Natural Law Part of the Law of God

HL.020.001

51. The same law obtains in the spiritual as in the natural world.— M. of B., p. 126.

HL.020.002

52. The transgression of the physical law is transgression of God’s law. Our Creator is Jesus Christ. — U. T., May 19, 1897.

HL.020.003

Natural Law Divine.

53. Every law governing the human machinery is to be considered just as truly divine in origin, in character, and in importance as the word of God. Every careless action, any abuse put upon the wonderful mechanism, by disregarding his specified laws of the human habitation, is a violation of God’s law. This law embraces the treatment of the entire being. U. T., Jan. 11, 1897.

HL.020.004

54. God’s law is written by his own finger upon every nerve, every muscle, every faculty which has been entrusted to man.— U. T., Aug. 30, 1896.

HL.020.005

Its Penalty.

55. God has formed laws to govern every part of our constitutions, and these laws which he has placed in our being are divine, and for every transgression there is a fixed penalty, which sooner or later must be realized.— H. R.

HL.020.006

56. Our first duty, one which we owe to God, to ourselves, and to our fellow men, is to obey the laws of God, which include the laws of health.— T., V. III, p. 164.

HL.021.001

57. The laws governing the physical nature are as truly divine in their origin and character as the law of the ten commandments. Man is fearfully and wonderfully made; for Jehovah has inscribed his law by his own mighty hand on every part of the human body.— U. T., Aug. 5, 1896.

HL.021.002

Physical Sin.

58. It is just as much sin to violate the laws of our being as to break one of the ten commandments, for we cannot do either without breaking God’s law. — T., V. II, p. 70.

HL.021.003

59. The human being who is careless and reckless of the habits and practises that concern his physical life and health, sins against God.— U. T., May 19, 1897.

HL.021.004

60. A violation of these laws is a violation of the immutable law of God, and the penalty will surely follow.— R. and H., 1883, No. 41.