God’s Family – Galatians 4:1-7 Commenatry

Faith in Christ means we are adopted into God’s family

Paul continues Chapter 4, explaining that  faith in Christ makes us God’s heirs or children with a an inheritance., but Jewish law is a form of bondage.

4:1 My point is this: heirs, as long as they are minors, are no better than slaves, though they are the owners of all the property.NRSV To further illustrate the spiritual immaturity of those who insist on remaining under the law, Paul used an example from Roman law and custom. In ancient times, the “coming of age” of a son carried tremendous significance. This did not occur at a specific age (such as twelve or thirteen), as it did among Jews and Greeks; rather, the “coming of age” was determined by the father. In Rome this event was usually marked on March 17 by a family celebration known as the Liberalia. During this event, the father formally acknowledged his son and heir. The son received a new “grown-up” toga and entered into adult responsibilities.

Paul pointed out, however, that while this son and heir was still a minor (not yet of age), he really was no better off than a slave, for he had no rights and little freedom. Although he was the future owner of an estate and a fortune, while he was young, he had no claim to it nor any right to make decisions regarding it. In the eyes of the Roman law, the young heir was no different from a slave. We cannot come to Christ to be justified until we have first been to Moses to be condemned. But once we have gone to Moses, and acknowledged our sin, guilt and condemnation, we must not stay there. We must let Moses send us to Christ.

John Stott

 

Paul’s application of the illustration reveals that when we were under the law, we were no better off than slaves. Though the law regards the child as the kurios (master, owner) of the estate, his experience resembles that of the servants. He lives under rules and discipline until he has achieved adulthood.

4:2 But they remain under guardians and trustees until the date set by the father.NRSV In this analogy Paul focused on the legal rights and status of the son, so he used the words epitropous (guardians, those who watch over the child) and oikonomous (trustees, those who watch over the inheritance), instead of pedagogue, as in 3:24. But Paul’s meaning was the same. The law performed its function of “keeping us out of trouble” and disciplining us during our “immaturity” until God offered us “maturity” through our acceptance of salvation by grace. Paul’s words imply that the time of this “coming of age” differed for every son. In Rome, the father set the time for his son’s coming of age and adulthood. So, too, God set the time for terminating our guardianship under the law and making us his children and heirs by faith. The date is the time of Christ’s coming into the world.

Faith, then, initiates the believer into maturity and full rights. Paul was dumbfounded that the Galatians would choose to revert to the state of discipline when Christ had given them freedom. They were behaving like a child who had inherited an estate but still insisted on remaining in a dependent, servile role.

 LIFE APPLICATION – SLAVERY
Religious slavery (trying to please God by legalism or works) is particularly devastating to people because it offers false hope. Thinking they will gain freedom, they instead get trapped in a cycle of effort and failure leading to more effort and failure.
Opportunities to return to religious slavery occur almost every day. When we have fallen short of our expectations, we are tempted to try harder and be more disciplined. But when we fail in the Christian life, we should apply grace, not renewed effort, as the primary means for becoming right again.

4:3 So also, when we were children, we were in slavery under the basic principles of the world.NIV Paul alluded to slavery in order to show that before Christ came and died for sins, people were in bondage to whatever law or religion they chose to follow. Thinking they could be saved by their deeds, they became enslaved to trying—and failing—to follow even the basics. Applying the illustration directly to the Galatian believers, Paul pointed out that when they were immature spiritually (when they were nepioi—children, infants), they were like slaves (see 4:8).The basic principles of the world (stoikeia tou kosmou) has also been translated “elements of the world” (nkjv). This phrase has three main interpretations:

  1. Some have interpreted “basic principles” to refer directly to the law of Moses, for Paul’s focus in this letter has been on the law and the believers’ relationship to it. While this interpretation agrees with Paul’s view that the law taken by itself leads only to slavery, the meaning must be much broader. As in Romans 2:12-16, Paul pointed to the conscience as a general means for God to reveal his standards. The Galatian believers had come from heathen backgrounds and had not grown up under the Jewish law. Although they had not been in slavery, they were becoming enslaved by turning from grace to the law.
  2. Others have interpreted “basic principles” or “elements” to mean the four basic elements of Greek philosophy—earth, air, fire, and water. Later, these elements became associated with the gods and then with the stars and planets as well. Many pagan religions (and, at times, the Jewish people) worshiped stars and planets because of their supposed effect on human destiny. Thus, Paul may have lumped both pagan and Jewish religions under one banner by saying that when the people followed these “principles” or “elements” of the world, they were actually in slavery under Satan’s influence. This idea would parallel Paul’s claim regarding the real source of our struggles in the Christian life (see Ephesians 6:12). Yet this view is unlikely because of the context. Paul spoke about people who are under the law.
  3. A third interpretation explains “basic principles” or “elements” as the elementary stages of religious practice, whether under the law of the Jewish religion, or the rites and rituals in any heathen religion (see also 4:9 and Colossians 2:20). In other words, the statement referred to any religious experience prior to accepting Christ as Savior.

The third interpretation seems most plausible. Paul was pointing out that trying to reach God through any religion or any worldly plan brings failure. The “basics” of the world (whether religious or moral) suggest that a solution is needed, but do not offer that solution. In fact, these “basics” can be used by demonic powers to give slavery a strong “religious” flavor. Paul compared religious rituals to slavery because they force a standard that people can never achieve. But, with the proclamation of the gospel, grace in Christ replaced those worldly religious practices.

 LIFE APPLICATION – GROWN-UPS
The illustration of slavery demonstrates that the law, apart from Christ’s death for our sins, keeps us in bondage. It holds us accountable to a standard we can never hope to meet on our own. But, as Paul wrote in 3:26, through faith in Jesus Christ we who were once slaves become God’s very own children. Because of Christ, we no longer have any reason to fear our heavenly Father. We can approach him as his treasured children, not as cringing slaves. What is your relationship with the heavenly Father? Have you experienced the freedom he wants you to have?

4:4 But when the fullness of the time had come, God sent forth His Son, born of a woman, born under the law.NKJV Everyone was enslaved under the “basic principles of the world,” but . . . That little word offered hope to humanity. God’s intervention into human history changed the world.

When the fullness of the time had come, God sent Jesus to earth. Why did Jesus come when he did? The “why” may be unanswerable, except that God knew it was the right time, the “fullness.” Several factors present in the Roman Empire certainly aided the quick spread of the message of the gospel. The Greek civilization provided a language that had spread across much of the known world as the main language for all people. The Romans had brought peace throughout their empire and built a system of roads that made land travel quicker and safer than ever before. The Jews were expectant, eagerly awaiting their Messiah. Messianic fervor was at its height. Into this world came Jesus.

Ultimately, the term “fullness of time” refers more clearly to the time of Christ’s arrival rather than to a climate caused by other events that somehow made Jesus’ birth inevitable. Just as a Roman father would set the date for his son to reach maturity and attain freedom from his guardians (4:2), so God had set the date when he would send forth His Son to free people from the law, to become his children (see 4:5). Guided by a sovereign God, historical events worked in harmony to prepare for the predecided moment of Jesus’ arrival on earth. God chose the exact time (see also Psalm 102:13; Mark 1:15; and Ephesians 1:10).

 LIFE APPLICATION  – TIMING IS EVERYTHING
For centuries the Jews had been wondering when their Messiah would come—but God’s timing was perfect. We may sometimes wonder if God will ever respond to our prayers, but we must never doubt him or give up hope. At the right time he will respond. Are you waiting for God’s timing? Trust his judgment, and trust that he has your best interests in mind.

The reference to Jesus as “sent” indicates his preexistence as well as his endorsement by God in the overall plan of salvation. The sending also clarifies the relationship between God the Father and God the Son. The former lovingly sends, while the latter obediently goes. This act of divine sending is mentioned forty-one times in the Gospel of John (for example, see John 3:16-17; 17:18; see also Romans 8:3-4 and 1 John 4:9-10). At the conclusion of that mission, Jesus prefaced his own “sending” of us into the world by claiming, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go . . .” (Matthew 28:18-19 niv). Jesus successfully submitted to his Father’s authority. Therefore, God gave him authority over us, both to rescue us and to send us out into the world.

Jesus was born of a woman—he was God yet also human (Genesis 3:15; Luke 1:26-38; John 1:1, 14). Paul balanced his amazing claims about Jesus’ divine nature with his reminder of Jesus’ human character. Born under the law, Jesus was a human; thus he was voluntarily subject to the structured universe that he had created (John 1:3-5) and that had been marred by human rebellion. More significantly, Jesus lived as a Jew, subject to God’s revealed law. In keeping with this, Jesus was both circumcised and presented at the temple (Luke 2:21-32). Yet while no other human being has been able to perfectly fulfill God’s law, Jesus kept it completely (Matthew 5:17; Hebrews 4:15). Thus, Jesus could be the perfect sacrifice because, although fully human, he never sinned. His death bought freedom for us who were enslaved to sin, offering us redemption and adoption into God’s family.

4:5 To redeem those under the law, that we might receive the full rights of sons.NIV Jesus was himself born “under the law” (4:4) so that by his living and dying he could accomplish two purposes: (1) to redeem those under the law and (2) to allow those “redeemed” people to receive the full rights of sons.

To “redeem” means “to buy back” (see 3:13). “Redemption” was the price paid to gain freedom for a slave (Leviticus 25:47-54). Through his life, Jesus demonstrated his unique eligibility to be our Redeemer. Through his death, Jesus paid the price to release us from slavery to sin. When Christ redeemed “those under the law,” he did not redeem the Jews alone. His death set people free from bondage to any law or religious system (see 4:3)—offering, instead, salvation by faith alone. But because the law was God’s clearest revelation of his justice, being born under the law and keeping it perfectly proved that Jesus was the perfect sacrifice. He took upon himself the curse the law required in order to set believers free of that curse.

In these verses, Paul continued to respond to the foolishness of the Galatians. If Christ had fulfilled the law, taking upon himself the curse of the law, and had freed people from the law, why would the Galatians try to keep requirements already fulfilled by Christ? The question appears again plainly in 4:9. Meanwhile, Paul was building a case that would make the question entirely rhetorical.

 LIFE APPLICATION – FULL RIGHTS AND PRIVILEGES
The scope and value of our “sonship rights” in Christ accumulate almost beyond our comprehension. These rights, given to us freely through faith in Christ, include:
We are no longer debtors, nor cursed (3:13).
 We have received “new life” (2:20).
 We are part of a new family (4:5).
 We have received the Spirit (4:6; 5:25).
 We have experienced a supernatural birth (John 1:12-13; Galatians 4:28-29).
 We have the promise of future resurrection of our bodies (Romans 8:23).
 We have the promise of a place in the future (John 14:2).
 We will be with Christ in eternity (John 14:3).
 We enjoy the same special relationship with God previously limited to Israel (Romans 9:4; Galatians 3:28).
We receive inestimable riches predestined for us by God through Jesus Christ (Ephesians 1:5).
Do you know your rights? In your relationship with God through Jesus Christ, they are yours to claim.

Redemption had an ongoing purpose—”that we might receive the full rights of sons.” Until Christ redeemed us (that is, paid the ultimate price by taking the penalty for our sins), we could never have been acceptable to God. In our sinful state, God could have nothing to do with us. Even our good works or religious rituals could bring us no closer to a relationship with him. But when Christ “bought us back,” he gave us freedom from the slavery we faced before and brought us into a new relationship with God the Father. Our new position in Christ goes beyond mere acceptance by God. So close is that relationship that Paul called it huiothesian (sonship) or “adoption as children” (nrsv) or “full rights of sons.” In Roman culture, a wealthy, childless man could take a slave youth and make that slave his child and heir. The adopted person was no longer a slave. He became a full heir to his new family, guaranteed all legal rights to his father’s property. He was not a second-class son; he was equal to all other sons, biological or adopted, in his father’s family. That person’s origin or past was no longer a factor in his legal standing. Likewise, when a person becomes a Christian, he or she leaves the slavery of trying to please God through works and gains all the privileges and responsibilities of a child in God’s family.

