Our culture deplores unchangeable rules. We don't 
			like prohibitions and restrictions, and so we want to be able to 
			alter or eliminate them. This attitude is so prevalent that car 
			dealers actually attract buyers with the boast that when it comes to 
			dealing with them, "the rules have changed." 
			
			
			Often those desiring to change rules will ask, "Where 
			is it written in stone" that something must be done a certain 
			way? The implication is that if it isn't "written in stone," it 
			wasn't meant to be permanent to begin with, and it is therefore 
			subject to change. The cry, "Where is it written in stone?" 
			expresses the desire of man's heart to change rules or procedures.
			
			
			So, rules are changed constantly in virtually every 
			area of modern life. Some are changed because they are bad or 
			inadequate; more often, they are changed because it's inconvenient 
			to keep them, they aren't being kept anyway, or somebody complained 
			enough.
			
			
			The rules or laws God gave the Israelites in ancient 
			times actually were written in stone. They were literally delivered 
			on "two tablets of stone" and were "written with the finger of God"
			
			
			(Deuteronomy 9:10; cf. Exodus 34:1). Choosing 
			the medium of stone as a writing material emphasized the relative 
			permanence of these laws.  By writing with His own finger, the Lord 
			indicated that these laws were of divine origin, unalterable by 
			human hands.
			
			
			The Lord Himself did eventually change those rules.  
			He took the "handwriting of ordinances...out of the way, having 
			nailed it to his cross." 
			
			(Colossians 2:14).  
			He decided to give His people new rules as part of a new covenant. 
			He declares, "I will put My laws in their mind and write them on 
			their hearts, and I will be their God, and they shall be My people."
			
			
			(Hebrews 8:10). Notice 
			that the new laws would still be written by God and thus be 
			unalterable by man. But they are not written on tablets of stone.  
			They are written on human hearts. 
			
			
			God's laws today are on the hearts of His covenant 
			people. Since God has written them there, they are not subject to 
			change by humans. But more than that, because they are written on 
			our hearts, we do not want to change them. You see if we are truly 
			God's people, His laws are part of us. They are what we want to do!  
			Regarding His laws, we would never begin to ask, "Where is it 
			written in stone?" because there is no desire within us to change 
			His rules.
			
			
			Those today who attempt to alter the laws of the New 
			Testament to suit themselves are demonstrating that they are not 
			God's people. They do not have God's laws in their hearts.
			 
		
		  
		
		Other Articles by Steve Klein
		
		The 
		Conversion of Lydia
		
		
		
		Baptism and the Fellowship of the Saints
		
		
		Winning Last Place
		
		How Men Act When They Repent