What Are the Different Types of Law in the Bible … And What Relevance Do They have for Us Today?

Lawyers focus on Laws as a profession. The Pharisees who Jesus debated with were lawyers who focused on the Mosaic Law that the Israelites unwisely agreed to at Mt. Sinai – though they were legally under the covenant that God the Father made with Jesus on Abraham’s behalf. He believed God’s promise to him and they kept the covenant of blessings and protection for him.

But the Israelites agreed to keep a Law-system, even before they knew what the requirements for God’s blessings and protection would be. If they didn’t keep it, there would be bad consequences even down to later generations. But fortunately for reborn saints, we enjoy freedom from that Law-system and now benefit from the New Covenant of Grace that Jesus made with God on our behalf. This is even beter than Abraham’s covenant God kept for him because we are now spiritually reborn and intimately connected to God as His children.

In the previous series on the Holy Spirit, just completed in this Blog, there  was a “greater” Law presented – the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:2) – that does not have any “demands” and negative consequences, just blessings and empowerment for us saints. So, not all “laws” in the Bible are bad for us. In the article below, Paul Ellis shares his discoveries about the various kinds of “laws” in the Bible to help us discern if and how they each apply to us as New Covenant saints. This is a natural follow-up to learning to “walk according to the Holy Spirit” instead of “according to the flesh,” discussed in the previous series. Stated another way, not all laws in the Bible are antithetical to the Gospel of Grace that characterized the New Covenant we now enjoy in Jesus.  LR

Posted on February 2, 2022 by Paul Ellis 

Law versus grace

When Paul said “you are not under law but grace,” he was referring to any old covenant-type law that says you must do things to earn God’s favor. If you have been told you must confess sin, tithe, serve, or pray to be blessed, that’s the kind of law that has no place in the New Covenant. Every blessing comes to us by grace alone.

Some say the church needs a healthy respect for the law. If we are talking about the Ten Commandments or the royal law or any law that hinges on your ability to keep it, then I disagree. Rely on your own law-keeping ability, and you’ll end up fallen from grace, Gal. 5:4. You will cut yourself off from Christ.

But if we are talking about the law of Christ or the law of faith or the law of liberty, then I heartily agree, for these sorts of laws lead us to rely on the grace of God.

Pop question: When Jesus said, “Is it not written in your Law, ‘I have said you are gods’?” what law was he referring to? Was he referring to the Law of Moses or some other law?

If you answered the Law of Moses, you are mistaken. Jesus was not quoting Moses but Psalm 8:6. When Jesus said “your law” in John 10:34 he was referring to the Hebrew Scriptures a.k.a. the Old Testament.

What is the law in the Bible? Usually “the law” refers to the Law of Moses, but not always. There is also the law of Christ, the law of liberty, the law of sin, the law of faith, and more.

If we are going to talk about the law, we need to know which law we are talking about. Otherwise you might have a conversation like this:

You: “Romans says we are not under law but grace.”
Them: “That is referring to the ceremonial ordinances only. We still need to keep the Ten Commandments.”
You: “Huh?”

Did you know the Bible lists at least twelve types of law? Here they are:

1. The Law of Moses

The Law of Moses refers to the Ten Commandments plus the 600 or so ordinances, punishments, and ceremonial observances given to the nation of Israel through Moses (Jos. 8:31, John 1:17, 7:19). This law is sometimes referred to as the law of commandments (Eph. 2:15) or the law of the Jews (Acts 25:8).

2. The law of God / the law of the Lord

The law of God has a double meaning, depending on which covenant you are under. In the old covenant, the Jews referred to the Law of Moses as the law of God (Jos. 24:26, Neh. 8:8) or the law of the Lord (Ex. 13:9). However, the law codified by Moses was but a shadow of a new covenant reality (Heb. 10:1).

In the new covenant, the law of God is synonymous with the word of God. The word of God is the way by which God makes himself and his will known. When Paul said he delighted in the law of God (Rom. 7:22), he meant he took pleasure in obeying God the Father. He was not referring to the Law of Moses.

3. The royal law

The royal law is to love your neighbor as yourself (Jas. 2:8). This commandment, which comes straight out of the Law of Moses (see Lev. 19:18), is the king of laws because loving others fulfils all the other laws (Rom. 13:8-9, Gal. 5:14). In context it means treat people with dignity, even if they are poor (Jas. 2:1, 5). Don’t show favoritism.