4:6 Because you are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, the Spirit who calls out, “Abba, Father.”NIV This verse and the next are central in the apostle’s entire argument. Focusing again on the Galatians, Paul added you are sons, that is, God’s children, part of God’s family. Paul almost seems to say, “Because you’re God’s kids, start acting that way!” Despite their doubts and confusion at that time, God still regarded the Galatian believers as his children. How did Paul know this? How could the Galatian believers claim this?

Because God sent the Spirit of his Son into their hearts. As God had sent the Son, so he had sent the Spirit (Paul used the same Greek word for “sent,” exapesteilen, in 4:4). God sent his Son to bring redemption (4:45); God sent his Spirit to mark us with his seal as “the pledge of our inheritance toward redemption as God’s own people” (Ephesians 1:14 nrsv). The Spirit cannot be earned or obtained, as if he were the result or reward of some system of works or discipline. Instead, God sends the Holy Spirit as a gift. It is through the Spirit that Christ can live in believers’ hearts: There is often a sense of failure among professing Christians that is sadly out of keeping with their rightful position in Christ. Do not be overanxious. Live in your Father’s house in constant freedom of heart. Remember that you are under the same roof as Christ, and are therefore allowed to avail yourself of all his grace and help. Refuse no task, however irksome, that God sets before you; and do not worry about irksome rules or petty vexations.

F. B. Meyer

 

  • But you are not in the flesh; you are in the Spirit, since the Spirit of God dwells in you. Anyone who does not have the Spirit of Christ does not belong to him. But if Christ is in you, though the body is dead because of sin, the Spirit is alive because of righteousness. If the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead dwells in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will give life to your mortal bodies also through his Spirit that dwells in you. (Romans 8:9-11 nrsv)

Having the Spirit of Christ means that we belong to Christ. Faith in Christ includes the reception of the Holy Spirit as part of the same transaction between us and God (see Ephesians 1:13-14). We do not experience Christ’s redemption apart from receiving his Spirit. “The Spirit of his Son” is a unique expression for Paul. It appears only in Galatians and shows Christ’s full deity and the total interaction of the Trinity.

 LIFE APPLICATION – WE HAVE THE SPIRIT
When Jesus described the Holy Spirit to his disciples during the Last Supper (John 13-17), he used the term parakletos (comforter, counselor, encourager). The actual ministry of the Spirit outlined in John 15:26-16:15 also shows his work as a “discomforter”—convicting the world of sin. But in Galatians we see the Spirit in his strengthening, helping, indwelling role.
He confirms our identity (4:6).
 He comes into our hearts, bringing the character of Christ (4:6).
 He assists in the control of our human nature (5:16).
 His presence creates certain by-products: steadfastness, intimacy with God, unity, and those character traits called the fruit of the Spirit (5:22-23).

A person cannot have a personal relationship with laws or rituals. But believers have an intimate relationship with God. *Abba is an Aramaic word for “father.” It was a very familiar, endearing term used by a child when addressing his or her father at home, perhaps like the English “Daddy.” Christ used this word in his prayer in Mark 14:36. Paul may have added pater (Father) simply as a translation of the word Abba, but he may have also been pointing to deeper issues than simply the freedom to be familiar with God. Before, when we were enslaved to the “principles” (4:3), we had no access to God. But now, as God’s adopted children, we can approach him with love and trust. Notice that it is the Holy Spirit, not we, who calls out Abba, Father. The Spirit cries out to the Abba on our behalf (Romans 8:26-27), and we cry to the Abba with the Spirit (Romans 8:15). Taken together, the  two terms convey the delightful fearlessness of a little child with the honor of a respectful son. He gives us the Spirit, not for us to display our spirituality, but so that we may witness to our adoption into his family. As God’s adopted children, we share with Jesus all rights to God’s resources. As God’s heirs, we can claim what he has provided for us—our full identity as his children.

How do the sending of the Spirit and adoption work together? Neither one occurs logically or chronologically prior to the other. God’s work of adopting us and sending his Spirit is an inter-woven relationship, reciprocally entwined.

 LIFE APPLICATION – THE FEAST
A young missionary couple with several children boarded an ocean liner, traveling economy fare on their way to a South American country. Finding their way to the dining room the first evening, the family was astonished at the sumptuous feast that was laid out on the serving tables. The family felt out of place; they were certain that there must be an “economy” dining room, or that perhaps they needed to look at a menu to decide if they would be able to eat at all. A discreet question to the purser produced a chuckle and an explanation. “You folks aren’t the first to be impressed by our cook. But everything you see here is for you. It’s all part of the ticket when you sail with us.”
How many Christians look for meager fare when God has already given us the best of everything?

The doctrine of the Trinity implicit in these verses must not be missed. Salvation is accomplished through the work of all persons of the Trinity. God the Father sent both God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. God the Son, by his death on the cross, allowed us to have the position as God’s children; God the Holy Spirit, by entering into believers’ hearts, gives us the assurance of that experience. The Galatians were being encouraged by the Judaizers to pursue what they in fact already had. No wonder Paul was astonished. It was as if the Galatians were believing door-to-door salesmen who were offering to sell them tiny shares of the inheritance they had already received!

4:7 So you are no longer a slave but a child, and if a child then also an heir, through God.NRSV To conclude his argument from this analogy, Paul explained briefly that each Galatian believer was no longer a slave to any law or religious ritual or even to Satan. Instead, each person had entered into God’s family, being adopted as a child. Belonging to God as his child also means being an heir, for God has promised the inheritance of eternal life and his riches and blessings to all his children. We need no further preparation. No system can fill in or stand in for Christ. Being a child and being an heir are inseparable realities in God’s family. Paul wrote to the Romans:

  • For you did not receive a spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but you have received a spirit of adoption. When we cry, “Abba! Father!” it is that very Spirit bearing witness with our spirit that we are children of God, and if children, then heirs, heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ (Romans 8:15-17 nrsv).

Note the change from the plural in 4:6 to the singular in this verse. The focus on each individual believer drives the point home. Not the Galatians only, but all believers, including you who read these words, can claim this incredible promise: You are no longer a slave but a child, and an heir of all God’s promises! For a Galatian to follow the Judaizers would be the same act as if a son and heir removed his birthright and returned to slavery.

The two words through God emphasize Paul’s source for his teaching and his assurances. The promises come through God and God alone. Paul’s teaching of these doctrines also came through God and God alone. Believers who trust in Christ’s sacrifice have the Holy Spirit and thus can have the same assurance. Our privileged position comes through God.

 LIFE APPLICATION – FREE!
When by faith we receive Christ, God gives us everything we need to be fully saved. We need no further act of repentance or submission to complete our salvation. Christ does all the work to redeem and cleanse us, and none of our work adds anything.
Some teach that sin has so polluted our nature that even the death of Christ cannot cleanse us. They imply that Christians must continually work to achieve a greater degree of righteousness and acceptability before God. But this is false. Because of our love for Christ and as a grateful response for his saving us, we serve him and battle the world, the flesh, and the devil—but none of these efforts contributes an ounce to our salvation. Salvation comes completely and utterly free!

Thank you Jesus!

 

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Source:  Bruce B. Barton et al., Life Application Bible Commentary – Galatians, (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1994), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, Under: “GALATIANS 3:1-4:7”.

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God’s Family – Galatians 3:26-29 Commentary

Our faith in Christ means we are adopted into God’s Family

At this point in the letter,  Paul shifted from using legal illustrations to an institution that God created that we are all familiar with:  Family.   It’s a universal message about what faith in Christ can do for relationships:  once we have gained a right relationship with God, our dealings with people will be entirely different. While maintaining that the law was useful, Paul pointed out what a severe taskmaster the law could be for those who failed to learn about grace received through faith.

3:23 Before this faith came, we were held prisoners by the law, locked up until faith should be revealed.NIV This faith refers to the faithfulness of Jesus Christ and to our response of faith in Jesus Christ. Clearly, Paul was not claiming that the capacity to believe had originated with the arrival of Christianity—people have managed to “believe” many things. They have also managed very often to be wrong in what they believed. Faith, as spoken of in the Scriptures, does not refer to some innate human power that, when used to its greatest capacity, gives us merit with God no matter what the actual content or object of that faith. The central point of the gospel is not belief, but who we believe and how we believe in him. Paul did not hesitate to display the vulnerability of Christianity in the claims about Jesus Christ. The system proves true or false in its foundational statement: “If Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins” (1 Corinthians 15:17 niv). Abraham was justified by his faith and, along with other Old Testament believers, had to trust in God’s grace without knowing much of God’s plan; but “this faith” was faith in what should be revealed—Jesus Christ.

We were held prisoners by the law means that the law held people in bondage. Not only was the whole world “a prisoner of sin” (3:22), but the law also held all people as prisoners. The phrase could also be interpreted to mean that the law guarded us, or held us in protective custody.

In a sense, the law kept us out of trouble, kept us away from the evil into which our natures might otherwise have led, until faith in Christ would be revealed. That faith then sets us free from the law but leads us into the desire to obey God wholeheartedly out of love for him. Man, blinded and bowed, sits in darkness and cannot see the light of heaven unless grace with justice comes to his aid.

Bonaventure

 

3:24 Therefore the law was our disciplinarian until Christ came, so that we might be justified by faith.NRSV The Greek word paidagogos is difficult to translate into English, but educational terms like pedagogue (tutor or basic instructor) and pedagogics (the science of teaching) have been derived from it. The niv renders the word as “put in charge,” and the nkjv says the law was a “tutor,” while the nrsv best translates it disciplinarian. In Greek culture, a “pedagogue” was a slave who had the important responsibility for the children in a family. A wealthy family might have one pedagogue for each child. This slave strictly disciplined the child, conducted the child to and from school, cared for the child, taught the child manners, and gave the child moral training. He reviewed “homework” but was not a teacher as such. Or to put it another way, the ancients understood better than we that a child needs far more direct instruction in life skills than merely learning educational content. The pedagogue’s role was temporary—he or she was responsible for the child until the child reached adult age (probably age sixteen).

The picture of the law serving as a “pedagogue” shows that the law was a temporary measure meant to “lead us to Christ” (niv). Paul summed up the role of the law in this verse with a single word, eis (“to,” or “until”). The word could be used in Greek to refer to both place and time. Thus, the phrase eis Christon forces a translation choice between stating that the “law instructed us until Christ” or that the “law guided us to Christ.” Paul may well have meant to include both nuances, although the context leans more strongly in the direction of the law’s temporal and supervisory (not educational) work. This leading was meant in the sense of the law watching over us until we could receive our “adulthood,” our full relationship with the Father, through Christ’s coming.

What was the ultimate purpose of the law? Paul repeated it in the last phrase, that we might be justified by faith. The law, through imprisonment and discipline, taught us (though negatively) that justification with God really is through faith alone. Paul did not hesitate to repeat crucial facts, and justification by faith was one of his constant themes. In fact, it represents in brief what he offered to the Galatians as the alternative to any other “gospel” or system that might appeal to them. The law had its usefulness in pointing out the wrong and providing constant reproof.

3:25 Now that faith has come, we are no longer under the supervision of the law.NIV The supervision of the law is like the supervision given by the pedagogue to the young child (3:24). Once the child came of age, he or she no longer needed the preparatory services of the pedagogue. After Christ arrived, offering salvation by faith alone, people no longer needed the supervision of the law. The law teaches the need for salvation; God’s grace offers us that salvation.

