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Galatians
Chapter Four
Galatians 4
The relative position therefore of the Jew (even though
he were godly) before the coming of Christ
and of the believing Jew or Gentile
when Christ had been revealed
is clearly set forth; and in the commencement of
chapter 4 the apostle sums up that which he had said. He compares the believer
before the coming of Christ to a child under age
who has no direct relation
with his father as to his thoughts
but who receives his father's orders
without his accounting for them to him
as a servant would receive them. He is
under tutors and governors until the time appointed of the father. Thus the
Jews
although they were heirs of the promises
were not in connection with the
Father and His counsels in Jesus
but were in tutelage to principles that
appertained to the system of the present world
which is but a corrupt and
fallen creation. Their walk was ordained of God in this system
but did not go
beyond it. We speak of the system by which they were guided
whatever divine light
they might receive from time to time to reveal heaven to them
to encourage
them in hope
while making the system under the rule of which they were placed
yet darker. Under the law then
heirs as they were
they were still in bondage.
But when the time was fulfilled and ripe for it
God sent forth His Son-an act
flowing from His sovereign goodness for the accomplishment of His eternal
counsels
and for the manifestation of all His character. It was God who did
it. It was He who acted. The law required man to act
and it manifested man to
be just the contrary of that which he ought to have been according to the law.
But the Son of God comes from God. He requires nothing. He is manifested in the
world in relation with men under the double aspect of a man born of woman
and
a man under law.
If sin and death came in by the woman
Christ came into this world by
the woman also. If through law man is under condemnation
Christ puts Himself
under law also. Under this double aspect He takes the place in which man was
found; He takes it in grace without sin
but with the responsibility that
belonged to it-a responsibility which He alone has met. But still the object of
His mission went much farther than the manifestation in His Person of man
without sin
in the midst of evil
and having the knowledge of good and evil.
He came to redeem those that were under the law
in order that believers (be
they who they may) should receive the adoption. Now that the Gentile believers
had been admitted to share the adoption was proved by the sending of the Spirit
who made them cry
"Abba
Father." For it is because they are sons
that God sent the Spirit of His Son into their heart
as well as into that of
the Jews without distinction. The Gentile
a stranger to the house
and the
Jew
who under age differed in nothing from a servant
had each taken the
position of a son in direct relation with the Father-a relation of which the
Holy Ghost was the power and the witness-in consequence of the redemption
wrought in their behalf by the Son; the Jew under the law needing it as much as
the Gentile in his sins. But its efficacy was such that the believer was not a
bondman but a son
and if a son
an heir also of God by Christ. Previously the
Gentiles had been in bondage
not indeed to the law
but to that which
in its
nature
was not God. They knew not God
and were the slaves of everything that
boasted of the name of God
in order to blind the heart of man alienated from
Him who is the true God and from His knowledge.
But what were these Gentiles
become Christians
now
doing? They desired to be again in bondage to these wretched elements
worldly
and carnal
to which they had formerly been in subjection; these things of
which the carnal man could form his religion
without one moral or spiritual
thought
and which placed the glory due to God
in outward observances which an
unbeliever and a heathen ignorant of God could call his religion and glory in
it.
As figures
which God used to bear testimony beforehand
to the realities that are in Christ
they had their true value. God knew how to
reconcile the employment of these figures
which are profitable to faith
with
a religious system that tested man in the flesh
and that served to answer the
question
whether
with every kind of help
man was able to stand before God
and to serve Him. But to go back to these ordinances made for man in the flesh
now that God hadshewn man's incapability of becoming righteous before Him-now
that the substance of these shadows was come
was to go back to the position of
men in the flesh
and to take that standing without any command of God that
sanctioned it. It was to go back to the ground of idolatry
that is to say
to
a carnal religion
arranged by man without any authority from God
and which in
no way brought man into connection with Him. For things done in the flesh had
certainly not that effect. "Ye observe days and months and seasons and
years." This the heathen did in their human religion. Judaism was a human
religion ordained of God
but
by going back to it when the ordinance of God
was no longer in force
they did but go back to the paganism out of which they
had been called to have part with Christ in heavenly things.
