Yet, Revelation continues to speak of keeping His commandments and of sin in the very Last Days. Thus, neither pass away especially since Yahusha said the Law would not (Matt. 5:17-20). Such strange new doctrine put words in His mouth which were and are not there.

Next, what changed at the cross?

Hebrews 10 does not say that Yahusha abolished righteousness or removed the definition of sin.

Instead, it teaches that His sacrifice was offered ONCE AND FOR ALL, accomplishing what the repeated animal sacrifices could never accomplish. He fulfilled them which definition is also misconstrued as fulfilled means He executed and continues to do so.

The sacrifice changed.

The priesthood changed.

The perfect atonement arrived.

But the New Covenant promise itself is:

> "I will put My laws into their minds, and write them in their hearts."

> (Hebrews 8:10; Jeremiah 31:33)

Notice what Scripture says is new.

The location of the Law changes—from tablets of stone to hearts.

The sacrifice changes—from repeated offerings to Messiah's perfect offering.

The High Priest changes—from the Levitical priesthood to our eternal High Priest (Melchizedek).

Yet the Law itself is not described as disappearing. Rather, it is written within those who belong to the New Covenant.

Grace does not redefine sin. It never has.

Grace provides forgiveness for sin and empowers us to walk in covenant with Yahuah. Such grace unto Salvation did not change either as Moses, Abraham and the Patriarchs were also saved by the same grace of Yahusha as He is present since the beginning even before His coming in the flesh (1 John 1).

The New Covenant is not the absence of His instruction.

It is His instruction written upon transformed hearts. A deepening of the same Law that opposes and defines sin.

A changing of medium is not a change of the Law.

Yah Bless.

Question for Discussion:

If the New Covenant promises to write Yahuah's Law on our hearts, what exactly is being written there if the Law no longer exists?

Tim is making several category errors here and is asking a wrong and loaded question. First of all the law is NOT abolished meaning it ceases to exist. It is still there pointing us to Christ. 

Galatians 3:24 Wherefore the law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ, that we might be justified by faith.

25 But after that faith is come, we are no longer under a schoolmaster.

Second of all is Tim's confusing the function of the law with its continued use. The law is a SHADOW of Christ. Christ has come and we are no longer under the law.

Hebrews 10:1 For the law having a shadow of good things to come, and not the very image of the things, can never with those sacrifices which they offered year by year continually make the comers thereunto perfect. 

But let's hear from noted theologian Father Ted Crilly.


Ah, Philippine Fails, me lad... puts the teacup down with a firm clunk and leans forward
I’ve read Tim’s Week 27 lesson — “Can the Law Be Abolished If Sin Still Exists?” — and you’re spot on. He’s making a category error and asking the wrong question because his entire foundation is faulty.What Tim is doingHe says:
  • Sin = transgression of the law (1 John 3:4).
  • If the law were abolished, sin would no longer exist.
  • But sin still exists → therefore the law still exists and is still binding.
  • The New Covenant just moves the law from stone tablets to our hearts.
It sounds logical on the surface. But it’s built on a false dilemma.The Category ErrorTim keeps treating “the Law” as one indivisible block that can only be fully kept or fully abolished. That’s the mistake.
The Bible makes distinctions:
  • The moral law (God’s unchanging righteous standard — reflected in the Ten Commandments) still reveals sin and God’s character. No one disputes this.
  • The Mosaic covenant as a whole (the full system given at Sinai — ceremonial laws, civil laws, sacrifices, feasts, dietary rules, penalties, etc.) was a temporary covenant with Israel that has been fulfilled and set aside in Christ.
Paul doesn’t say the moral standard disappeared. He says we are not under the law as a covenant system (Romans 6:14, Galatians 3:23–25, 5:18). The tutor has done its job. Christ has come. We now live by the Spirit.
When Paul says we are not under the law, he is not saying “sin doesn’t exist anymore.” He is saying the law is no longer the covenant framework under which we relate to God.Tim’s Foundational Flaw
This whole lesson (and the entire Foundations series) rests on one faulty assumption:

“If the law isn’t still binding in the same way, then sin has no definition.”

That’s simply not true. Sin is ultimately rebellion against God Himself — against His holy character. The law revealed that, but it was never the only definition. After Christ, sin is still real, but we are no longer under the old covenant system that couldn’t fix it. We are under grace, led by the Spirit, with God’s law written on our hearts (the New Covenant promise).
Tim keeps trying to keep believers under the old system “internally.” That’s not what Hebrews 8 or Jeremiah 31 actually teach.The Real Answer
Yes, the moral standard remains — we are still called to holiness.

But the Mosaic covenant with all its shadows, sacrifices, and specific commands has been fulfilled in Christ. The shadow served its purpose. The substance has come.