The Old Testament still applies today. In it God has revealed his nature, his will for humanity, his moral laws, and his guidelines for living. The law still serves as a demanding instructor to those who have not yet believed. But we cannot be saved by keeping that law; now that faith has come, we must trust in Christ. The word now is important. The law supervised us until Christ came; but Christ has come, so we can now respond to God through faith. We are no longer bound by legalism or guilt-ridden by perfectionism.

As Paul will immediately demonstrate, the arrival of faith was not a static experience. Living does not come to an end when we are no longer under the authority of the law. Faith comes first, then we lay aside the supervision of the law. Many would like to do away with the supervision of the law, but they also don’t want the requirements of faith. Now we must live by faith in Christ. Paul had already addressed this issue in 2:20-21.

Faith had its most basic work in our being “crucified with Christ,” but it immediately pursues its ongoing task: “The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God” (2:20 niv). This living by faith will be the theme of much of the remainder of this letter. We must take care lest, by exalting the merit of faith, without adding any distinction or explanation, we furnish people with a pretext for relaxing in the practice of good works.

Ignatius of Loyola

 

3:26 For in Christ Jesus you are all children of God through faith.NRSV The change to you shows Paul’s return to focusing on the Galatian believers. They did not need to be children under the care of the pedagogue (the law); instead, they are all children of God. They received this status in Christ Jesus and through faith. Those who are truly God’s children have been justified by faith in Christ and receive a new relationship with God—that of adopted children.

 LIFE APPLICATION – LAW BREAKING
One reason that we fail in our attempts to present the gospel to others is our hesitancy to bring the law to bear on their lives. We assume that their consciences will admit to sinfulness enough to lead them to acknowledge their need for a divine solution. So we end up debating with someone whose confidence rests on the hope that they are not nearly as bad as many other people whom they are willing to name. They may even claim that their understanding of God assures them that they are making a passing moral grade.
But going through the Ten Commandments, one at a time, asking them to measure their lives against God’s standard, may well create a new openness to the gospel. People are often not ready for freedom in Christ until they have a deeper awareness of their slavery to sin and judgment under God’s law.

The phrase “in Christ Jesus” strikes a dominant responsive chord for those who are trusting him as Savior and Lord. In this context, the phrase expresses the alternative to being

under the supervision of the law” (3:25 niv). Just as the use of a life instructor in the ancient Greek world assumed a distance between the slave and the child under his care, the alternate arrangement “in Christ Jesus” assumes a personal relationship. Paul made this clear by reminding the Galatians that their relationship with Christ means that they are “children of God.” Being “in Christ” is the essence of Christian proclamation and experience. One may discuss legalism, nomism, and even justification by faith, but without treating the “in Christ” motif we miss the heart of the Christian message.

Richard Longnecker

 

The actual expression “in Christ” appears eight times in Galatians. Paul used the expression in every one of his letters to churches. He found it just as easy to say, “Christ lives in me” (2:20). For some, the idea of being “in Christ” contradicts the idea of Christ being “in us.” But the terms describe a relationship like no other. They help us understand much without allowing us to claim that we understand everything. The picture of being “in Christ” establishes the reason or basis of our relationship with God. Christ’s righteousness, sacrifice, and faithfulness are all regarded by the Father to stand in our place. From the perspective of grace, when God views us who are “in Christ,” he sees Christ. The picture of Christ being “in us” identifies the actual experience of relationship. To the Colossians, Paul spoke of Christ being “in you” as the essence of the mystery of God revealed in the gospel—”Christ in you, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27 niv). Yet in the next verse he wrote of his goal to “present everyone perfect in Christ” (Colossians 1:28 niv). Or perhaps to put it another way, “in Christ” and Christ “in us” convey two aspects of our family relationship. Our membership in the family of God flows from being “in Christ,” just as our biological connection with our earthly family derives from having been literally “in” our father and mother. Our constantly changing experience of having Christ “in us” varies as much as the fellowship that flows from day to day among the various members of an earthly household.

What does it mean to be “children of God“? As he did in most of his letters, Paul was moving from the initial section of teaching passages to the application of what he had been developing. Here the first application is unmistakable: Our relationship with each other has its common principle in how we are related to God. We are children of the same family if we have the same heavenly Father. Paul wrote to the Romans, “Now if we are children, then we are heirs—heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, if indeed we share in his sufferings in order that we may also share in his glory” (Romans 8:17 niv). What a privilege! Because we are God’s children, we share in great treasures as co-heirs. From this point, Paul will first develop applications regarding how we should see ourselves and others. Later in the letter he will discuss how we should treat each other.

3:27 For all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.NIV The reference to baptism here does not mean that Paul was replacing the rite of circumcision with baptism. Baptism does not save anyone any more than circumcision would. If Paul was referring to water baptism, he was recognizing the fact that, in the early church, new converts usually were baptized (see Acts 2:41; 8:36-38; 9:18; 10:47-48; and 16:33 for some examples of new converts being baptized). Baptism demonstrated their faith—people “believed and were baptized”—not the other way around. It also demonstrated identification with the body of believers, the Christian church.

Paul may have been referring to the baptism of the Holy Spirit. When a person believes, the Holy Spirit comes to dwell within. Jesus promised this: “And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Counselor to be with you forever—the Spirit of truth. . . . He lives with you and will be in you” (John 14:16-17 niv). The Holy Spirit also supernaturally makes us a part of the body of Christ: “The body is a unit, though it is made up of many parts; and though all its parts are many, they form one body. So it is with Christ. For we were all baptized by one Spirit into one body—whether Jews or Greeks, slave or free—and we were all given the one Spirit to drink” (1 Corinthians 12:12-13 niv).

Most likely Paul referred to the theology behind water baptism expressed as an early form of liturgy. Paul restated for emphasis his claim to the Galatians that they were children of God. The purpose of baptism ultimately confirms the connection between us and Christ. We are “baptized into Christ.” Those who would use a text like this as proof that babies who have been baptized are somehow acceptable to God (unlike babies who are not baptized) must do so with caution. The context certainly implies an active, informed faith whose object is Jesus Christ. Our faith rests, not on any form of baptism, but in Christ.

 LIFE APPLICATION – NEW CLOTHES
In order to grasp the long-term effects of “putting on Christ,” we might be helped by seeing the robe he gives us as a full-size, adult set of clothing. It is a seamless robe of characteristics, attitudes, and intentions modeled by Jesus himself. At first, because we are no more than spiritual children, the clothing doesn’t fit. The more we grow, the better we fit into what Christ has already given us.
However, we carry out the disciplines of the spiritual life or train in holiness, not under the threat of failure or judgment, but under the loving guidance of God’s Spirit. We do not seek merit with God; rather, we desire to experience fully all that God has given to us in Christ. In what areas of spiritual life do you find your “clothing” still not fitting? What parts of God’s Word have you found that give you directions for growth in those areas?

The expression enedusasthe (put on, clothed yourselves) recalls a specific ancient rite of passage. In Roman society, a youth coming of age laid aside the robe of childhood and put on a new toga. This represented his move into adult citizenship with full rights and responsibilities. Likewise, being “in Christ” leads to our ongoing experience of clothing ourselves with Christ. Paul combined this cultural understanding with the concept of baptism. By becoming Christians and being baptized, the Galatian believers were becoming spiritually grown up and ready to take on the privileges and responsibilities of the more mature. Paul was saying that they had laid aside the old clothes of the law and had put on Christ—that is, Christ’s robe of righteousness (see 2 Corinthians 5:21; Ephesians 4:23-24). The person who did so became a “new” person, with a new lifestyle and new aspirations. Clothing ourselves with Christ is not passive; it is an action we must take. Have you put on the attitudes, characteristics, and intentions of Jesus Christ?

 LIFE APPLICATION – UNITY
Christians do not have permission to discriminate against other believers. The emphasis must always be, not on unity for unity’s sake, but on unity in Christ. Where Christ is not recognized as Lord, all unity will be superficial, if present at all. But remarkably divergent people who recognize in Jesus their common life will find deep unity and fellowship.
Those who seek unity as their only goal will find their objective elusive. Those who seek others who also name Jesus as Lord will find themselves yoked with any number of unusual characters. Unity flows out of being “in Christ,” not the other way around. Where do you tend to discriminate (culture, background, gender, racial issues)?

3:28 There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither slave nor free, there is neither male nor female; for you are all one in Christ Jesus.NKJV In the first part of this verse, discrimination and barriers are eliminated. In the second part, unity is established. If all believers have put on Christ, if all believers have professed faith and joined the body of Christ, then this unity sets aside all other superficial distinctions. While it is true that in the body of Christ, Jews, Greeks (meaning Gentiles), slaves, free people, men, and women do still have individual identities, Paul exalts their unity in Christ Jesus. All labels become secondary among those who share Jesus in common.

Some Jewish males would greet each new day by praying, “Lord, I thank you that I am not a Gentile, a slave, or a woman.” The prejudice toward all three categories was real and strong. As discussed throughout this letter to the Galatians, a Jew who believes in Christ is no different from a Gentile who believes. Unity in Christ transcends racial distinctions. Next is the barrier of social status. Slaves and free persons treat each other like brothers and sisters in the body of Christ. To take it even further, when it comes to faith and God’s promises, there really is no gender distinction. Both male and female alike are acceptable in the body of Christ. Women were not treated well in Paul’s day. Both the Gentile and the Jewish culture placed women in inferior positions—almost as property. The ancient Jewish historian Josephus pointed out that “woman is inferior to man in every way” (Against Apion 2.24). Christianity liberated women as God’s creations with worth and abilities that could be used for God’s kingdom. Just to announce that barriers have been removed does not mean that all prejudice has been overcome. This requires faith and being clothed with Christ. More than tolerance and superficial harmony, it requires a real change of heart and actions.

Christians have debated the application of this verse. Some would contend that the equality applies only to salvation. They interpret the verse to mean that we all have equal access in Christ to God’s grace without discrimination. They would limit the application of equality to salvation and not see it as a basis for social equality in the life of the church (such as allowing women to hold offices). Others see this verse to mean the stripping away of all barriers to God’s use of people to do his will based on their position in Christ. Thus, it does clear the way to full equality for all people. Paul seems to imply both. Our equal standing in Christ gives us equal access not only to salvation but to the full gifts of the Spirit and to all avenues of service.

The barriers broken down in this verse may not seem so radical to our day, but they were astounding in ancient Roman culture. This made Christianity unique and attractive—it valued each individual, yet it provided a unified body. All believers are one in Christ Jesus. All are equally valuable to God. Differences arise in gifts, in function, in abilities, but all are one in Christ (Ephesians 2:15).

 LIFE APPLICATION – COMMON GROUND
It’s natural to feel uncomfortable around people who are different from us and to gravitate toward those who are similar. But when we allow our differences to separate us from our fellow believers, we are disregarding clear biblical teaching. Make a point to seek out and appreciate people who are not just like you and your friends. You may find that you have a lot in common with them.

3:29 And if you are Christ’s, then you are Abraham’s seed, and heirs according to the promise.NKJV Besides becoming God’s children (3:26) and one in Christ (3:28), believers (those who are Christ’s) also become Abraham’s seed. Abraham was the prime element in Jewish thought about salvation. Jews believed that they were automatically God’s people because they were “Abraham’s seed.” Paul concluded that Abraham’s spiritual children are not the Jews, nor are they those who have been circumcised. Abraham’s children are those who respond to God in faith as Abraham had done. The only difference is that our response is to Christ as Savior. Because we have responded, we are heirs according to the promise.  Since they are “the body of Christ,” they are heirs to God’s eternal kingdom.