Nothing can be more striking than this statement of what
ritualism is after the cross. It is simply heathenism
going back to man's
religion
when God is fully revealed: "I fear concerning you
" said
the apostle
"that I have laboured in vain." But they reproached the
apostle with not being a faithful Jew according to the law
with freeing
himself from its authority. "Be ye then
" says he
"as I am; for
I am as ye are" (namely
free from the law). Ye have done me no wrong in
saying so. Would to God ye were as much so! He then reminds them of his thorn
in the flesh. It was some circumstance adapted to make him contemptible in his
ministry. Nevertheless they had received him as an angel of God
as Jesus
Christ. What was become of that blessedness? Had he become their enemy because
he had told them the truth? Zeal was good; but if it had a right thing for its
object
they should have persevered in their zeal
and not merely have
maintained it while he was with them. These new teachers were very zealous to
have the Galatians for their partisans
and to exclude them from the apostle
that they might be attached to themselves. He laboured again
as though
travailing in birth
in order that Christ should be formed as if anew in their
hearts-a touching testimony of the strength of his christian love. This love
was divine in its character; it was not weakened by the disappointment of
ingratitude
because its source was outside the attraction of its objects.
Moses said
"Have I conceived all this people
that I should carry them in
my bosom?" Paul is ready to travail in birth with them a second time.
He does not know what to say. He would like to be present with them
that he might
on seeing them adapt his words to their condition
for they had
really forsaken christian ground. Would they then
since they desired to be
under the law
hear the law? In it they might see the two systems
in the type
of Hagar and Sarah: that of law
gendering to bondage; and that of grace
to
liberty; not that only
but the positive exclusion of the child of bondage from
the inheritance. The two could not be united; the one shut out the other. The
bond-child was born according to the flesh
the free-child according to
promise. For the law and the covenant of Sinai were in connection with man in
the flesh. The principle of man's relationship with God
according to the law
(if such relations had been possible)
was that of a relationship formed
between man in the flesh and the righteous God. As to man
the law and the
ordinances were only bondage. They aimed at bridling the will without its being
changed. It is all-important to understand
that man under the law is man in
the flesh. When born again
dead and risen again
he is no longer under law
which has only dominion over man in that he is alive here below. Read
"Jerusalem which is above is our mother"-not "the mother of us
all." It is in contrast with Jerusalem on earth
which in its principle
answered to Sinai. And observe that the apostle is not here speaking of the
violation of the law
but of its principle. The law itself puts man in a state
of bondage. It is imposed on man in the flesh
who is opposed to it. By the
very fact that he has self-will
the law and that will are in conflict.
Self-will is not obedience.
Verse 27 presents some difficulty to many minds
because
it is generally confounded with Hagar and Sarah. But it is a separate
consideration
suggested by the idea of Jerusalem above. The verse is a
quotation from Isaiah 54
which celebrates the joy and glory of the earthly
Jerusalem at the beginning of the millennium. The apostle quotes it to shew
that Jerusalem had more children during the time of her desolation than when
she had a husband. In the millennium Jehovah
the Lord
will be her husband. He
had been so before. At present she is desolate
she bears not. Nevertheless
there are more children than previously when she was married. Such were the
marvellous ways of God. All Christians are reckoned
when earth takes its
course again
as the children of Jerusalem
but of Jerusalem with no husband
and desolate
so that the Galatians were not to own it as if God did still.
Sarah was not without a husband. Here is a different order of thought. Without
a husband and desolate (so that
properly speaking
she has none) Jerusalem has
more children now than in the best days of her career
when Jehovah was a
husband to her. For
as regards the promise
the gospel came forth from her.
