And answer has to do with understanding the Moral Law which existed prior to the Torah.
Paul states Romans 7:12 says, “Therefore the law is holy, and the commandment holy, righteous, and good.”
This reflects God’s nature, He is holy, just, and righteous and therefore His laws are a direct expression of who He is. His moral laws remain timeless, even under Christ (Malachi 3:6).
Malachi 3:6 “For I the Lord do not change; therefore you, O children of Jacob, are not consumed.”
They reveal our need for grace, and we are called to use them appropriately (1 Timothy 1:8). All 66 books of the Bible are God’s inspired Word (John 12:49), and both the Old and New Covenants present a unified view of His character, plan, and design through Scripture (2 Timothy 3:16–17).
Although the Bible does not explicitly categorize its laws, scholars often use distinctions, moral, ceremonial, civil to aid understanding. It’s mistaken to claim that the Old Covenant only applied to Israel and that we now have entirely new moral standards under Christ. While ceremonial and civil laws were indeed fulfilled and set aside (Colossians 2:16–17; Hebrews 7:12; 9; 10), the moral law endures. Jesus emphasized this when He declared, “Do not relax the law… your righteousness must exceed that of the Pharisees” (Matt 5:19–20). Paul likewise taught we establish the law by our conduct (Romans 3:31), not abolish it.
Our moral laws preexisted Moses, passed along orally to every nation (cf. Leviticus 18; Psalm 9:17; 110:6; Isaiah 34; Jeremiah 25), underscoring their universal and timeless nature. To disregard them is to deny the moral order God put in place.
Consider the Sabbath, it carries ceremonial, ritual, and moral dimensions. While observance may differ in application today, that doesn’t diminish its moral significance. The Sabbath, like all moral laws, ultimately points us to Christ (Lord of the Sabbath), the perfect embodiment of God’s Word (John 1:14).
God magnifies His Word above His Name (Psalm 138:2), and Jesus Himself is the living Word, our example and standard (1 Cor 11:1; Eph 5:1). Sanctification happens only through adherence to His Word (Lev 10:3; 1 Thess 4:3–4), grounded in diligent study of both Covenants (2 Tim 3:16–17; John 17:3).
Rejecting Mosaic moral laws reveals a misunderstanding of God’s Word and disrupts our spiritual vitality. As one brother said “If we gave greater attention to Israel’s law, we would see more fruit of the Spirit and fewer works of the flesh, more spiritual enlightenment and Christlikeness, fewer worldly habits and impurity.”
The kind of faith described in Hebrews 11 is the very faith that Israel was meant to demonstrate by living according to the Spirit behind the Law. However, the Law achieve its task for which God sent it out to do perfectly.