That’s why Paul can say:
  • “Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone who believes.” (Romans 10:4)
  • “You are not under law but under grace.” (Romans 6:14)
He’s not abolishing righteousness. He’s saying the way to righteousness is no longer through the old covenant law system. It’s through faith in Christ, with the Spirit producing fruit in us.
Father Ted’s plain verdict:
Tim is chained in his own cave again. He sees the shadow of the law and thinks it’s still the main reality. He can’t let the old covenant go, so he keeps dragging it into the New Covenant and calling it “restoration.”
The New Covenant doesn’t abolish God’s righteous standard.

It gives us a better way — Christ’s righteousness credited to us by faith, and the Holy Spirit writing obedience on our hearts.

Down with this sort of thing, lad.

Very careful now.

The gospel is not “the law moved from stone to heart so we can keep it better.”

The gospel is “Christ fulfilled the law, took its curse, and now we live by the Spirit.”

...Right, I’m off to read Romans 6–8 again and thank the Lord we are not under the old system.

Go on, go on, go on — have a cuppa. You keep spotting the same foundational error. Tim’s whole system is built on a category mistake. The real gospel is far clearer and freer. Keep holding fast to it. 

Friday, July 17, 2026

Retards in the Government 478

It's your weekly compendium of foolishness and corruption in the Philippine government.

 


https://newsinfo.inquirer.net/2259476/2-cops-slain-in-sultan-kudarat-ambush

Two police officers were killed in an ambush by still unidentified gunmen in Lambayong town, Sultan Kudarat province, on Tuesday night, July 7.

Initial report from Sultan Kudarat Police Provincial Office, showed that the victims, identified only as Patrolmen Pagurayan and Bullos, were riding in tandem on a motorcycle driven by Pagurayan, when ambuhsed at about 6:30 p.m. while traversing a bridge in Barangay Tinumiguis.

Both fatalities were assigned to the 1202nd Mobile Company of the Regional Mobile Force Battalion (RMFB 12).

The gunmen used M16 rifles in the ambush based on the empty shells recovered at the scene.

Manhunt operation was still ongoing as of posting.

Two police officers were killed in an ambush by still unidentified gunmen in Lambayong town, Sultan Kudarat province.

https://mb.com.ph/2026/07/10/pateros-mayor-suspends-2-employees-for-not-wearing-helmets

Pateros Mayor Gerald German suspended two municipal employees who were caught riding a motorcycle without helmets on July 6.

German earlier directed the two employees, assigned to the Pateros Business District and Administration Office, to submit an explanation.

A photo showed them riding without helmets along B. Morcilla Street.

The employees said they were rushing to respond to a report about street beggars in Barangay Sta. Ana.

The municipal government, however, ruled that urgency was not a valid reason to disregard the law.

German later issued an administrative order, imposing a traffic citation ticket on the motorcyclist for violating the helmet ordinance and suspending him without pay for five days. His companion was given a three-day suspension without pay.

“This step is proof that in the Pateros Municipal Government, the law is enforced equally. No one is above the law—be it a government employee or official,” the municipal government said.

Pateros Mayor Gerald German suspended two municipal employees who were caught riding a motorcycle without helmets.

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1279297

Philippine National Police (PNP) chief Gen. Jose Melencio Nartatez Jr. directed the immediate filing of administrative and criminal cases against a police officer who was arrested over the weekend for allegedly transporting PHP1.285 million worth of suspected smuggled cigarettes in Pagadian City, Zamboanga del Sur.

Nartatez instructed concerned units to place the police officer, who is assigned at Camp Crame in Quezon City, under restrictive custody and to immediately initiate administrative proceedings.

He ordered investigators to ensure the filing of appropriate criminal and administrative cases without delay once the investigation and the assessment of the Bureau of Customs (BOC) are completed.

“The arrest demonstrates that no one is above the law. We will ensure a thorough, impartial investigation, and if the evidence warrant, the concerned personnel will face both administrative and criminal charges,” Nartatez said in a statement on Monday.

The police officer was arrested Sunday during a checkpoint conducted by intelligence personnel of the Pagadian City Police Station along the national highway in Barangay Tiguma after authorities received information about the alleged transport of smuggled cigarettes.

The suspect attempted to pass through the checkpoint, but during a search of the vehicle, police discovered 251 reams of New Berlin cigarettes with an estimated market value of PHP1.285 million. 

Meanwhile, authorities confiscated PHP50.98 million worth of illegal drugs and arrested 86 suspects in 62 nationwide operations conducted July 2 to 9, the Philippine Drug Enforcement Agency (PDEA) said on Monday.

Of those arrested, 55 were identified as drug pushers while 10 were alleged possessors.

All suspects will face charges under Republic Act 9165 or the Comprehensive Dangerous Drugs Act.