The assembly is not of promise. It was a counsel hid in God
of which the
promises had never spoken. Its position is a yet higher one; but in this place
the apostle's instruction does not rise to that height. But we are also the
children of promise
and not of the flesh. Israel after the flesh had no other
pretension than to be the children of Abraham after the flesh; we are so only
by promise. Now the word of God cast out the child of the bondwoman
born after
the flesh
that he might not be heir with the child of promise. As to us
we
are the children of promise.
── John Darby《Synopsis of Galatians》
Galatians 4
Chapter Contents
The folly of returning to legal observances for
justification. (1-7) The happy change made in the Gentile believers. (8-11) The
apostle reasons against following false teachers. (12-18) He expresses his
earnest concern for them. (19
20) And then explains the difference between what
is to be expected from the law
and from the gospel. (21-31)
Commentary on Galatians 4:1-7
(Read Galatians 4:1-7)
The apostle deals plainly with those who urged the law of
Moses together with the gospel of Christ
and endeavoured to bring believers
under its bondage. They could not fully understand the meaning of the law as
given by Moses. And as that was a dispensation of darkness
so of bondage; they
were tied to many burdensome rites and observances
by which they were taught
and kept subject like a child under tutors and governors. We learn the happier
state of Christians under the gospel dispensation. From these verses see the
wonders of Divine love and mercy; particularly of God the Father
in sending
his Son into the world to redeem and save us; of the Son of God
in submitting
so low
and suffering so much for us; and of the Holy Spirit
in condescending
to dwell in the hearts of believers
for such gracious purposes. Also
the
advantages Christians enjoy under the gospel. Although by nature children of
wrath and disobedience
they become by grace children of love
and partake of
the nature of the children of God; for he will have all his children resemble
him. Among men the eldest son is heir; but all God's children shall have the
inheritance of eldest sons. May the temper and conduct of sons ever show our
adoption; and may the Holy Spirit witness with our spirits that we are children
and heirs of God.
Commentary on Galatians 4:8-11
(Read Galatians 4:8-11)
The happy change whereby the Galatians were turned from
idols to the living God
and through Christ had received the adoption of sons
was the effect of his free and rich grace; they were laid under the greater
obligation to keep to the liberty wherewith he had made them free. All our
knowledge of God begins on his part; we know him because we are known of him.
Though our religion forbids idolatry
yet many practise spiritual idolatry in
their hearts. For what a man loves most
and cares most for
that is his god:
some have their riches for their god
some their pleasures
and some their
lusts. And many ignorantly worship a god of their own making; a god made all of
mercy and no justice. For they persuade themselves that there is mercy for them
with God
though they repent not
but go on in their sins. It is possible for
those who have made great professions of religion
to be afterwards drawn aside
from purity and simplicity. And the more mercy God has shown
in bringing any
to know the gospel
and the liberties and privileges of it
the greater their
sin and folly in suffering themselves to be deprived of them. Hence all who are
members of the outward church should learn to fear and to suspect themselves.
We must not be content because we have some good things in ourselves. Paul
fears lest his labour is in vain
yet he still labours; and thus to do
whatever follows
is true wisdom and the fear of God. This every man must
remember in his place and calling.
Commentary on Galatians 4:12-18
(Read Galatians 4:12-18)
The apostle desires that they would be of one mind with
him respecting the law of Moses
as well as united with him in love. In
reproving others
we should take care to convince them that our reproofs are
from sincere regard to the honour of God and religion and their welfare. The
apostle reminds the Galatians of the difficulty under which he laboured when he
first came among them. But he notices
that he was a welcome messenger to them.
Yet how very uncertain are the favour and respect of men! Let us labour to be
accepted of God. You once thought yourselves happy in receiving the gospel;
have you now reason to think otherwise? Christians must not forbear speaking
the truth
for fear of offending others. The false teachers who drew the
Galatians from the truth of the gospel were designing men. They pretended
affection
but they were not sincere and upright. An excellent rule is given.
It is good to be zealous always in a good thing; not for a time only
or now
and then
but always. Happy would it be for the church of Christ
if this zeal
was better maintained.