 LIFE APPLICATION – WHO ARE YOU?
Christians often fail to live up to the identity they have been given in Christ. They live passive, defeated lives, appearing in almost every respect to still be living with the curse of the law hanging over their heads. We may be heirs in Christ, but we appear to have missed the reading of the will.
God’s Word inspires us to confidence—not in our own ability to live the Christian life, but in God’s infinite ability to help us grow into Christ. If you believe in Christ, then you are in him and truly belong as a member of his family.

By responding to Christ in faith, we have followed in the ancient way of Abraham, one of the early ones justified by faith. He trusted God, and so do we. But to us has been added the opportunity to appreciate what price Christ paid to ensure our share in the promise.

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Source:  Bruce B. Barton et al., Life Application Bible Commentary – Galatians, (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1994), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, Under: “GALATIANS 3:1-4:7”.

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Living Faith – Galatians 2:11-21 Notes & Commentary

Orthopedics is a branch of medicine, according to Webster’s Dictionary, that is concerned with the correction or prevention of skeletal deformities and disorders.

Many have used orthopedic surgeons to replace knees or to work on shoulders, some have used orthopedic doctors to aid with feet problems.

You might find it odd that I would refer to Orthopedics, but it really is a good introduction to our passage in Galatians chapter two, especially 2:11-14.  Our passage today will teach us about Orthopedic Christianity.

Sounds odd, doesn’t it? Well, let me define it for you and then let me show it to you from the text. Orthopedic Christianity is concerned for the correction or prevention of Christians straying from the Lord. That is my own definition, but it seems to be a good one. I came up with this term by studying verses eleven through fourteen of Galatians chapter two. What takes place in these verses is orthopedic Christianity: one Christian correcting another in his walk with the Lord.

One of the evidences of Divine inspiration of the Scriptures is found in the honesty concerning the lives of the men and women recorded in the Bible. If the Bible was of human origin, then we probably wouldn’t see all the imperfections of so many people. We humans have a tendency to gloss over our faults.

Our passage of Scripture is one of those passages where we see the failing of a man of God; not just any man of God, but the apostle Peter.

I will admit to you that passages like this one in Galatians encourage me. It is not that I revile in one man’s failure, but that I realize that even the godliest of people have moments of failure.  Let’s look at the commentary on this passage.

2:11 When Peter came to Antioch, I opposed him to his face, because he was clearly in the wrong.NIV This Antioch was in Syria (as distinguished from Antioch in Pisidia). Antioch was a major trade center in the ancient world. Heavily populated by Greeks, it eventually became a strong Christian center. In Antioch the believers were first called Christians (Acts 11:26). Antioch in Syria became the headquarters for the Gentile church and was Paul’s base of operations.

When Peter made this trip to Antioch is uncertain; there is no reference to it in the book of Acts. It may have occurred soon after Paul, Barnabas, and Titus had returned to Antioch from Jerusalem after delivering the famine relief. Perhaps Peter wanted to see for himself the ministry taking place in Antioch. Paul’s narrative style does not require this event to be in chronological order with Paul’s visit to Jerusalem recorded in previous verses, but it is the most likely conclusion.

In any case, Paul opposed him to his face. Paul began his account with the climax of the event. In verses 1-10 Paul had illustrated his unity and cooperation with the other apostles. This one begins with a claim that he was even willing to challenge another apostle. Why he did so is recorded in following verses. Clearly, Paul had already had a great deal of practical experience in applying his theology when it came to dealings with the Gentiles. But Peter’s actions were clearly in the wrong (kategnosmenos en, “he was condemned”), and Paul, an apostle with the right to speak with authority, had to confront Peter. The event involved an emotional, face-to-face showdown. Peter was caught in a glaring inconsistency that might have gone tragically unresolved if not for Paul’s boldness. He always focused on the purity of the gospel truth; whenever it was threatened, Paul acted. The results were dramatic.

 LIFE APPLICATION – CONFRONTATION
All conflicts are not the same. Paul’s confrontation of Peter is not meant to be a model for every disagreement in the church. A layperson, questioning a point in the pastor’s sermon, probably should not “oppose him to his face” publicly! Conflicts may be similar in emotion and damage caused, but the issues vary greatly in their importance. Churches, families, and friendships can be shattered over trivial matters. Often a simple church decorating or furnishing idea has nearly led to a church split. Such conflicts occur all too often, to the shame of the gospel.
At times, confrontation must take place. The issues ought to be clear and compelling. We must seek to preserve the unity of the body of Christ and faithfulness to God’s Word. Whether the issue is a minor disagreement over taste or a major crisis regarding the truth, love must be communicated to all involved.

This instance may be another reason for Paul’s usage of seemingly disparaging remarks about the church leaders in 2:2, 6, and 9. Although the apostles were to be held in high authority, they were still humans, capable of mistakes, errors in judgment, even hypocrisy. No Christian leader should ever be above correction. No person, no matter what he achieves or how long he serves, should be exempt from rebuke and guidance. We need accountability as much today as it was needed in Paul’s day. Paul was not trying to lower their position; he was pointing out to the Judaizers that they were wrong to refuse anyone else (namely himself) the position of apostle. The story itself indicates that their teaching also was incorrect.

2:12 Before certain men came from James, he used to eat with the Gentiles.NIV When Peter arrived in Antioch, he saw that Jewish and Gentile Christians enjoyed fellowship at mealtimes without concern over Jewish dietary laws. His setting aside long-established taboos against Jews sharing board and room with Gentiles showed nothing less than his acceptance of freedom in Christ. Peter accepted these practices; he himself had received a vision from God (actually one vision and two instant replays) about food laws and Gentiles in the new world of the gospel. Indeed, Peter had been the first to receive the understanding about God’s acceptance of the Gentiles, and he was the first to preach to Gentiles. Acts 10 records Peter’s vision of a large sheet falling to the earth, filled with all kinds of animals, reptiles, and birds—many of them on the Jewish forbidden food list. “Then a voice told him, ‘Get up, Peter. Kill and eat.’ ‘Surely not, Lord!’ Peter replied. ‘I have never eaten anything impure or unclean.’ The voice spoke to him a second time, ‘Do not call anything impure that God has made clean'” (Acts 10:13-15 NIV).

Peter understood from this vision that he should not look upon the Gentiles as inferior people whom God would not redeem. After Peter had this vision, a Gentile Roman officer named Cornelius asked him to come and share the gospel message with him and his household. Peter did so, without the hesitation he would have felt before the vision, and Cornelius and his household became believers. The Holy Spirit came upon them, they were baptized, and “they asked Peter to stay with them for a few days” (Acts 10:48 niv). Peter knew firsthand about fellowship with Gentile believers. While he stayed with Cornelius and his family, Peter probably did not adhere to the strict Jewish dietary laws—it would have been difficult and may have insulted these new believers who were his gracious hosts.

Thus, when Peter arrived in Antioch, he already knew that God had broken down the barriers between Jews and Gentiles, and he understood the true meaning of Christian freedom. So he would gladly eat with the Gentiles. The imperfect tense of the verb indicates that this was not one occasion but a repeated pattern, meaning that Peter joined with the other Jews in eating with their Gentile brothers and sisters in Christ on a regular basis. This pattern undoubtedly went beyond sharing common meals and included taking the Lord’s Supper together.

But all that was before certain men came from James. These men were the legalists, members of “the circumcision group” (see below), and most likely not sent by James. The wording here means they came “from James’s group,” that is, from the Jerusalem church. James, as leader of the Jerusalem church, had a vast range of people to deal with, and these men were part of the legalistic group of his church (almost every modern-day church has its own group of these!).

Among the entourage from Jerusalem, there must have been “certain men” who frowned on fraternizing with Gentiles. These may have been rigid and legalistic Jewish Christians, but they were probably associated with the same “false brothers” that had disrupted Paul’s visit to Jerusalem. The fear of others lays a snare, but one who trusts in the Lord is secure.

King Solomon
(
Proverbs 29:25)

 

Though this group probably tried to trade on James’s authority, he later firmly denied sending them. In the letter sent back to the Gentile Christians in Antioch after the Jerusalem council, James wrote,

“We have heard that some went out from us without our authorization and disturbed you, troubling your minds by what they said” (Acts 15:24 niv). How difficult it is to avoid having a special standard for oneself!

C. S. Lewis

 

But when they arrived, he began to draw back and separate himself from the Gentiles because he was afraid of those who belonged to the circumcision group.NIV Apparently, the mere appearance of this group caught Peter by surprise. When these legalists arrived, they may have expressed shock at Peter’s conduct. Peter surely knew these men, as they came from the Jerusalem church, and he was influenced by their presence to the point that he began to draw back and separate himself from the Gentiles with whom he had been eating and fellowshiping. The imperfect tense of the verbs indicates a gradual, awkward withdrawal.

Why was this action “clearly in the wrong” (2:11)? By his actions, Peter was implying that there really was a difference between Jewish and Gentile believers—a difference that could not be bridged. The notion that the body of Christ had to be divided between Jews and Gentiles was nothing other than heresy. Peter was being hypocritical. Perhaps he was motivated by the desire to keep peace between the legalists and the law-free gospel group. Peter’s error was that he gave in to them. Peter must have known that he had gone against God’s revelation. By the very nature of Peter’s stature as an apostle, his actions confused and hurt other believers—thus Paul’s strong face-to-face opposition to Peter’s actions.

 LIFE APPLICATION – FEAR OF FAILURE
Paul identified fear as the motivation behind Peter’s erratic behavior in Antioch. Peter’s intentions may have been honest or merely confused, but his actions had undermined the gospel. Peer pressure led him to compromise his convictions; in so doing, he compromised the gospel itself (see 2:14). Because personal blunders were such a part of Peter’s past, this was probably in some way a response to the fear of making another mistake. Because, in this case, Peter had acted in response to fear, the actions were ill-chosen. How often do we fall into the same trap in order to be accepted by others? Although we recognize that fears of various kinds will usually affect our emotions, we should always base our actions on what God wants rather than the negative motivation of fear of rejection.

What did the circumcision group say to Peter to cause him to change his actions for a brief time? One explanation suggests that they may have argued that Peter was encouraging the Jewish believers to disregard their heritage and its laws. They may have played on Peter’s emotions; after all, he too was a Jew. It is likely that Peter tried to keep peace by his actions—not wanting to offend these legalistic Christians. After they left, he would resume his fellowship as before. But this sort of playacting was unacceptable to Paul. That was too high a price to pay for peace.

Another explanation points to Peter’s pattern of not handling surprises very well. Caught unawares, he tended to overreact (as when he hacked the servant’s ear off in John 18:10 or when he denied knowing Jesus in Luke 22:54-62). Circumstances arose in Antioch that he had not faced previously. Up until then, his dealings with Gentile Christians had been totally separate from his dealings with fellow Jewish Christians. Peter was alone with Cornelius and on his own in Antioch, both situations dominated by Gentile Christians. But with the arrivals from Jerusalem, he was suddenly faced with a diversity of extremes. His immediate action was unwise and required Paul’s intervention.

But then the question arises, why was someone of Peter’s stature afraid of those who belonged to this group in the Jerusalem church? That question probably cannot be answered any more than we could answer why he denied Jesus. At times, Peter would act courageously: when he gave the incredible speech at Pentecost (Acts 2:14-41); when he and John stood before the Sanhedrin and refused to follow the command to stop preaching the gospel (Acts 4:1-20); when he had to defend to the other apostles his own actions after his visit to Cornelius’s home (Acts 11:1-18). Yet at times, he would seem very weak. How human Peter was! We should be thankful that Scripture records for us the courage and failings of so many of God’s people. Many times we also find ourselves amazed at our courage in some circumstances and then embarrassed by our weakness in others. Peter demonstrated the conflict between Spirit and flesh (sinful human nature) that Paul would discuss in 5:13-26. When Peter was motivated and led by the Holy Spirit, he was wise and courageous.

