No it doesn’t, here’s what I’m talking about …
Your post 230 “I do not believe a Christian can be zealous of the Old law of Moses.”
Your post 236 “There was not a question about Jews converting through the blood of Christ continuing in these ceremonial laws respecting circumcision, distinctions of meats and days, festivals etc. It was the sacrificial laws requiring burnt offerings of animals and blood that had become anathema unto God after Christ shed His blood on the cross.” “But they were not zealous, nor did they practice of the laws requiring blood of slain animals year after year because in Christ they understood these sacrifices could not purify the conscience (heart/mind) for only the blood of Christ does that.”
In these posts you are clarifying that it’s the laws concerning offerings and sacrifices that are anathema to God and that these particular laws were not the ones the Jews were zealous for in Acts 21:20.
But just a few days prior you said this …
Your post 201 “But according to Paul those who continued to believe that circumcision according to the law of Moses was still in effect after the advent of Christ were only Jews outwardly, making a show of the law, but inwardly they were not Jews of faith. Because Jews of faith understood true circumcision is not of the outward flesh but inwardly of the heart and that circumcision of the flesh was only profitable when they kept the WHOLE law. “
The very issue at hand in Acts 21:20-22 is Paul’s teaching about circumcision, and you seemed to agree that the Jews were zealous for that part of the law in post 236. If circumcision is not anathema to God, that makes your view work with what you posted in post 236, but that doesn’t agree with your post 201, which needs circumcision to be anathema with God after the cross.
To me it looks like keep changing your view to avoid problems. There should be one consistent view that can work with all the verses. I think that view should be that it was still a mystery to the apostles (not Paul).
You're right, I did not make myself clear, and it did seem as thou I was changing my view. It is not that I changed my view, I simply was not clearly stating which laws Christian Jews remained zealous for and which they understood to be anathema unto God. It seemed apparent to me, but it was obviously not apparent to you. Is that because the doctrine of Preterits believes as long as the Old city and temple remained, the cross and resurrection did not make a complete end of the Old until the literal destruction? Therefore, Christian Jews still zealous for the WHOLE law of Moses was fine as long as the city and temple remained? IOW for your doctrine to be believable the cross and resurrection could not have altogether taken away the Old to establish the New Covenant. That's one of the problems with embracing the doctrines of Preterism, you seem to believe Christ was more concerned with what would become of apostate Jews than He was for building the Kingdom of God as the gospel is proclaimed.