Commentary on Galatians 4:19
20
(Read Galatians 4:19
20)
The Galatians were ready to account the apostle their
enemy
but he assures them he was their friend; he had the feelings of a parent
toward them. He was in doubt as to their state
and was anxious to know the
result of their present delusions. Nothing is so sure a proof that a sinner has
passed into a state of justification
as Christ being formed in him by the
renewal of the Holy Spirit; but this cannot be hoped for
while men depend on
the law for acceptance with God.
Commentary on Galatians 4:21-27
(Read Galatians 4:21-27)
The difference between believers who rested in Christ
only
and those who trusted in the law
is explained by the histories of Isaac
and Ishmael. These things are an allegory
wherein
beside the literal and
historical sense of the words
the Spirit of God points out something further.
Hagar and Sarah were apt emblems of the two different dispensations of the
covenant. The heavenly Jerusalem
the true church from above
represented by
Sarah
is in a state of freedom
and is the mother of all believers
who are
born of the Holy Spirit. They were by regeneration and true faith
made a part
of the true seed of Abraham
according to the promise made to him.
Commentary on Galatians 4:28-31
(Read Galatians 4:28-31)
The history thus explained is applied. So then
brethren
we are not children of the bond-woman
but of the free. If the privileges of
all believers were so great
according to the new covenant
how absurd for the
Gentile converts to be under that law
which could not deliver the unbelieving
Jews from bondage or condemnation! We should not have found out this allegory
in the history of Sarah and Hagar
if it had not been shown to us
yet we
cannot doubt it was intended by the Holy Spirit. It is an explanation of the
subject
not an argument in proof of it. The two covenants of works and grace
and legal and evangelical professors
are shadowed forth. Works and fruits
brought forth in a man's own strength
are legal. But if arising from faith in
Christ
they are evangelical. The first covenant spirit is of bondage unto sin
and death. The second covenant spirit is of liberty and freedom; not liberty to
sin
but in and unto duty. The first is a spirit of persecution; the second is
a spirit of love. Let those professors look to it
who have a violent
harsh
imposing spirit
towards the people of God. Yet as Abraham turned aside to
Hagar
so it is possible a believer may turn aside in some things to the
covenant of works
when through unbelief and neglect of the promise he acts
according to the law
in his own strength; or in a way of violence
not of
love
towards the brethren. Yet it is not his way
not his spirit to do so;
hence he is never at rest
till he returns to his dependence on Christ again.
Let us rest our souls on the Scriptures
and by a gospel hope and cheerful
obedience
show that our conversation and treasure are indeed in heaven.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Galatians》
Galatians 4
Verse 1
[1] Now
I say
That the heir
as long as he is a child
differeth nothing from a
servant
though he be lord of all;
Now — To
illustrate by a plain similitude the preeminence of the Christian
over the
legal
dispensation.
The heir
as long as he is a child — As he is under age.
Differeth nothing from a servant — Not being at liberty either to use or enjoy his estate.
Though he be lord —
Proprietor of it all.
Verse 2
[2] But is under tutors and governors until the time appointed of the father.
But is under tutors — As
to his person.
And stewards — As
to his substance.
Verse 3
[3] Even
so we
when we were children
were in bondage under the elements of the world:
So we —
The church of God.
When we were children — In our minority
under the legal dispensation.
Were in bondage — In
a kind of servile state.
Under the elements of the world — Under the typical observances of the law
which were like the first
elements of grammar
the A B C of children; and were of so gross a nature
as
hardly to carry our thoughts beyond this world.
Verse 4
[4] But
when the fulness of the time was come
God sent forth his Son
made of a woman
made under the law
But when the fulness of the time — Appointed by the Father
Galatians 4:2.
Was come
God sent forth — From his own bosom. His Son
miraculously made of the substance of a
woman - A virgin
without the concurrence of a man.
Made under the law —
Both under the precept
and under the curse
of it.
Verse 5
[5] To redeem them that were under the law
that we might receive the adoption
of sons.
To redeem those under the law — From the curse of it
and from that low
servile state.