When he gave in to the influence of his human nature, he was fearful, ambivalent, and hypocritical. Everyone makes mistakes, so we must live each day in close communication with God and under the control of the Holy Spirit. If War is ever lawful, then peace is sometimes sinful.

C. S. Lewis

 

 LIFE APPLICATION – DON’TS AND DOS
Goal setting and decision making based on “what we don’t want to do” rather than “what we want to do” will result in poor choices. “What we don’t want to do” responds to pressure and tends to avoid discomfort and inconvenience; “what we want to do” responds to values and convictions. In attempting to avoid an uncomfortable problem, Peter almost undermined his own convictions. His instinctive solution to the local conflict over Jewish/Gentile relations in the church would have opened a wound in the church that might have never been healed.
Our freedom in Christ must lead us to positive goal setting and behavior reflecting God’s truth. Following Jesus rarely involves a convenient or comfortable way. In fact, to use Christ’s own words, the way will be narrow and straight. Our single-minded pursuit of “what we want to do” for Christ will put most of “what we don’t want to do” in its proper place.

2:13 And the other Jews joined him in this hypocrisy, so that even Barnabas was led astray by their hypocrisy.NRSV As Peter acted on his fear, the other Jews, meaning those not already committed to the policy of separation, went along with his hypocrisy. They, too, gradually stopped joining with the Gentiles in eating and fellowshiping. These “other Jews” were the Jewish believers who lived in Antioch and were members of the church there. In that setting, they were most likely in the minority.

 LIFE APPLICATION – CLOSELY WATCHED
Christians don’t live as isolated individuals. Their actions and attitudes affect other Christians. The way Christians treat each other has a particularly strong attractive or repelling effect on outsiders. Jesus said that the world would recognize his disciples by their love for one another (John 13:35). Leaders should be especially careful to be good examples because others may stand or fall because of them.

Paul mentioned Barnabas separately, probably because Paul was especially surprised that Barnabas would be led astray by their hypocrisy. Barnabas was Paul’s traveling companion; together they preached the gospel to the Gentiles, proclaiming Jews’ and Gentiles’ oneness with Christ. Barnabas was not from the Jerusalem church and would not have had the personal and relational stake in this that Peter had. And Barnabas should have known better (in reality, so should Peter have known better). Yet, like Peter, Barnabas was human, and for some unknown reason he followed Peter’s example.

Paul boldly told the truth—this was sheer “hypocrisy.” A hypocrite says one thing but does another. Peter, Barnabas, and the Jewish believers knew that God accepted everyone equally, that salvation was available to all, that there should be no separation in the body of Christ. Yet their actions implied just the opposite. If Paul had opted for peace and allowed these actions to go unrebuked, the Christian church would have divided into two distinct groups going their separate ways. But this was not God’s  plan, nor was it consistent with “the truth of the gospel,” as Paul would explain in the next verse.

 LIFE APPLICATION – FACE-TO-FACE
Although Peter was a leader of the church, he was acting like a hypocrite. He knew better, yet he was driven by fear of what the legalistic Christians from his home church would think. Paul knew that he had to confront Peter before his actions damaged the church. At stake were, not only conditions in Antioch, but the future of the gospel in the Gentile world. So Paul publicly opposed Peter. Note, however, that Paul did not go to the other leaders, nor did he write letters to the churches telling them not to follow Peter’s example. Instead, he opposed Peter face-to-face. Sometimes sincere Christians, even Christian leaders, make mistakes. And it may take other sincere Christians to get them back on track. If you are convinced that someone is doing harm to himself/herself or the church, try the direct approach. There is no place for back stabbing in the body of Christ.

2:14 But when I saw that they were not acting consistently with the truth of the gospel.NRSV This was the crux of the matter—they (Peter, Barnabas, and the Jewish believers there in Antioch) were not behaving consistently (orthopodousin—walking correctly, (Orthopedic Christianity)  being straightforward, acting rightly) with the truth. In other words, their application was in error; their orthodoxy was not leading to orthopraxy. Paul had heard one thing, but then he saw just the opposite!

Paul’s agitation was over the truth of the gospel. This truth was that Jesus Christ had died and had risen again to offer salvation to all people—Jews and Gentiles alike. Both groups are equally acceptable to God; thus, they must be equally acceptable to each other. Jewish believers separating themselves implied that they were superior because of their race, traditions, or law keeping. The gospel clearly shows, however, that people do not become accepted by God for anything they do but only by God’s grace.

Paul was not interested in a power play. He did not oppose Peter in order to elevate himself. Paul recounted this story in this letter to the Galatians to show that he was a full apostle and could speak authoritatively, even in opposition to another apostle if the truth of the gospel were at stake, as was the case at that time. This was not a secondary issue blown out of proportion. The confrontation fit the crisis.

 LIFE APPLICATION – JUST DO IT!
Actions usually speak more loudly than mere words. The goal, of course, must be to have agreement between the way we live and what we say. Hypocrisy exists when what we say professes more than how we live. Paul gave Timothy some effective counsel in this area in 1 Timothy 4:15-16. The following questions can help us avoid hypocrisy:
Am I participating in behaviors that I know Scripture does not condone?
What parts of my life would I not want my children to imitate?
What specific commands in Scripture have I not applied to my life thus far? Why am I refusing to consider their truth?
Has God given me responsibilities that I have been ignoring?
The recognition and acceptance of God’s help often comes when we finally see our own shortcomings.

I said to Peter in front of them all, “You are a Jew, yet you live like a Gentile and not like a Jew. How is it, then, that you force Gentiles to follow Jewish customs?”NIV Paul spoke to Peter publicly, in front of them all—that is, in front of the Jewish believers, the Gentile believers, the circumcision group, and Barnabas. Those who want to attribute other motives to Paul might ask why he didn’t go to Peter privately. Wouldn’t that have been more “peace loving”? more “Christian”? But Peter’s actions had started a domino effect; and, because of his authority as an apostle, his actions had confused the believers. A private solution to this problem was not an option. Peter’s action was public, with public consequences; thus the rebuke had to be public.

Was Paul acting inconsistently and unbiblically with his treatment of Peter? Some who attack the way Paul handled the issue back up their case by using Galatians 6:1, where Paul urges gentle restoration in dealing with conflict. They raise the possibility that Paul was violating Jesus’ teaching in Matthew 18:15-17 regarding the private handling of conflict. They also use 1 Corinthians 9:19-23, where Paul treated people in different ways at different times.

The Bible doesn’t say whether or not Paul met with Peter privately; perhaps he did. Paul also wrote, “Those who sin are to be rebuked publicly, so that the others may take warning” (1 Timothy 5:20 niv). Paul’s public confrontation was respectful, forthright, and honest. As a leader of the Jerusalem church, Peter was setting public policy.

 LIFE APPLICATION – CONVICTIONS AND COMPROMISE
The Judaizers accused Paul of watering down the gospel to make it easier for Gentiles to accept, while Paul accused the Judaizers of nullifying the truth of the gospel by adding conditions to it. The basis of salvation was the issue: Is salvation through Christ alone, or does it come through Christ and adherence to the law? The argument came to a climax when Peter, Paul, the Judaizers, and some Gentile Christians all gathered together in Antioch to share a meal. Peter probably thought that by staying away from the Gentiles, he was promoting harmony—he did not want to offend the Jewish Christians. Paul charged that Peter’s action violated the gospel. By joining the Judaizers, Peter implicitly was supporting their claim that Christ was not sufficient for salvation. Compromise is an important element in getting along with others, but we should never compromise the truth of God’s Word. If we feel we have to change our Christian beliefs to match those of our companions, we are on dangerous ground.

Paul recorded his exact words here. Obviously, everyone knew Peter’s Jewish background; Paul’s wording indicates they also knew that Peter had set aside Jewish rituals and ceremonial laws (especially the food laws that made fellowship between Jews and Gentiles almost impossible) because of his freedom in Christ, thus living like a Gentile and not like a Jew. Certainly the visions Peter had seen and his experience with Cornelius had cured him of any prejudice against Gentiles (see Acts 10).

Paul’s actual guidelines for situations like the one in Antioch (see 1 Corinthians 8:1-13; 10:23-33) flowed from the proper role of host and visitor in various cultural contexts. When in someone else’s home, a Christian was free to find common ground with that family by accepting their hospitality and food without question. The key to guidance was in keeping the “weaker brother” in mind. Neither Peter nor the Judaizers were in that category in Antioch. In this case, the “weaker brothers and sisters” were being abused.

But how could Paul say that Peter wanted to force Gentiles to follow Jewish customs? By siding with the Judaizers who were visiting Antioch, Peter was playing into their hands, appearing as if he agreed with them and actually supported their insistence that Gentiles should follow Jewish customs. By separating himself from the Gentiles, Peter was supporting the Judaizers’ claim that Jews still were better than Gentiles.

Alongside the theological problems that Peter’s actions caused, a practical question must have surfaced. While Peter’s change in policy about having meals with Gentiles was harmful, the change in the policy for the Lord’s Supper must have been disastrous. If this group was divided over the sharing of common meals, it is inconceivable that they would be able to assemble together for the Lord’s Supper. Without Paul’s immediate and forceful intervention, the church in Antioch might have been crippled and destroyed.

Some commentators struggle over where Paul ends his actual self-quotation in the confrontation with Peter. The niv text ends Paul’s speech to Peter with closing quotes at the end of verse 21, making his words fill a couple of paragraphs; the nrsv text puts the closing quotes at the end of verse 14. Based on tone alone, the exact exchange probably ended with Paul’s direct question to Peter. What follows summarizes the reasons behind Paul’s insistence on consistency. In any case, Paul moves away from the confrontation with Peter and on to a magnificent sketch of the gospel and then back to his concern over the Galatians themselves in chapter 3.

2:15 We ourselves are Jews by birth and not Gentile sinners.NRSV Both Paul and Peter were Jews by birth, as were, obviously, all the Jewish Christians. Yet being Jews by birth was not enough for salvation.

Paul’s phrase Gentile sinners was said ironically because this was the scornful name Jews applied to Gentiles. Peter’s actions had conveyed some sort of “holier than thou” attitude in line with the teaching that Gentiles were still “sinners” unless they became Jewish. But both Peter and Paul knew better. Yes, pride is a perpetual nagging temptation. Keep on knocking it on the head, but don’t be too worried about it. As long as one knows one is proud one is safe from the worst form of pride.

C. S. Lewis

 

2:16 Yet we know that a person is justified not by the works of the law but through faith in Jesus Christ.NRSV All people stand as condemned sinners before God: God-fearing, law-keeping Jews, and “Gentile sinners” alike. But all have hope in the same source: through faith in Jesus Christ. Paul was speaking from within the context of his Jewish upbringing. He contended with his compatriots that their traditions did not solve the problem of sin. Paul’s appeal is similar to Jesus’ confrontations with the Pharisees and teachers of the law. Jesus said, “Woe to you experts in the law, because you have taken away the key to knowledge. You yourselves have not entered, and you have hindered those who were entering” (Luke 11:52 niv).

In this verse, three profoundly significant terms occur for the first time in this letter: (1) justified (dikaioo, in three forms); (2) works of the law (ergon nomou); and (3) faith in [of] Christ Jesus (pisteos Iesou Christou).

First, let’s look at the word justified. In a single word it represents the effect upon us of what Jesus accomplished on the cross. There are two views to interpret its meaning. One view, generally represented in Roman Catholic theology, takes justified to mean that people’s past sins have been wiped out so that they have been “made righteous” in and of themselves. This approach emphasizes the ethical aspects of a person’s relationship to a holy God. It moves from acquittal of past sins to ethical renewal and moral uprightness in the present; final and complete righteousness is not conferred until the last judgment.

