How did Jesus treat the law and the commandments recorded in the Gospels? I ask this to clear common confusion and to start a calm, honest study of Scripture.
Many hear that the law was set aside, yet Matthew 5:17–19 and Matthew 19:16–19 give clear answers. I will explain how Jesus upheld God’s rules while teaching deeper meaning.
I will focus on two Gospel anchors: Matthew 5 and Matthew 19. I will show direct quotes and actions from Jesus Christ that relate to those rules.
My aim is simple: offer clear Bible references and a step-by-step line of reasoning. I will define “commandments” to mean the original ten and the sayings Jesus cites.
Later I will treat the Sabbath question separately and stick close to the text. Honest questions are welcome here, and we will stay under God’s word as we seek truth and hope.
Key Takeaways
- I will ask how Jesus treated the Ten Commandments as found in the Gospels.
- Matthew 5 and Matthew 19 serve as the main biblical anchors.
- Scripture passages show Jesus affirmed God’s law while teaching its intent.
- “Commandments” refers to the Decalogue and Jesus’s quoted commands.
- A focused section will address the Sabbath using Scripture alone.
Why this topic matters for Christians today
I write this because clear teaching affects daily choices today. Scripture guides belief and action. People need simple rules that shape family life and church life.
Obedience links to love. 1 John 5:3 says love for God means keeping his commandments and that his commands are not a burden.
“For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments: and his commandments are not grievous.”
Psalm 119 connects love for God’s law with peace and steady direction. That shows the law helps people live with hope and order.

- Belief must lead to action so faith affects real life.
- Confusion about the law breeds uncertainty about sin and obedience.
- Clear teaching helps churches form honest, trusting communities.
| Scripture | Key point | Practical effect |
|---|---|---|
| 1 John 5:3 | Love includes obedience | Faith motivates daily obedience |
| Psalm 119:165-167 | Law brings peace | Choices give stability to life |
| Jesus’ teaching | Law affirms love and truth | Churches teach clear moral guidance |
What the Ten Commandments are in the Old Testament law
At Sinai God spoke rules that shaped Israel’s life and faith. I define the ten commandments as the words God gave at Sinai and recorded in Exodus 20:1-17.
Where Exodus and Deuteronomy record these words
Exodus 20 lists the commands plainly. Deuteronomy 5 repeats that list for a new generation. Deuteronomy 30 frames obedience as a choice between life and death.

How these rules set a standard for people and community life
These laws guide honest speech, marriage faithfulness, respect for life, and property rights. They create a moral way that protects neighbors.
The rules against theft and false witness build trust. That trust keeps communities stable and safe.
“I have set before you life and death, blessing and cursing: therefore choose life”
- Scriptural origin: Exodus 20 and Deuteronomy 5.
- Practical effect: Moral order for families and towns.
- Community benefit: Laws against theft and lying protect neighbors.
| Scripture | Focus | Community effect |
|---|---|---|
| Exodus 20:1-17 | God’s spoken rules at Sinai | Clear moral standard for people |
| Deuteronomy 5:6-21 | Restated law for a new generation | Reinforces family and civic duty |
| Deuteronomy 30:15-19 | Choice between life and death | Links obedience to blessing |
Jesus knew these texts. He read them and taught from them, which leads us into how he applied these commands in the Gospels.
Jesus said “keep the commandments” for eternal life
A careful reader finds Jesus answering a direct question about life and law in Matthew 19. A man approached with a plain request: What good thing must I do to have eternal life?
The rich young ruler asked a direct question
“Teacher, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?”
Jesus connected obedience with entering life
“If you want to enter into life, keep the commandments.”
Keep here means to obey and to guard what God has given. Jesus said this plainly: obedience is tied to entering life. He did not set those rules aside or call them irrelevant.
This answer matters for believers today. It shows that following God’s law remains part of Christ’s call to faith and hope. The young man then asked which commandments Jesus meant, which we will examine next.
Jesus listed specific commandments in Matthew 19
When pressed about lasting life, Jesus referred to well-known moral commands. He named a set of duties that Christians still read as clear rules for community and family life.
You shall not murder
This command protects human life and dignity. By forbidding murder, Jesus upheld respect for every person and linked it to loving your neighbor.
You shall not commit adultery
This rule guards marriage and trust. Adultery harms families, and keeping this commandment supports faithful relationships.
You shall not steal
Prohibiting theft preserves honest work and property. Stealing injures a neighbor and breaks social trust.