That we —
Jews who believe.
Might receive the adoption — All the privileges of adult sons.
Verse 6
[6] And
because ye are sons
God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your
hearts
crying
Abba
Father.
And because ye —
Gentiles who believe
are also thus made his adult sons
God hath sent forth
the Spirit of his Son into your hearts likewise
crying
Abba
Father -
Enabling you to call upon God both with the confidence
and the tempers
of
dutiful children. The Hebrew and Greek word are joined together
to express the
joint cry of the Jews and gentiles.
Verse 7
[7]
Wherefore thou art no more a servant
but a son; and if a son
then an heir of
God through Christ.
Wherefore thou —
Who believest in Christ.
Art no more a servant — Like those who are under the law.
But a son — Of
mature age. And if a son
then an heir of all the promises
and of the
all-sufficient God himself.
Verse 8
[8]
Howbeit then
when ye knew not God
ye did service unto them which by nature
are no gods.
Indeed then when ye knew not God
ye served
them that by nature — That is
in reality.
Are no gods —
And so were under a far worse bondage than even that of the Jews. For they did
serve the true God
though in a low
slavish manner.
Verse 9
[9] But
now
after that ye have known God
or rather are known of God
how turn ye
again to the weak and beggarly elements
whereunto ye desire again to be in
bondage?
But now being known of God — As his beloved children.
How turn ye back to the weak and poor
elements — Weak
utterly unable to purge your
conscience from guilt
or to give that filial confidence in God.
Poor —
incapable of enriching the soul with such holiness and happiness as ye are
heirs to.
Ye desire to be again in bondage — Though of another kind; now to these elements
as before to those idols.
Verse 10
[10] Ye
observe days
and months
and times
and years.
Ye observe days —
Jewish sabbaths.
And months —
New moons.
And times — As
that of the passover
pentecost
and the feast of tabernacles.
And years —
Annual solemnities. it does not mean sabbatic years. These were not to be
observed out of the land of Canaan.
Verse 11
[11] I am
afraid of you
lest I have bestowed upon you labour in vain.
The apostle here
dropping the argument
applies to the affections
Galatians 4:11-20
and humbles himself to the
Galatians
with an inexpressible tenderness.
Verse 12
[12]
Brethren
I beseech you
be as I am; for I am as ye are: ye have not injured me
at all.
Brethren
I beseech you
be as I am — Meet me in mutual love.
For I am as ye were — I
still love you as affectionately as ye once loved me. Why should I not? Ye have
not injured me at all - I have received no personal injury from you.
Verse 13
[13] Ye
know how through infirmity of the flesh I preached the gospel unto you at the
first.
I preached to you
notwithstanding infirmity
of the flesh — That is
notwithstanding bodily weakness
and under great disadvantage from the despicableness of my outward appearance.
Verse 14
[14] And
my temptation which was in my flesh ye despised not
nor rejected; but received
me as an angel of God
even as Christ Jesus.
And ye did not slight my temptation — That is
ye did not slight or disdain me for my temptation
my
"thorn in the flesh."
Verse 15
[15]
Where is then the blessedness ye spake of? for I bear you record
that
if it
had been possible
ye would have plucked out your own eyes
and have given them
to me.
What was then the blessedness ye spake of — On which ye so congratulated one another.
Verse 17
[17] They
zealously affect you
but not well; yea
they would exclude you
that ye might
affect them.
They —
The judaizing teachers who are come among you.
Zealously affect you — Express an extraordinary regard for you.
But not well —
Their zeal is not according to knowledge; neither have they a single eye to
your spiritual advantage.
Yea
they would exclude you — From me and from the blessings of the gospel.
That ye might affect — Love and esteem them.
Verse 18
[18] But
it is good to be zealously affected always in a good thing
and not only when I
am present with you.
In a good thing — In
what is really worthy our zeal. True zeal is only fervent love.
Verse 19
[19] My
little children
of whom I travail in birth again until Christ be formed in
you
My little children — He
speaks as a parent
both with authority
and the most tender sympathy
toward
weak and sickly children.
