I agree that the Law is moral AND civil AND ceremonial, but I know that there is no Scripture that either delineates divisions between them or defines any of them as such.
It is one Law. You break any ordinance thereof, and you have broken the Law. It's really very simple, and people just want to make it complicated.
There are aspects of the ceremonial law (which pertains to animal sacrifices) that have been fulfilled by the sacrifice of Christ on the Cross.
The aspects of the moral law are fulfilled in that,
1) Christ lived a perfect life and applies His life to our account; and,
2) Christ lives in us and through us so that we practically live lives that are pleasing to God according to the moral law.
The civil law will be fulfilled when Israel rules over the whole world as a nation and the civil laws of Israel become the laws in all of the land.
There is a difference between the moral law and the civil law.
The civil law has penalties in the government's treatment of sinners;
While the moral law very imply defines the sins that require those penalties according to the civil law.
The moral law is personal; the civil law is national.
The civil law applies to the penalties given (such as death for adultery or violating the sabbath).
The moral law applies to the morality therein (it identifies adultery or breaking the sabbath as being sinful).