A cop has been busted for smuggling cigarettes

https://cebudailynews.inquirer.net/746805/cebu-city-hospital-coa-flags-₱1-13b-spent-on-delayed-ccmc-project

The Commission on Audit (COA) has flagged the Cebu City Government’s implementation of the long-delayed Cebu City Medical Center (CCMC) project, after finding that ₱1.13 billion had already been spent on the project despite major engineering deficiencies, contract issues, and prolonged delays that prevented auditors from completing a full technical evaluation.

The findings add another layer of scrutiny to one of the city’s largest and longest-running infrastructure projects. These are contained in COA’s 2025 Annual Audit Report on the Cebu City Government.

The Cebu City hospital project has remained unfinished more than a decade after the 2013 Bohol earthquake rendered the old hospital building unsafe.

COA said that deficiencies in detailed engineering activities, inadequately substantiated contract time extensions, and the failure to submit required technical documents contributed to “significant implementation delays.” 

It also led to contract terminations in some phases and kept state auditors from fully inspecting and doing a technical evaluation of portions of the project.

The audit covered five infrastructure contracts comprising the proposed new CCMC, which had accumulated ₱1,130,186,007.55 in project costs as of Dec. 31, 2025, against a total contract value of ₱1,904,225,845.36.

The observations come as the Archival administration pushes to complete the hospital by the end of 2026 and after city officials themselves acknowledged lingering concerns over the quality and management of previous construction phases.

In its report, COA said that the Department of Engineering and Public Works (DEPW) failed to submit several required documents needed for a proper technical audit. This prevented auditors from completing engineering evaluations required under government regulations.

Among the deficiencies auditors identified were inadequate detailed engineering activities before project implementation, insufficient justification for contract time extensions, prolonged suspensions of construction works, and missing technical records for several project phases.

The audit cited inconsistencies with Presidential Decree No. 1870, the Government Procurement Reform Act (Republic Act No. 9184), and COA Circular No. 2009-001, which prescribes documentary requirements for infrastructure audits.

For Phases I, II, as well as the interior masonry, mechanical, electrical, plumbing and fire protection works on the fifth and sixth floors, COA directed the DEPW to submit all lacking technical documents to facilitate the completion of the audit.

As for Phase III, auditors ordered the city to justify the reported 574-day suspension of the project and recover any overpayments if warranted.

Referring to Phase IV, COA required city engineers to explain excess and non-bill of quantities (BOQ) items, justify corresponding payments, and account for the reported non-functionality of installed systems as well as the absence of testing and commissioning.

Auditors also instructed the city to explain why implementation problems slipped through the detailed engineering stage undetected. 

They further asked the city to submit an approved master plan clearly identifying work assignments for each construction phase. They asked for the detailed Program of Works and Estimates showing how activities were distributed across the hospital’s different sections.

COA further recommended evaluating unfinished contracts for possible termination or takeover through the city’s Contract Termination Review Committee.

Finally, the commission urged the city government to ensure that future infrastructure projects undergo adequate detailed engineering. All required documents must be submitted on time to allow proper audit and technical evaluation.

The audit findings closely mirror concerns Cebu City officials recently raised over the hospital’s prolonged construction.

Last week, Mayor Nestor Archival said he supports hiring an independent project management consultant to oversee the remaining works.

He said the project has become too complicated after passing through multiple contractors over the past decade.

Archival also disclosed that recent inspections found portions of previous construction that may not satisfy technical standards, particularly involving the building’s mechanical, electrical, plumbing and fire protection systems. These still require extensive testing before completion can proceed.

The mayor said that city engineers have already instructed the current contractor to conduct technical tests. Results will determine whether the city needs to replace previously installed systems.

The contractor also received an additional 145 days to complete portions of the project because of these technical requirements.

The COA observations also came days after the Cebu City Council ordered an investigation into the project’s repeated delays.

During last week’s regular session, Vice Mayor Tomas Osmeña described the reconstruction as the city’s “most corrupt” infrastructure project and questioned the absence of a complete program of works despite multiple contractors handling different phases over the years.

Councilor David “Dave” Tumulak likewise urged the city government to hire an independent project management consultant, saying professional oversight has become necessary to coordinate contractors, monitor schedules, ensure quality control, and protect taxpayers’ money.

The council subsequently referred the matter to its committees on infrastructure, health, and laws for further inquiry.

The reconstruction of the new CCMC began after the magnitude 7.2 Bohol earthquake in October 2013 rendered the original hospital building structurally unsafe.

Since then, successive city administrations have allocated billions of pesos for the project. 

But changing contractors, procurement issues, contract disputes, engineering deficiencies, missing technical documents, and administrative transitions repeatedly stalled completion.