4. The golden rule

The golden rule is Jesus’ version of the royal law: do unto others as you would have them do unto you (Luke 6:31).

5. The greatest commandment

Jesus was asked to name the first and greatest commandment in the law. Jesus replied, “To love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind” (Matt. 22:36–38).

Note that this is the greatest commandment in the Law of Moses. Under the law-keeping covenant, the flow was from you to the Lord (Deut. 6:5, 10:12). You loved God because it was a law that came with consequences. But in the new covenant of grace, we love because he first loved us (1 John 4:19). This brings us to…

6. The law of Christ

The law of Christ (1 Cor. 9:21, Gal. 6:2) is the Lord’s command to “love one another as I have loved you” (John 13:34).

The law of Christ is both a new commandment and a new kind of commandment (1 John 2:8, 2 John 1:5). We don’t love others because we fear God’s punishment; we love because we have received his love. As with everything in the new covenant, love starts with God, and as we receive from the abundance of the Father’s love we find ourselves loving others (1 John 4:19).

7. The law of the Spirit of life

The law of the Spirit of life refers to the rule or government of the indwelling Holy Spirit (Rom. 8:2). It is being led by the Spirit instead of walking after the flesh (Rom. 6:14, 18). When we yield to the life-giving Spirit, we reap abundant life (Rom. 8:13).

8. The law of sin

The law of sin refers to the rule or influence of sin (Rom. 7:23, 25). In the same way that a sheriff is the law in a small town, the world is enslaved to the rule of sin (Rom. 6:14, 20). The fruit of sin is death which is why the law of sin is also called the law of sin and death (Rom. 8:2).

Although Christians have been freed from sin (Rom. 6:7), they subject themselves to the law of sin whenever they walk after the old ways of the flesh (Rom. 6:16). One way they do this is by putting themselves under the yoke of law (Gal. 5:3–5). The law is not sin, but keeping the law requires no faith and anything that is not of faith is sin (Rom. 14:23, Gal. 3:12).

9. The law of righteousness

The law of righteousness refers to the so-called righteousness that comes from observing the Law of Moses (Rom. 10:5, Php. 3:6, 9). Such a righteousness is not true righteousness because it is not based on faith (Gal. 3:11–12).

No one was ever justified or made righteous through their observance of the law (Rom. 9:31). If righteousness could be obtained through the law, Christ died for nothing (Gal. 2:21).

10. The law of faith

The law of “Do It Yourself righteousness” can be distinguished from the law of faith which says we are justified by faith, without regard for our works (Rom. 3:27–28).

11. The law of liberty

The law of liberty is another name for the word that can save you (Jas 1:21, 25), which is Jesus, the Living Word of God who sets us free. The law of liberty describes what Jesus has done (perfectly fulfilled or completed the law) and the fruit he will bear in our lives (liberty) if we trust him.

The perfect law that gives freedom, can be contrasted with the Law of Moses that binds (Rom 7:6, Jas. 1:25). Look into the mirror of Moses’ Law and you will be miserable, for it exposes all your faults. But look into the perfect law which is Jesus and you will be blessed, for it reveals his righteousness.

12. The law written on our hearts

The law written on the hearts is two different things. When Paul speaks of the godless Gentiles having a law written in their hearts, he is referring to our consciences (Rom. 2:14–15). Your conscience is a kind of law-based religion that tells you right from wrong and condemns you when you violate those standards (Rom. 2:15).

But the Bible mentions another law that God writes on the hearts and minds of his children (Heb. 8:10, 10:16). This law is not the knowledge of right and wrong, nor is it the Law of Moses. When Jeremiah the prophet said that those who had the new law written on their hearts would know the Lord, he was referring to the indwelling Spirit (a.k.a. the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus Rom. 8:2)  –  the believer’s union with Christ (Jer. 31:33–34).

The law written by God into your heart is Jesus. It is the seed of God birthed in you by the Holy Spirit.

Summary

What is the law in the Bible? There are many laws and many kinds of laws. Some of the laws found in the Bible are old covenant laws, meaning:

1) they come with penalties for non-compliance, while other laws are

2)new covenant laws, meaning they describe the life that is ours in Christ.

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The law written by God into your heart is Jesus. It is the seed of God birthed in you by the Holy Spirit.” That is a most interesting revelation. We will present more on that in next week’s Post. LR