The other view, held by many Protestants, takes justified as a legal word, literally meaning “to declare righteous” (the opposite being “to condemn”). To use a familiar but helpful explanation, the person who is justified can claim that his condition before God is “just as if I’d never sinned.” This view emphasizes the status conferred or relational aspect of God’s dealing with us. The reality of past sin, the potential to sin in the present, and the on-going need for repentance tend to give this view of justification a more intimate and personal sense than the first, which tends to be formal and structured.

When defining theological positions, sometimes alternative views simply emphasize different aspects of a single reality. Recently, scholars show that Paul had in mind both the ethical renewal and the new standing in Christ. One benefit of the first view is that it provides the believers a solid, ethical view of the transaction between themselves and God. But this needs to be held alongside the equally important and probably more foundational understanding of a personal, ongoing relationship with Christ.

Justification, as used in Scripture, always begins with God alone, acting in grace. God justifies people despite their guilt, pardons them, and then makes them his children and heirs.

To be declared righteous could never happen as a result of the works of (or by obeying) the law—the second term Paul introduced here to the Galatians. The law to which he was referring could mean Jewish Scripture, plus the laws added by the Pharisees. If that were the case, the books of Genesis through Deuteronomy and constant interpretations by the Pharisees would be all that was needed for salvation. The possibility of self-achieved righteousness would mean that Christ did not have to die. But, the law could also have a more general meaning—the idea that just by being good and doing good works a person can be justified. While this passage does not conclusively teach how Paul felt about the law itself, there is little doubt about the effectiveness of the “works of the law” (ergon nomou). Paul directs the force of his argument toward those who would mistakenly hope to “work” or observe the law in order to merit or earn God’s approval. Jesus said, “I have not come to call the righteous, but sinners” (Matthew 9:13 niv). Those who were righteous in their own eyes did not think they needed Christ; those who saw their true status as sinners could find their hope in him.

Paul, Peter, and the Jewish believers obviously knew this; otherwise, they would not have converted to Christianity. They understood that trying to follow and obey all of God’s laws (let alone all the laws the Pharisees heaped on them) could not give salvation. This came “through faith in Jesus Christ” alone. “Faith” is a personal act of commitment; it means believing and accepting that Jesus came, died on the cross to take the punishment our sins deserved, and rose again. This faith opens the way to a relationship with God the Father, and the promise of eternity with him.

 LIFE APPLICATION – LAW AND ORDER
If observing the Jewish laws cannot justify us, why should we still obey the Ten Commandments and other Old Testament laws? We know that Paul was not condemning the law, because in other letters he wrote: “the law is holy” (Romans 7:12 nkjv); “the law is spiritual” (Romans 7:14 nkjv); “the law is good if one uses it properly” (1 Timothy 1:8 niv). Instead, he was saying that the law can never make us acceptable to God. The law still has an important role to play in the life of a Christian. The law:
reveals God’s nature and moral goodness;
 guards us from sin by giving us standards for behavior;
 convicts us of sin, leaving us the opportunity to ask for God’s forgiveness; and
 drives us to trust in the sufficiency of Christ because we can never keep the Ten Commandments perfectly.
The law cannot possibly save us. But after we have become Christians, it can guide us to live as God requires.

So we, too, have put our faith in Christ Jesus that we may be justified by faith in Christ and not by observing the law, because by observing the law no one will be justified.NIV The third phrase introduced in this verse by Paul is faith in [of] Christ (pisteos Christou), which he used twice (the earlier one being pisteos Iesou Christou). The phrase pisteos Iesou Christou occurs seven times in the New Testament: twice in 2:16, and once in 3:22; Romans 3:22, 26; Ephesians 3:12; and Philippians 3:9. Scholars differ over an issue of Greek grammar. If “faith in Jesus Christ” is an objective genitive, then it means faith in Jesus Christ. If “faith in Jesus Christ” is a subjective genitive, then it means the faith or faithfulness of Jesus Christ. The Old Testament word for “faith” is a Hebrew term emuna, which can mean either the faithfulness of God or a person’s response. If Paul merely substituted emuna for pisteos, then the evidence would point toward interpreting this phrase as “the faithfulness of Christ that saves us.”

The “faith in Christ Jesus” phrase that begins this part of the verse actually translates eis Christon Iesoun episteusamen (“in Christ Jesus we have believed”). While all three phrases have often been translated as if they were the same, they clearly are not. The first and last phrases, while difficult to understand, probably describe the operation of justification, leading to a suggested translation of “Christ-faith” or “faithfulness of Christ” or even “Christ-centered faith.” Meanwhile, the center one of the three phrases describes the application of faith on the part of those who allow themselves to be justified by faith. The ambiguity maintains the truth that faith must be exercised but does not “save us.” Rather, it is Christ who faithfully applies to us what he provided at the Cross, our justification.

The significance of the different viewpoints can be brought out in this example. Two rock climbers are working together. One person falls and will die if he is not rescued. The top climber drops a rope to save him. The bottom climber responds and grasps the rope. How was he saved? Did his grasp save him, or did the faithful work of his rescuer save him? We are not the source of our salvation. No matter how strong the rope, if you don’t grab it, you’re dead. No matter how strong your grasp, if there is no rope, you cannot be saved.

Because Paul expected his readers to agree with the “we know” that begins this verse, he could then conclude that we have exercised our faith so that the way is now open that we might be justified by faith. Whether Paul was still recalling his speech to the group at Antioch, or if he was addressing the Galatians, the truth of this statement remains. Believers today are also part of the “we.” Because we believed, because we put our faith in Christ Jesus, we have rejected the idea that human endeavor or observing the law can make anyone acceptable to God. We have understood that we are justified by faith; thus, we know that keeping all the Old Testament laws and trying to do good works could not, cannot, and will not save us.

 LIFE APPLICATION – NO SUBSTITUTE
By studying the Old Testament Scriptures, Paul realized that he could not be saved by obeying God’s laws. The prophets knew that God’s plan of salvation did not rest on keeping the law. Because all people are sinners, we cannot keep God’s laws perfectly. Fortunately, God has provided a way of salvation that depends on Jesus Christ and not on our own efforts. Even though we know this truth, we must guard against using service, good deeds, charitable giving, or any other effort as a substitute for faith.

Paul appealed to the Jewish Scriptures to emphasize his point, for his words echo Psalm 143:2, “Do not bring your servant into judgment, for no one living is righteous before you” (niv). No one is righteous, nor can they become righteous by doing good deeds and by obeying the law. This was not a new idea, certainly not one created by Paul. The doctrine of justification by faith goes back to Abraham who, “believed the Lord, and [God] credited it to him as righteousness” (Genesis 15:6 niv).

2:17 If, while we seek to be justified in Christ, it becomes evident that we ourselves are sinners, does that mean that Christ promotes sin? Absolutely not!NIV Because most of Paul’s letters were dictated, sometimes one idea springboards to a related point or answers a foreseen, potential problem. In this verse, Paul responds to one objection that might be raised by his opponents. They might say, “How could Paul claim that justification by faith is effective when Christians still sin?” Or, “If you have invalidated the importance of living by the law, how will you escape the charge that you are promoting sinful living? Doesn’t that make Christ the founder of an ineffective system (or less effective than the law), and shouldn’t the law be added for justification?”

Paul moved directly to his answer. If we refers to Jewish believers; the word for sinners in the Greek is the same word used in the phrase “Gentile sinners” in 2:15. The neb translates the first part of the verse, “We ourselves no less than the Gentiles turn out to be sinners.” Paul was answering an objection to his message, an objection that would probably be leveled against him by the Judaizers among the Galatians. They claimed that to say the law doesn’t matter is to say that standards and morality don’t matter. This leaves the door open for people to become believers and then live any way they choose. The freedom that the Gentiles had led them to break some of the legal restrictions and thus, in the eyes of the Judaizers, to “sin.”

Of course, Paul did not mean that. If Jewish believers became justified in Christ, gained freedom from the law, and then committed a sin, does that mean that Christ promotes sin?

Paul’s reply is vehement: Absolutely not! Sin does not result because people are justified; therefore, Christ is not responsible for promoting sin. Obviously those who have been justified—Christians—can and do sin, for that, unfortunately, is part of our human nature (Paul details his own struggle with sin in Romans 7). But the sin led to the need for justification, not the other way around. The Judaizers saw justification as a “theological” excuse to get out from under Jewish law (that is, changing from Jew to Christian). But Paul (and the Jewish Christians who had experienced justification) knew that while offering freedom from the restrictive law, justification by faith demanded lifestyle and behavioral changes. When God truly gets hold of a life, nothing can remain the same. “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation; the old has gone, the new has come!” (2 Corinthians 5:17 niv). At the end of this letter, Paul wrote, “Neither circumcision nor uncircumcision means anything; what counts is a new creation” (Galatians 6:15 niv). Grace does not abolish the law with its standards and morality; rather, it moves it from an external standard impossible to keep to an inner motivation for living a pure and God-honoring life.

Paul appealed to the Galatian’s knowledge that having the law and trying to obey it had not brought assurance of justification. The legalists were doomed to failure, handicapped by human tendency to sin even when they knew better. But the group that Paul was confronting added a twist to the problem. If they agreed with Paul about their inability to be justified by the works of the law, then why did the law remain so important? Because having the law was a label of status and significance. Possession of God’s own laws was a matter of great pride. Even if the laws were not obeyed, they were revered.

But Paul could see that the gospel was the way of freedom from the slavery of legalism on the one hand and the pride of ownership on the other. We are still faced with the challenge of following Jesus between these two errors—becoming bound to a set of rules or becoming proud over our spiritual status. Liberation in Christ bears the sign of humility.

2:18 If I rebuild what I destroyed, I prove that I am a lawbreaker.NIV Justification by faith destroyed the Jewish “merit system” with all its laws and good deeds that attempted to rack up points with God. To rebuild that, to be justified by faith and then return to that legal system as a basis for one’s relationship with God, would erroneously imply that Christ’s death was not sufficient. The truth, however, is that it was not necessary for the Gentiles to place themselves under the law in order to discover that the law could not add to their justification. Paul saw the situation in Antioch with Peter as a clear illustration of the unnecessary burden that some wanted to place on Gentile believers. Peter, through his act of pulling away from the Gentile fellowship, was giving law a place of authority that it no longer held.

Justified people will sin, but they are moving onward and upward. The real sinner is the one who is justified and then returns to the law. Ironically, that person is actually a lawbreaker. People under the law are more precisely described as lawbreakers than as law-keepers! The law cannot give salvation because no one can keep it perfectly. The best the law can do is prove our sinfulness and how much we need the Savior and his gracious offer of justification by faith.

2:19 For through the law I died to the law so that I might live for God.NIV Paul changed his wording from “we” to I here, relying again on his personal experience. His phrase through the law embodies much of what he would write regarding the law’s purpose several years later in his letter to the Romans. The law itself could not save because no one can keep its perfect standards. The law thus cannot give eternal life; instead, it offers only failure and death. So what is its usefulness? The law was a necessary instrument to show people the ultimate futility of trying to live up to God’s standard on their own. But that very hopelessness created by the law can have a positive impact if it leads a person to the true hope, Christ himself. Christ took upon himself that death penalty—the death we deserved for being lawbreakers. His action freed us from the jurisdiction of Moses’ law. When Paul understood that the law was completely incapable of giving salvation, and when he embraced the one who

could give salvation, he knew he could never go back to the law. Paul felt this so intensely that he expressed it in terms of death, I died to the law. Paul went from a law-centered life to a Christ-centered life. The law’s purpose was to work itself out of a job and point us beyond itself to a fuller relationship with God.

Richard Longnecker

 

Years previously, Paul had been at the height of his determined service of the law when Christ had interrupted his life on the road to Damascus. His efforts were weighed and found lacking. Seeking to pursue “spiritual justice,” in reality he had been persecuting God’s Son. “Death” may well have been the most appropriate description Paul could choose to capture the effect of that encounter. But it was a death that opened the way for new and real life!