You shall not bear false witness
False witness destroys truth in court and community. Truthful speech protects justice and relationships.
Honor your father and your mother
Respect across generations keeps families stable. Obedience here fosters care and social order.
Love your neighbor as yourself
Jesus added this as a capstone. This law from Leviticus calls us to active care. It summarizes and supports the other commands he listed.
| Command | Purpose | Community effect |
|---|---|---|
| You shall not murder | Protects human life | Maintains safety and dignity |
| You shall not commit adultery | Guards marriage trust | Stabilizes families |
| You shall not steal | Respects property and labor | Supports honest economy |
| You shall not bear false witness | Preserves truth | Ensures fair judgment |
| Honor your father and your mother | Promotes family care | Encourages intergenerational stability |
| Love your neighbor as yourself | Summarizes duty to others | Fosters compassion and justice |
Jesus said He did not abolish the law
Jesus set the record straight about the law before he taught deeper meaning. I keep each claim tied to the verses and avoid speculation.
“Do not think” corrects a wrong assumption
“Do not think that I came to abolish the Law or the Prophets.”
“Do not think” corrects a false idea. It tells readers to stop assuming the law is canceled. Abolish means to remove or cancel in plain English.
He linked the law to heaven and earth
Jesus tied the law’s endurance to heaven and earth. He said not one small mark will pass until all is accomplished. The phrase “jot or tittle” refers to tiny parts of the written text.
Warning about breaking and teaching against commandments
Jesus warned that anyone who breaks the least commandment or teaches others to do so will be called least. He addressed both action and instruction. That is a practical point for church life.
| Verse | Point | Application |
|---|---|---|
| Matthew 5:17 | Not here to abolish | Respect God’s word |
| Matthew 5:18 | Law holds until heaven and earth pass | Trust Scripture’s stability |
| Matthew 5:19 | Warning about breaking and teaching | Leaders must teach obedience |
For further study on law and its roots, see what Exodus teaches about God’s law. This gives context for Jesus’ words and offers hope that God’s word endures.
What “fulfill” means in Matthew 5:17-19
To understand Jesus’ point about law, we must first define what he meant by fulfill. The word means “to make full” or to bring something to its full expression.
Jesus filled the meaning of a commandment
Jesus expanded written rules to their inner intent. In Matthew 5 he shows how anger links to murder and lust links to adultery. That teaching makes a commandment reach into motive and choice, not only outward acts.
Jesus lived the law without sin
He did more than teach: he obeyed perfectly. John 15:10 notes that Jesus Christ kept the Father’s commandments. His life models obedience of heart and deed.
| Fulfill defined | How Jesus acted | Practical point |
|---|---|---|
| Make full; bring to full expression | Expanded intent in teaching | Focus on inner motives |
| Does not mean cancel | Kept law without sin | Obedience includes heart |
| Roots in Scripture | Sermon on the Mount examples | Christ shapes Christian obedience |
Jesus applied commandments to the heart in the Sermon on the Mount
In the Sermon on the Mount Jesus redirected attention from acts to motives. He shows a pattern: outward rules point to inner life. This shift explains why law matters to faith and hope.
Anger links to murder (Matthew 5:21–22)
Jesus names anger and insult as roots that lead toward murder. Matthew 5:21–22 ties hostile speech and contempt to the same moral concern as killing.
When anger breeds hatred, it erodes neighbors and breaks God’s rule. I remind readers that guarding speech guards life.
Lust links to adultery (Matthew 5:27–28)
Jesus makes clear that lust in the mind already breaks faithfulness. Matthew 5:27–28 shows adultery begins with desire and intent.
Thoughts shape actions; unchecked desire weakens marriage trust. This teaching strengthens the commandments by calling for purity of mind and will.
Truthful speech protects against false witness (Matthew 5:33–37)
Jesus forbids oath abuse and calls for simple honesty. Honest words prevent false witness and shield community trust.
These verses link truth, witness, and daily choices. In practice, speech, thought, and conduct are the fields where faith grows.
- Pattern: outward act → inner motive.
- Effect: anger feeds violence; lust precedes adultery; false speech harms neighbors.
- Hope: Jesus calls us to change and gives grace to obey God’s commandments.
Jesus summed up the commandments with love for God and neighbor
Jesus gave a short, living summary that points to purpose and practice. He named loyalty to God and active care for neighbor as the heart of moral duty.
Love the Lord God with all your heart
Love here means full allegiance and true worship, shown by obedient life. Matthew 22:37 frames this as first loyalty—worship, prayer, and keeping God’s word follow from a single devoted heart.