Of whom I travail in birth again — As I did before
Galatians 4:13
in vehement pain
sorrow
desire
prayer.
Till Christ be formed in you — Till there be in you all the mind that was in him.
Verse 20
[20] I
desire to be present with you now
and to change my voice; for I stand in doubt
of you.
I could wish to be present with you now — Particularly in this exigence.
And to change —
Variously to attemper.
My voice — He
writes with much softness; but he would speak with more. The voice may more
easily be varied according to the occasion than a letter can.
For I stand in doubt of you — So that I am at a loss how to speak at this distance.
Verse 21
[21] Tell
me
ye that desire to be under the law
do ye not hear the law?
Do ye not hear the law — Regard what it says.
Verse 22
[22] For
it is written
that Abraham had two sons
the one by a bondmaid
the other by a
freewoman.
Verse 23
[23] But
he who was of the bondwoman was born after the flesh; but he of the freewoman
was by promise.
Was born after the flesh — In a natural way.
By promise —
Through that supernatural strength which was given Abraham in consequence of
the promise.
Verse 24
[24]
Which things are an allegory: for these are the two covenants; the one from the
mount Sinai
which gendereth to bondage
which is Agar.
Which things are an allegory — An allegory is a figurative speech
wherein one thing is expressed
and
another intended. For those two sons are types of the two covenants. One
covenant is that given from mount Sinai
which beareth children to bondage -
That is
all who are under this
the Jewish covenant
are in bondage. Which
covenant is typified by Agar.
Verse 25
[25] For
this Agar is mount Sinai in Arabia
and answereth to Jerusalem which now is
and is in bondage with her children.
For this is mount Sinai in Arabia — That is
the type of mount Sinai. And answereth to - Resembles Jerusalem
that now is
and is in bondage - Like Agar
both to the law and to the Romans.
Verse 26
[26] But
Jerusalem which is above is free
which is the mother of us all.
But the other covenant is derived from
Jerusalem that is above
which is free - Like Sarah from all inward and outward
bondage
and is the mother of us all - That is
all who believe in Christ
are
free citizens of the New Jerusalem.
Verse 27
[27] For
it is written
Rejoice
thou barren that bearest not; break forth and cry
thou
that travailest not: for the desolate hath many more children than she which
hath an husband.
For it is written —
Those words in the primary sense promise a flourishing state to Judea
after
its desolation by the Chaldeans.
Rejoice. thou barren
that bearest not — Ye heathen nations
who
like a barren woman
were destitute
for many
ages
of a seed to serve the Lord. Break forth and cry aloud for joy
thou
that
in former time
travailedst not: for the desolate hath many more children
than she that hath an husband - For ye that were so long utterly desolate shall
at length bear more children than the Jewish church
which was of old espoused
to God. Isaiah 54:1.
Verse 28
[28] Now
we
brethren
as Isaac was
are the children of promise.
Now we —
Who believe
whether Jews or Gentiles.
Are children of the promise — Not born in a natural way
but by the supernatural power of God. And as
such we are heirs of the promise made to believing Abraham.
Verse 29
[29] But
as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the
Spirit
even so it is now.
But as then
he that was born after the flesh
persecuted him that was born after the Spirit
so it is now also — And so it will be in all ages and nations to the end of the world.
Verse 30
[30]
Nevertheless what saith the scripture? Cast out the bondwoman and her son: for
the son of the bondwoman shall not be heir with the son of the freewoman.
But what saith the scripture — Showing the consequence of this.
Cast out the bondwoman and her son — Who mocked Isaac. In like manner will God cast out all who seek to be
justified by the law; especially if they persecute them who are his children by
faith. Genesis 21:10.
Verse 31
[31] So
then
brethren
we are not children of the bondwoman
but of the free.
So then — To
sum up all.
We — Who believe.
Are not children of the bondwoman — Have nothing to do with the servile Mosaic dispensation.