Paul knew he had to die to the law before he could live for God. There can be no middle ground. It makes no sense to accept salvation by faith and then work for it, just as it makes no sense to accept a gift and then offer the giver money for it. We must deny that our own efforts can accomplish anything in order to be able to humbly accept the gift that Christ offers. By identifying with Christ, we can experience freedom from the law that he procured for us by dying on our behalf.

Some scholars think the next phrase should actually be attached to this verse in order to round off Paul’s thought, rather than place it at the beginning of verse 20. Thus Paul would have been saying, “In order that I might live for God I have been crucified with Christ.” This parallels other passages such as 2 Timothy 2:11, “If we died with him, we will also live with him” (niv).

2:20 I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.NKJV In several short phrases the apostle captured the breathless wonder believers experience as the realization dawns that we are no longer living “our” lives, but have surrendered to the author of life, who now lives his life in and through us.

Paul continued his thought from verse 19. The perfect tense of the verbs indicates something that happened in the past but influences the present. Paul “died to the law” by being crucified with Christ. Christ completely fulfilled the law (past tense); this act influenced Paul in the present (who, as an imperfect human, could not keep the law). Yet because of Christ’s death, the law no longer had a hold on either of them. What profound relief Paul must have felt! He no longer needed to fear that, after spending his entire life studying and trying to keep the law, somehow he might still miss God. The Cross of Christ shows that although the law had to be kept, it was fulfilled by a perfect human. Christ paid sin’s penalty for imperfect humans.

Being crucified with Christ refers to the conversion experience, a once-for-all transaction that has ongoing results. We do not have to be crucified with Christ again each day. As Christians, we must daily take up our cross to follow him, but this refers to the responsibilities of discipleship. We are required to daily withstand our sinful human desires. (This will be discussed in detail in 5:16-25.)

Scholars have looked at Paul’s phrase “I have been crucified with Christ” in different ways. This could mean that

  • all believers participate in the benefits of Christ’s death and resurrection;
  • all believers experience death and new life because Christ did so on their behalf;
  • all believers will have experiences like those Christ endured (Romans 8:17; Philippians 3:10); or
  • all believers actually participate in Christ’s death and resurrection because of the mystical union that believers have with the Lord (see also Romans 6:4-8; Colossians 2:12-14, 20; 3:1-4).

This statement holds in its simplicity the incomprehensible depth of each believer’s union with Christ. Each of the above suggestions actually emphasizes an aspect of the workings and benefits of Christ’s death on our behalf. Our biggest danger is in trivializing Christ’s death. Being a part of the “body of Christ” means more than just church membership. Union with Christ means that believers share his death, burial, and resurrection. Believers are so united with Christ that Christ’s experiences become their experiences. Paul would later write to the Romans:

  • Don’t you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life. If we have been united with him like this in his death, we will certainly also be united with him in his resurrection. (Romans 6:3-5 niv)

Paul claimed he had been “crucified,” but he found himself still alive. Paul had died with Christ, but it was his “old self” that had died: it is no longer I who live. The self-centered, Jewish Pharisee, Christian-persecuting, law-abiding, violent, and evil Paul “no longer” lived. That person’s sinful life had been crucified with Christ on the cross when Paul was saved. This is the “I” of the flesh (see 5:13-24), of sinful human desires, of works and pride. Paul was released, not only from the tyranny of the Mosaic law, but also from the tyranny of self. Thus, this verse could read, “I no longer live I myself” or “I no longer I the old self in the flesh live.”

Instead, Paul was a “new creation” (2 Corinthians 5:17) because, he explained, Christ lives in me. In other words, Paul had turned over his life to Christ. Each of the phrases is a crucial aspect of the sequence of salvation: We relinquish our old life and turn to Christ for his life. The self-centered self now becomes the Christ-centered self. It is as if Paul was saying, “My old life, my old goals and plans, even old relationships were nailed to the cross with Christ. Now I have a new life because Christ came in and filled the empty spaces all those old pursuits could not fill. Now he lives in me and is the focus of my life.” To accomplish this, there must be a radical cleansing of our old selfish nature. But there must also be a turning to the empowering of Christ. Just as in repentance we turn away from sin and toward Christ, we must turn from the self in the flesh to the self hidden in Christ.

Mystical? Yes. Difficult to understand? Certainly. True? Beyond a doubt—ask any Christian. And that is precisely Paul’s point in the following section. Although mystical, this resurrection life is not beyond anyone’s reach, for the key to living it is by faith.

Paul no longer focused his life on trying to please God by obeying laws; instead, with Christ in him, the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me. Believers’ lives are still lived “in the flesh” (in their bodies prone to sin) while they remain on earth. But with Christ in charge, they are new creations, living life “by faith.” This faith is not a one-shot deal—have faith, be saved, end of story. Rather, it is an attitude, a lifestyle. This new life is lived every day, every moment, through every situation “by faith.”

What is the object of that faith? Our Lord Jesus Christ. We have faith in his act of loving us and giving himself (dying) for us. In other words, “Because he loved me and died for me, he can live in and through me.”

 LIFE APPLICATION – DYING TO LIVE
How have we been crucified with Christ? Legally, God looks at us as if we had died with Christ. Because our sins died with him, we are no longer condemned (Colossians 2:13-15). Relationally, we have become one with Christ and identified ourselves with him, and his experiences are ours. Our Christian life began when, in unity with him, we died to our old life (see Romans 6:5-11). In our daily life, we must regularly crucify the sinful desires that keep us from following Christ. This too is a kind of dying with him (Luke 9:23-25).
And yet the focus of Christianity is, not dying, but living. Because we have been crucified with Christ, we have also been raised with him (Romans 6:5). Legally, we have been reconciled with God (2 Corinthians 5:19) and are free to grow into Christ’s likeness (Romans 8:29). And in our daily life, we have Christ’s resurrection power as we continue to fight sin (Ephesians 1:19-20). Relationally, we are no longer alone, for Christ lives in us—he is our power for living and our hope for the future (Colossians 1:27).

2:21 I do not set aside the grace of God, for if righteousness could be gained through the law, Christ died for nothing!NIV Paul returned to his argument with the legalistic and “labelistic” false teachings begun in chapter 1. Paul’s message of salvation by faith (without works of the law) did not set aside the grace of God. Instead, that is exactly what the Judaizers’ teaching did—they “set aside” or “nullified” God’s grace. For if people have to follow laws in order to earn their salvation—if righteousness could be gained through the law—then the logical conclusion is that Christ died for nothing. Christ did not need to die if we could have obtained salvation by obeying the law. However, it was because no one could obey God’s law perfectly that Christ came to both obey it and then set it aside as a means to salvation. That was the ultimate picture of God’s love and grace for sinful humanity. The basis of Christianity is God’s grace and Christ’s death for sin. Without these there is no faith, no gospel, and no hope of salvation.

 LIFE APPLICATION – LEGAL EAGLES
Believers today may still be in danger of acting as if Christ died for nothing. How? By replacing Jewish legalism with their own brand of Christian legalism, they are giving people extra laws to obey. By believing they can earn God’s favor by what they do, they are not trusting completely in Christ’s work on the cross. By struggling to appropriate God’s power to change them (sanctification), they are not resting in God’s power to save them (justification). If we could be saved by being good, then Christ did not have to die. But the Cross is the only way to salvation.

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Additional Source: Bruce B. Barton et al., Life Application Bible Commentary – Galatians, (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1994), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, Under: “GALATIANS 2”.

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Good News! Galatians 1:1-10 Commentary

The year was probably a.d. 49. Paul and Barnabas had just completed their first missionary journey (Acts 13:2-14:28). By their standards, it must have been a whirlwind adventure. Following a brief stay on the island of Cyprus, they had visited Iconium, Lystra, and Derbe, cities in the Roman province of Galatia (present-day Turkey). In their travels they had met with both wholehearted response and deep-seated resistance.

Usually Paul and Barnabas would introduce the gospel in a new area by starting in the local Jewish synagogue, demonstrating from the Scriptures that Jesus was the long-awaited Messiah. But they would venture beyond the Jewish community to offer the promise of forgiveness and eternal life to the Gentiles. And that would get them in trouble. Declaring that God wanted to save Gentiles placed Paul and Barnabas under a cloud of suspicion by Jews and Jewish Christians. As a result of their preaching, however, many Jews and Gentiles converted to Christ. The success of Christianity also created deep resentment in those holding positions of leadership in society and in religious circles. The work of Paul and Barnabas threatened their standing.

Thrilled by the number of persons who accepted their message, upon arriving back in Antioch, Paul and Barnabas “gathered the church together and reported all that God had done through them and how he had opened the door of faith to the Gentiles” (Acts 14:27 niv).

Shortly after their return to Antioch, some Jewish Christians arrived from Judea. These Judeans claimed that the Antioch church and its missionaries were diluting Christianity to make it more appealing to Gentiles, and they challenged Paul’s authority as an apostle. They disagreed with Paul’s teaching that Gentiles did not have to follow many of the religious laws that the Jews had obeyed for centuries. The resultant heated debate touched almost every church in the first century. The issue: how to maintain a proper place for the Jewish root from which the vine of Christianity was flourishing.

Some of Paul’s accusers went to the Galatian churches and insisted that the Gentile converts had to be circumcised and follow all the Jewish laws and customs in order to be saved. According to these people (called Judaizers), Gentiles had to first become Jews in order to become Christians. This caused much confusion in the churches that Paul and Barnabas had planted in Galatia.

In response to this threat, Paul wrote this letter to the Galatian churches. In it, he explained that following the Old Testament laws or the Jewish laws would not bring salvation. A person is saved only by grace through faith. Most likely, Paul wrote this letter about a.d. 49, shortly before the meeting of the Jerusalem council, which settled the law-versus-grace controversy (Acts 15). By this time, Paul himself had been a Christian for about fifteen years.

LIFE APPLICATION – STAKING HIS CLAIMS
The Galatian Christians were in danger of being led astray by false teachers. Paul wrote to protect them from this danger. To combat the false teachers, Paul made three primary claims:
1. Paul claimed divine authority for his appointment as an apostle. He contrasted his mandate with those who were sent by human institutions or presumed to be God’s messengers (1:12).
2. Paul claimed his spoken and written message embodied the directly revealed will of God (1:11). Therefore, if he himself contradicted the message, he would be subject to judgment (1:8).
3. Paul claimed that opposition and distortion of his message were evidences of the present evil age. The fact that the gospel offered hope to persons lost in sin made the message as much a threat to the evil age as Christ himself had been when he died on the cross (1:4).

1:1 Paul, an apostle.NKJV First-century letters often began by introducing the writer, although this “writer” often dictated his letters to a scribe. Paul used a secretary for most, if not all, of his letters (see Romans 16:22), usually writing the last few lines in his own hand to authenticate his message (6:11). Tertius served Paul in this way (Romans 16:22).

Saul (Paul was probably his Roman surname) was born into a Jewish family from the tribe of Benjamin. He was raised as a strict Pharisee (Philippians 3:5), grew up in Tarsus, and was educated under a well-known teacher, Gamaliel (Acts 22:3). However, he was also a Roman citizen, a privilege he used to great advantage at times (Acts 22:27-29). Out of this diverse background, God formed and called a valuable servant, using every aspect of Paul’s upbringing to further the spread of the gospel.