Love your neighbor as yourself
Jesus described neighbor as the one we serve with honesty, faithfulness, and respect for life. That care turns rules about speech, marriage, property, and life into concrete acts of mercy and truth.
“You shall love the Lord your God with all your heart… and your neighbor as yourself.”
| Focus | Points to | Practical way |
|---|---|---|
| Love of Lord God | First table of duties toward God | Worship, loyalty, keeping God’s word |
| Love of neighbor | Second table of duties toward others | Honesty, faithfulness, respect for life |
John 14:15 links love for Jesus to obedience: “If you love me, keep my commandments.” That shows love and law belong together. I invite you to measure love by actions that match God’s word and to follow this clear way of faithful living.
Ten Commandments in the New Testament
Across the Gospels and letters, each Sinai rule appears in Christian teaching by direct quote or clear allusion. I will map each brief command to New Testament texts so readers see how Scripture treats God’s moral law.
No other gods before the Lord God
Worship the Lord God alone. Jesus cites this when he resists temptation (Matthew 4:10; Luke 4:8).
No idols and no idolatry
Acts 15:20 and Paul’s lists warn against idols and practices tied to idolatry (1 Corinthians 6:9–10).
Do not take God’s name in vain
Jesus’ teaching on honest speech and vows (Matthew 5:33–37) guards the use of God’s name.
Remember the Sabbath day and the debate
Luke 4:16 and Acts 17:2 show Jesus and apostles observed synagogue days. Christians debate how that fourth rule applies today, and careful study of Scripture guides faithful practice.
Honor father mother
Jesus and Paul uphold honoring parents (Matthew 15:4; Ephesians 6:1–3).
Do not murder; do not commit adultery; do not steal; do not bear false witness; do not covet
Jesus expands murder and adultery to include anger and lust (Matthew 5:21–28). Paul and the apostles quote these as binding law for love of neighbor (Romans 13:9; Ephesians 4; Matthew 19:18).
In short, the New Testament treats these commands as part of faithful life. Scripture links outward acts and inner motives and calls us to obey by grace and truth.
Paul taught that keeping God’s commandments matters
Paul repeatedly taught that obedience to God shows the life Christ calls us to. He spoke plainly about keeping rules that reflect faith and love.
Obedience matters
“Circumcision is nothing and uncircumcision is nothing, but keeping the commandments of God is what matters.”
Paul’s point: obedience to God’s commands proves faith and shapes conduct.
Law described as good
“So then, the law is holy, and the commandment is holy and just and good.”
Paul’s view: the law reflects God’s character and serves our good.
Love sums the rules
“You shall not commit adultery, you shall not murder, you shall not steal, you shall not covet…”
Paul quotes a list of duties and then sums them by love for neighbor. This shows how romans 13:9 links command and care.
Paul also rejects lawless grace: “Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound?” he asks, and answers no (Romans 6:1–2). That clears confusion: grace frees us to obey, not to rebel.
I say this kindly for those who distrust Paul. He did not teach lawlessness. Rather, he anchored faith to God’s word so obedience grows from trust in Christ.
Paul answered claims that he opposed the law
Some people charged Paul with opposing God’s law. They made this claim publicly and pressed it in legal settings. I will describe his response using plain courtroom language so the point is clear.
Paul denied offending against law
“And certain of the Jews… cried out, saying that he did many things contrary to the law of Moses. But Paul said, ‘I have committed no offense against the law of the Jews.’
Paul spoke this as a formal defense. He refused to accept a label of lawbreaker before Roman and Jewish judges.
Paul affirmed belief in Law and Prophets
“I confess this to you, that according to the way which they call heresy, so worship I the God of my fathers, believing all things which are written in the Law and the Prophets.”
Here Paul claims loyalty to Scripture. He insists his faith rests on what is written, not on opposing commands.
Paul led Gentiles to obey God
“…I have fulfilled the ministry of Christ, to testify the gospel of God, that the Gentiles should be obedient.”
This states his mission: not to tear down law, but to bring people to obey God by faith and truth.
| Accusation | Paul’s reply | Scripture |
|---|---|---|
| Opposed Jewish law | Denied any offense against law | Acts 25:7–8 |
| Rejected Scriptures | Declared belief in Law and Prophets | Acts 24:14 |
| Led people away from God | Described mission to make Gentiles obedient | Romans 15:18 |
Practical point: Accusations must yield to Paul’s own testimony recorded in Scripture. Let the Bible settle this dispute and guide our judgment.