But of the free —
Being free from the curse and the bond of that law
and from the power of sin
and Satan.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Galatians》
Chapter 4. Two Covenants
Born in the
Ordinary Way
Born as the Result of a Promise
I. From a Child
to a Son
II. The
Galatians Turn Back
III.
Representation of the Two Women
── Chih-Hsin Chang《An Outline of The New Testament》
Chapter Four General Review
OBJECTIVES IN STUDYING THIS CHAPTER
1) To appreciate the significance and blessedness of receiving the
Spirit in our hearts (cf. Jn 7:37-39; Ac 2:38; 5:32; Ro 5:5;
8:11-17; 15:13; 2 Co 1:22; 5:5; Ep 1:13-14; 3:16; 4:30)
2) To understand Paul's concern over the Galatians' observance of holy
days (cf. Co 2:16-17; Ga 5:4)
3) To comprehend the implications of the allegory of Hagar and Sarah
SUMMARY
In this chapter Paul continues and concludes his defense of the gospel
of justification by faith in Christ
in contrast to seeking
justification by the works of the Law. The previous chapter ended with
Paul making a practical argument
how that by faith they had become the
sons of God
the true seed of Abraham and heirs of the promise
when
they put on Christ in baptism.
The practical argument continues in the first part of chapter four as
Paul describes the condition of those under the Law prior to the coming
of Christ. They were "children"
and really no different than slaves.
But when Christ came
He redeemed those under the Law and made it
possible for them to receive the adoption as "sons". A special
blessing of this sonship was receiving the Spirit in their hearts
and
now they are no longer as a slave but as a son and a heir of God
through Christ (1-7).
Paul then argues along sentimental lines. After having come to know
the true God and being recognized by Him
their observance of holy days
is indicative of a desire to return to bondage. That greatly concerns
Paul
who would have them become like him. He reminds them of their
reception of him in the past
and he hopes that by telling them the
truth he has not become their enemy. Wishing he could be with them in
person and use a different tone
he feels like a woman going through
labor again as he seeks to ensure that Christ is formed in them. All
of this because he has doubts about them (8-20).
His final argument is an appeal to the Law itself
addressed directly
to those who desire to be under it. He reminds them of Abraham's two
sons by Sarah and Hagar
and contends there are allegorical
implications concerning the two covenants. Hagar
the bondwoman who
gave birth to Ishmael
represents the covenant given at Mt. Sinai
and
corresponds to physical Jerusalem and the bondage of those under the
Law. Sarah
Abraham's wife who gave birth to Isaac
represents the new
covenant and corresponds to the heavenly Jerusalem which offers freedom
to all who accept it. With a reminder that those born of the Spirit
can expect persecution by those born according to the flesh
Paul
concludes his defense of the gospel of justification by faith in Christ
by proclaiming that those in Christ are of not of the bondwoman but of
the free (21-31).
OUTLINE
I. JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH: THE PRACTICAL ARGUMENT cont. (1-7)
A. THEY HAD BEEN AS CHILDREN
NO DIFFERENT THAN SLAVES (1-3)
1. The illustration of an heir (1-2)
a. While a child
is no different than a slave
even though a
"master" (1)
b. Under guardians and stewards until the time appointed by
the father (2)
2. In like manner
they had been as children
in bondage to the
elements of the world (3)
B. THEY'VE RECEIVED ADOPTION AS SONS
NO LONGER AS SLAVES (4-7)
1. At the right time
God sent His Son
born of woman
born under
the Law (4)
a. To redeem those under the Law (5a )
b. That they might receive the adoptions as sons (5b)
2. Because they are now "sons" (and not just "children")...
a. God sent the Spirit into their hearts
crying out "Abba
Father!" (6)
b. No longer are they as "slaves"
but as "sons"
thus heirs
of God through Christ (7)
II. JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH: THE SENTIMENTAL ARGUMENT (8-20)
A. PAUL'S FEAR OVER THEIR CONDITION (8-11)
1. They had come to know God
and to be known by God (8-9a )
2. But they seem to desire to be in bondage again
returning to
weak and beggarly elements (9b)
3. Their observance of holy days gives Paul fear that his labor
was in vain (10-11)
B. THEIR PAST AND PRESENT RELATIONS WITH HIM (12-20)
1. A plea for them to be as he is (12)
2. A reminder of their past relations with him (13-15)
a. They had not allowed his physical infirmities to hinder
their reception of him and his gospel (13-14)
b. They were even willing to pluck out their own eyes for him
(15)
