What, more than all else, proves the perpetuity and immutability of the law of God?

Answer

"For God so loved the world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believes in Him should
not perish, but have everlasting life." John 3: 16. "Christ died for our sins." 1 Cor. 15: 3.
NOTE. - Could the law have been abolished, and sin been disposed of in this way, Christ need not
have come and died for our sins. The gift of Christ, therefore, more than all else, proves the immutability of
the law of God. Christ must come and die, and satisfy the claims of the law, or the world must perish. The
law could not give way. Says Spurgeon in his sermon on "The Perpetuity of the Law of God": "Our Lord
Jesus Christ gave a greater vindication of the law by dying because it had been broken than all the lost can
ever give by their miseries." The fact that the law is to be the standard in the judgment is another proof of
its enduring nature. See Eccl. 12. 13, 14; James 2: 8-12.
 


What are the commandments of God declared to be?
Of what was Abraham's obedience the fruit?
What similar call and appeal will be made under the final outpouring of the Spirit?
By what means is all Scripture given?
What charge was made against Stephen concerning his attitude toward the ceremonial law?
If John, therefore, referred to a day of the week, on what day must he have been in the Spirit?
What will the saints do in the new earth?

Questions & Answers are from the book Bible Readings for the Home Circle