John defined sin as lawbreaking and linked obedience with truth
John’s letters sharpen our view: sin is a violation of God’s law, not merely a lapse of feeling. He names this plainly in Scripture so readers cannot reduce wrongdoing to private opinion.
Sin breaks God’s law in 1 John 3:4
“Whosoever committeth sin transgresseth also the law: for sin is the transgression of the law.”
This definition ties wrongdoing to a firm standard. It protects truth by keeping moral language rooted in God’s word.
John warned against claiming faith without obedience in 1 John 2:4
“He that saith, I know him, and keepeth not his commandments, is a liar…”
John makes an if–then point: if someone claims faith but does not keep commandments, then that profession fails the test of truth.
Love of God leads to keeping commandments in 1 John 5:3
“For this is the love of God, that we keep his commandments…”
Love and obedience belong together. Jesus Christ taught the same link between heart and duty. God gives grace so we can keep commandments without finding them burdensome.
Peter warned against turning back from the holy commandment
2 Peter 2:20–21 gives a plain warning: those who know Christ and then return to former ways face a worse end than before. I state this without alarmism, staying close to Peter’s language.
“For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end is worse with them than the beginning.”
What turning back looks like
Turning back can mean returning to patterns such as willful deceit, unfaithfulness, or using worship as a cover for old habits. These are choices, not mere struggles.
“Holy commandment” names God’s clear instruction for life. It points to the way of truth and faithful obedience rather than a list of burdens.
Peter’s warning calls us to hope with effort. True repentance and steady faith in Christ keep people on the way that leads to life, not death.
Revelation links commandments to the gates and the tree of life
I read Revelation as clear and direct about final identity and reward. Revelation 12:17 names God’s people by their obedience: they “keep the commandments of God.” That verse presents obedience as a marker of faith.
“And the dragon was wroth with the woman… and went to make war with the remnant which keep the commandments of God.”
Revelation 22:14 links blessing with doing God’s commands. The text ties that blessing to access to the tree of life and to entering the city through its gates.
“Blessed are those who do his commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life…”
What “gates into the city” means plainly
The phrase describes entrance to God’s future kingdom. It shows welcome and access for those who obey God’s law.
How this links back to Jesus Christ
Revelation keeps faith and obedience together. It points readers to hope in Christ and to holding God’s word with confidence.
| Verse | Key phrase | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Revelation 12:17 | Keep the commandments | Identity of God’s people is obedience |
| Revelation 22:14 | Tree of life | Blessing and restored life for the obedient |
| Final city image | Gates into the city | Entrance to God’s kingdom for the faithful |
How to read “law” and “commandments” in the New Testament
I begin with a simple rule: watch words closely. The word law can mean God’s revealed rule, a set of human traditions, or moral principle. Word study matters because one verse may use a different meaning.
Separate God’s commands from added human rules
“Why do your disciples transgress the tradition of the elders? For God commanded, saying…”
Here Jesus drew a sharp line. He refused traditions that nullify God’s word. Readers should follow that same care when reading other passages.
Clear reading steps
- Look first for direct quotes of God’s law or commandment. These carry initial weight.
- Next, track clear allusions. Examples include Romans 13:9 and Ephesians 4:25, where writers echo Sinai rules.
- Note context: is the author arguing about practice, doctrine, or added customs?
- Avoid canceling many plain verses from one hard text. Use consistent logic instead.
| Type | How to spot it | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Direct quote | Phrase matches Scripture wording | Matthew 19 list |
| Clear allusion | Echo or summary of law meaning | Romans 13:9 |
| Human rule | Tradition debated by Jesus | Matthew 15:1–3 |
Practical point: Faithful study builds unity and clearer obedience. Read Scripture with care, and let plain quotations guide interpretation.
Conclusion
Jesus taught that obedience to God’s law flows from true love and leads to life.
His clearest words appear in Matthew 19 and Matthew 5, where he ties entering life to keeping the ten commandments and refuses to abolish God’s rule.
Apostolic witnesses agree: Paul, John, Peter, and Revelation uphold Scripture’s call to faith and faithful conduct across the new testament writings.
For daily faith this means obedience grows from love for God and love for neighbor. Obedience is not mere duty but the fruit of changed hearts.
Action plan: read Exodus 20, Matthew 5, Matthew 19, Romans 13, and 1 John 5 this week and pray for grace to live what you read.
May God’s word steady your walk. Follow Jesus with a willing heart and a clear conscience before the Lord.