3. Has he become their enemy because he tells them the truth?
(16)
4. They are being zealously courted by others
but zeal is good
only when for the right cause (17-18)
5. He labors over them again
that Christ might be formed in
them
wishing he could change his tone
but he has doubts
about them (19-20)
III. JUSTIFICATION BY FAITH: THE ALLEGORICAL ARGUMENT (21-31)
A. AN ALLEGORY FOR THOSE WHO DESIRE TO BE UNDER THE LAW (21-24a )
1. For those who wish to be under the law
will you hear what the
law says? (21)
2. For we read Abraham had two sons (22-23)
a. One of a bondwoman (Hagar)
born according to the flesh
(Ishmael)
b. The other of a freewoman (Sarah)
born through promise
(Isaac)
3. These things are symbolic (24a )
B. THE TWO COVENANTS (24b-31)
1. The two women represent two covenants (24b-26)
a. Hagar represents the covenant from Mount Sinai (the Law)
physical Jerusalem
and the bondage shared with her
children
b. Sarah represents a new covenant from Jerusalem above
(spiritual Jerusalem )
which offers freedom to all
2. As prophesied
the barren woman (Sarah) would have more
children (27)
3. Those under the new covenant are like Isaac
children of
promise (28)
4. Those born of the Spirit can expect animosity from those born
of the flesh (29)
5. But the Scripture says that the children of the free woman
(Sarah
the Jerusalem above) will be the heir (30)
6. We are not children of the bondwoman but of the free (31)
REVIEW QUESTIONS FOR THE CHAPTER
1) What are the main points of this chapter?
- Justification by faith: The practical argument
continued (1-7)
- Justification by faith: The sentimental argument (8-20)
- Justification by faith: The allegorical argument (21-31)
2) What is the condition of a child even though an heir? (1-2)
- No different from a slave
- Under guardians and stewards until the time appointed by the
father
3) What was the condition of those under the Law? (3)
- As children
in bondage under the elements of the world
4) When did God send His Son? Why? (4-5)
- When the fullness of time had come
- To redeem those under the Law
that they might receive the
adoption as "sons"
5) As sons of God what do we receive? What is our condition? (6-7)
- The Spirit of His Son into our hearts
crying "Abba
Father!"
- No longer a slave
but a "son" and an "heir" of God through Christ
6) What indication was there that the Galatians sought to be in bondage
again? (8-10)
- Their observance of days
months
seasons
and years
7) What did Paul fear? (11)
- That his labor with them had been in vain
8) How had the Galatians received Paul when he first preached the
gospel to them? (14)
- As an angel of God
even as Christ Jesus Himself
9) What were they apparently willing to do when Paul was with them?
(15)
- They would have plucked out their own eyes and given them to Paul
10) What concern did Paul have in telling them the truth? (16)
- Had he become their enemy?
11) Why did Paul wish he could be with them and change his tone? (20)
- He had doubts about them
12) For those who desired to be under the Law
what story from the Law
does Paul relate? (21-23)
- That of Hagar and Sarah
and their sons
13) What do the two women represent? (24-26)
- Two covenants
- Hagar represents the covenant given at Mt. Sinai which gives birth
to bondage
and relates to physical Jerusalem
- Sarah represents the covenant in Christ
corresponding to the
Jerusalem above which gives freedom to all
14) How are Christians like Isaac? (28 31)
- We are children of promise
- We are children of the freewoman
not of the bondwoman who
represents the Law
--《Executable
Outlines》