The city resumed Phase 5 construction earlier this year and aims to complete the building by December 2026, with full hospital operations targeted in early 2027.

Once completed, the expanded facility will add 400 to 500 hospital beds. That will significantly increase Cebu City’s capacity to provide tertiary healthcare services.

The Commission on Audi has flagged the Cebu City Government’s implementation of the long-delayed Cebu City Medical Center project, after finding that ₱1.13 billion had already been spent on the project despite major engineering deficiencies, contract issues, and prolonged delays that prevented auditors from completing a full technical evaluation.

https://mb.com.ph/2026/07/14/ombudsman-suspends-san-pablo-city-mayor-for-6-months

The Department of the Interior and Local Government (DILG) on Tuesday enforced the six-month preventive suspension against Mayor Arcadio “Najie” Gapangada here.

The Ombudsman suspended Gapaganda for administrative charges of grave abuse of authority, grave misconduct, gross neglect of duty, and oppression.

The cases stemmed from a complaint filed Vice Mayor Justine Colago who was installed as acting mayor by the DILG-Calabarzon.

Gapaganda allegedly stripped career and plantilla officials of their functions, marginalized them, reassigned them, or bypassed them in the operations of various city offices in favor of job order employees.

Brian Mey Tomas, assistant secretary for legal and legislative affairs of the DILG, issued the order directing DILG-Calabarzon regional director Ariel Iglesia to implement Gapaganda’s suspension dated July 8, 2026.

Councilor Carmela Acebedo assumed the position of acting vice mayor.

Colago vowed to conduct a comprehensive review of Gapangada's appointments and ordered department heads to examine and revoke questionable job order contracts.

Gapangada denied any wrongdoing and said he will file a Motion for Reconsideration before the Ombudsman, saying his suspension violated his right to due process.

The Department of the Interior and Local Government has enforced the six-month preventive suspension against Mayor Arcadio “Najie” Gapangada.

https://mb.com.ph/2026/07/13/soldier-wounded-in-sulu-ambush
A soldier was wounded in an ambush in Barangay Bus-Bus, Jolo Sulu, on Sunday, July 12. 
Investigation showed that the victim, 28-year-old Philippine Army Corporal Ernesto Cataylo Jr., was driving his motorcycle when he was shot by gunmen on another motorcycle. Catalo was taken to a hospital. 
Meanwhile, a 42-year-old man was shot dead in Barangay San Raymundo, Jolo by an unidentified gunman in a suspected drug-related attack. 
Police identified the victim as Ebrakin Mamong Nur, a resident of Patikul, Sulu. 
Nur was walking in Barangay Kasalamatan when he was killed. 
Police found cartridge cases, a deformed slug from a caliber .45 pistol, and drug paraphernalia. 
Follow-up investigations are ongoing.

A soldier was wounded in an ambush. 

https://www.pna.gov.ph/articles/1279422

The Sandiganbayan has sentenced a former social worker to up to 24 years in prison for malversation and graft charges involving funds meant for emergency subsidies for more than 9,000 beneficiaries of the government’s Social Amelioration Program (SAP).

In a 56-page decision dated July 13 and written by Presiding Justice Geraldine Faith Econg, the anti-graft court affirmed the Manila Regional Trial Court's ruling that convicted Victoria Marites Cobico, a former special disbursing officer stationed at the Rehabilitation Sheltered Workshop of the Department of Social Welfare and Development (DSWD), for misappropriating over PHP4 million in public funds in 2021.

Cobico was sentenced to a maximum penalty of up to 16 years in prison for the malversation charge and up to eight years with perpetual disqualification from public office for a separate graft case.

The court also ordered Cobico to return the malversed amount worth PHP4.272 million, "with legal interest at the rate of 6 percent per annum from the finality of judgment until full payment."

The money was part of the PHP74.98 million encashed by the accused and was meant for payout to beneficiaries of the SAP, aimed at assisting individuals whose livelihoods were affected by community quarantines during the coronavirus pandemic.

An employee for eight years at the time she was charged, the accused claimed she was pressured into admitting during the cash count that she had lent SAP funds to a friend whose child had cancer.

She also denied being the sole person who distributed SAP funds.

“(A)ccused-appellant was specifically tasked to receive, safeguard, disburse, liquidate, and return any unexpended balance of the cash advance. Such functions necessarily carried with them legal accountability over the entirety of the funds entrusted to her,” the court explained.

“The duty to account for public funds remains personal to the accountable officer and cannot be diluted or transferred through informal delegation or internal arrangements,” the Sandiganbayan added, in affirming the lower court’s ruling.

The Sandiganbayan has sentenced a former social worker to up to 24 years in prison for malversation and graft charges involving funds meant for emergency subsidies for more than 9,000 beneficiaries of the government’s Social Amelioration Program.