The Jewish name Saul, given to a man born in the tribe of Benjamin, evoked memories of the tribe’s days of glory—the first king of Israel was named Saul and came from this tribe (1 Samuel 10:20, 24-26). The Roman name Paul (Paulus) was a common surname (see, for example, Sergius Paulus in Acts 13:7). We know nothing of the origins of Paul’s Roman citizenship; the name may have been a family name, or Paul may have chosen the name simply because of how close it sounded to his Jewish name. In Acts, Luke wrote, “Then Saul, who also is called Paul” (Acts 13:9 nkjv), then used only the name Paul throughout the rest of the book. When Paul accepted the Christian faith and began his mission to the Gentiles, part of his effort to identify with his listeners included using his Roman name. In all of his letters, Paul used his Roman name, linking himself with the Gentile believers to whom he had been sent with the gospel of Christ.

Paul was called to be an apostle by Jesus Christ and God the Father. Paul was not one of the original twelve disciples (later called apostles), but Jesus had especially called him on the road to Damascus to preach the gospel to Jews and Gentiles (Acts 9:3-19). The apostles’ mission was to be God’s representatives; they were envoys, messengers, and delegates who were directly under the authority of Jesus Christ. They had authority to set up and supervise churches and discipline them if necessary. Paul presented his credentials as an apostle at the beginning of this letter because his authority was being undermined in the churches in Galatia.

 LIFE APPLICATION – COURSE REVERSED
What a change had occurred in Paul’s life! At first he had been a fierce “apostle” of the Sanhedrin, persecuting the first Christians in the name of Judaism. But that calling was replaced by God’s call to follow Christ and to offer God’s grace to Jews and Gentiles alike. Paul’s apostleship was transformed. His intensity and zeal remained, but his purpose had been reversed. Paul had begun as the apostle of death to those who dared to be Christians, but he ended as the apostle for Christ who offered life to anyone willing to believe.
Whatever our past, God is able to call us out by his grace, transform us by his power, and give us a new purpose for life. Has God given you a new purpose for serving him?

Sent neither by human commission nor from human authorities, but through Jesus Christ and God the Father, who raised him from the dead.NRSV The title apostle means “one sent on a mission.” Paul had gone on a mission while he was still a committed Jew. Acts 9:1-2 records his mission, authorized by the high priest, to imprison Christians in Damascus. However, Paul’s mission here was of an entirely different character from an entirely different authority. Paul was sent with the gospel not by any person but by Jesus Christ and God the Father. Jesus’ name side-by-side with “God the Father” reveals Paul’s understanding of the oneness of God and Jesus Christ.

No human had commissioned him; no human authority had called him; instead, Jesus Christ himself had spoken to Paul (Acts 9:4-5). Thus Paul added, who raised him from the dead, further clarifying that it was the living, risen Christ who had met him on the road to Damascus. Paul was not called during Jesus’ ministry on earth; rather, he was called after Jesus’ resurrection and ascension. Paul wrote that Jesus appeared “last of all . . . to me also, as to one abnormally born. For I am the least of the apostles and do not even deserve to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God. But by the grace of God I am what I am, . . .” (1 Corinthians 15:8-10 niv).

Paul explained his apostleship in these words, not to separate himself from the original Twelve, but to show that his apostleship rested on the same basis as theirs. If the believers in Galatia questioned Paul’s apostleship, then they also should question the apostleship of Peter, John, James, and all the others—and such questioning would be absurd. All the apostles were called by Jesus Christ and God the Father, and they answered to God as their final authority.

 LIFE APPLICATION – ON WHOSE AUTHORITY?
When challenged, Paul based the credibility of his teaching on the authority of Jesus Christ. In other words, he claimed to be consistent with what Jesus said and did. Those who questioned his message or methods were in danger of questioning Christ’s. But if they could find a discrepancy between Paul’s words and Christ’s, then they had a right to be suspicious.
We do not ignore the wisdom of humans, but we must base our theology, teaching, and ministry on Jesus Christ and his Word. As Peter said, “Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life” (John 6:68 niv). Christian teachers are not to be evaluated on their personal charisma, the size of their following, or the boldness of their claims of truthfulness. Rather, what they say and do must be measured against the standard of Jesus Christ. Cult leaders are notorious for trying to dodge the standards of Jesus by claiming to be Christ. What sad results come when followers fail to question why someone who claims to be Jesus acts so unlike the original.

Paul was also challenging those who were calling his teaching into question. Paul used neither by human commission as part of his defense against the Judaizers, who challenged his apostolic commission and rejected his credentials. From whom did they take their authority? The Galatians needed to develop a more discerning approach to those who claimed to speak for God.

1:2 And all the brothers with me.NIV Paul’s fellow workers in Antioch joined him in sending greetings to the Galatian believers, for all of them together were brothers or “members of God’s family.” These coworkers in Antioch, a sizable group, included Barnabas, Titus, Timothy, and some of the men listed in Acts 13:1 (see also Acts 19:29; 20:4).

In most of his letters, Paul sent greetings at the outset from himself and one or two traveling companions whom he named, reserving the greetings from others who were with him for the end of the letters (see, for example, 1 Corinthians 1:1 and 16:19-20; 2 Corinthians 1:1 and 13:13; Philippians 1:1 and 4:21; Colossians 1:1 and 4:7-14). In this letter, however, he sent greetings from “all the brothers with me” immediately after his salutation. Paul may have wanted to reinforce the solidarity of the Christian church to show that he was not alone in opposing the false teachings of the Judaizers and in confirming the truth of the gospel. Others, many of whom the Galatians may have known, were “with Paul” in being concerned for their faith.

On one hand, in verse 1 Paul declared that he was not sent from men or by men, meaning that he did not need or seek their endorsement. On the other hand, the unity of his fellow workers added force to his argument. Those with Paul in the Asian ministry were single-minded about the gospel content, Paul’s authority, and the role of the law in salvation.

To the churches in Galatia.NIV This letter is an example of Paul writing to a region or group of churches. Another such epistle is Ephesians, which was probably a circular letter to the whole region. The words “to the Ephesians” are missing in several early manuscripts and were probably added because that city’s copy was used to produce later copies. Each of Paul’s other epistles is addressed to an individual church (such as Philippians) or person (such as Titus). In Paul’s time, Galatia was the Roman province located in the center section of present-day Turkey. Much of the region was on a large and fertile plateau; many people had moved to the region because of its favorable agriculture. During his missionary journeys, Paul planned to visit regions with large population centers in order to reach as many people as possible and to plant churches in those centers. This letter was to be circulated among the churches in Galatia planted by Paul and Barnabas during the first missionary journey—in Derbe, Lystra, and Iconium.

While much has been written about the possibility of two distinct “Galatian areas,” one north and one south, the weight of scholarship and tradition still affirms the southern Galatian cities as the correct addressees for this letter. In either case, the addressees are not as crucial to identify as the message itself. After all, we study this letter as if written to us.

Either Paul expected each church to read the letter, perhaps make a copy, and then pass it along; or Paul’s scribe made several copies on which Paul wrote the authenticating final lines (6:11) and then had a copy delivered to each church. The first explanation is most likely correct, if Paul usually implemented the procedure explained at the end of his letter to the Colossians: “After this letter has been read to you, see that it is also read in the church of the Laodiceans and that you in turn read the letter from Laodicea” (Colossians 4:16 niv).

 LIFE APPLICATION – PRECIOUS WORDS
We can hardly appreciate the impact and value of Paul’s letters to the early church. To English speakers, the abundant availability of the Bible has resulted in our treating God’s Word as common. In a world without books, people were probably better listeners. Their minds were expected to retain more. Writing was a valued ability and a treasured product.
As you study Galatians, read the sentences again, aloud. Imagine hearing them for the first time. Treasure these important words revealed from God to us through Paul.

1:3 Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ.NRSV Paul used grace and peace in all his salutations, wishing his readers the benefits of both. “Grace” was the Greek greeting, as “peace” was the Jewish greeting. The two expressions were common greetings; jointly used in the context of the gospel, they gained unfathomable depth. The word “grace” (charis) reminded Paul’s readers of God’s kindness in offering salvation to undeserving people. It refers to the multifaceted gift that God makes available to us despite our unworthiness. Not only does God mercifully withhold the judgment and punishment that we so clearly deserve, he grants, instead, the almost unbelievable gift of forgiveness, salvation, and eternal life. God’s grace requires faith because the moral and legal case against us leads to an inevitable verdict—guilty.

Grace means the forgiveness of our sins. It cannot be earned by works or by any goodness in us. It is free and undeserved favor on us by Christ’s faithful act of redemption. As long as we insist on finding or making our own way we remain lost. We who have shown a marked proficiency at sin find ourselves relentlessly pursued by God’s grace. We do not discover God’s grace; it finds us (see Romans 5:1-11)! Grace releases sin, and peace makes the conscience quiet. The two fiends that torment us are sin and conscience. But Christ has vanquished these two monsters, and trodden them under foot, both in this world, and in the world to come.

Martin Luther

 

“Peace” (eirene) was a familiar word often used in salutations of letters even by unbelievers. Paul used it to remind the readers of Christ’s offer of peace to his disciples as they lived out their faith in an evil world (John 14:27). Christian letters not only expressed the wish for peace, but identified the source of peace. If “grace” summarizes God’s gift to us, then “peace” summarizes the personal results of that gift (see John 14:27; 16:33). Peace describes felt grace. Peace combines a quiet conscience, cleansed by forgiveness, with a growing sense of joy in the unlimited possibilities of freedom in Christ.

True peace comes only from a right relationship with God because peace comes from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ. As in verse 1, the connecting of “God” and “Jesus” reveals their oneness (John 10:30). God is called “Father,” a name Jesus taught his disciples to use in the Lord’s Prayer (Matthew 6:9). In contrast with verse 1, Paul here personalized the divine name by adding “our” to Father. The earlier titles emphasized the authority of the Father and Jesus, while this expression pointed to God as the provider of grace and peace. Also, Jesus Christ is identified as “Lord,” a title given to him after his resurrection and ascension that reveals him as worthy of worship (see John 20:28; Acts 2:36; Philippians 2:9).

1:4 Who gave himself for our sins to rescue us from the present evil age.NIV Our Lord Jesus Christ (1:3) gave himself for our sins. “Giving” refers to Christ’s ultimate sacrifice for sin offered by his death on the cross. Jesus said of himself, “For even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve, and to give His life a ransom for many” (Mark 10:45 nkjv). Jesus died for “our sins,” not his own, for he was sinless. Jesus’ sacrifice was ultimate, voluntary, and substitutionary.

This refers to Christ’s substitutionary atonement. Christ died for our sins, in our place, so we would not have to suffer the punishment we deserve (see 1 Peter 2:24). In 1 Corinthians 15:3 Paul regards this truth as a key element of the early Christian confession of faith. This is probably the earliest written statement in the New Testament about the significance of the death of Christ.

F. F. Bruce

 

Paul wasted no time in laying the groundwork for his message to the Galatians.

 If they were to accept as valid any other “gospel” as an answer to sin, including the one offered by the Judaizers, they would be denying the value and effectiveness of Christ’s sacrifice. So, having claimed his authority to speak, Paul briefly summarized the gospel that he had given them in person. Our most active participation in God’s work of saving us is simply allowing ourselves to be saved.

Neil Wilson

 

 LIFE APPLICATION – –ACCEPTABLE
God does not have to go against his own nature or be inconsistent in order to accept us. We cannot solve our sin problem that separates us from God, but God solved the problem for us by sending Christ to die for us. God’s demand for justice is satisfied by the ultimate sacrifice of Christ. Christ’s giving himself for us is the essence of love. Spiritual rebirth and all of our Christian experience begin as a gift.
“He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all—how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?” (Romans 8:32)
“All this is from God, who reconciled us to himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation.” (2 Corinthians 5:18)
“I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.” (Galatians 2:20)
 “For if the inheritance depends on the law, then it no longer depends on a promise; but God in his grace gave it to Abraham through a promise. . . . But the Scripture declares that the whole world is a prisoner of sin, so that what was promised, being given through faith in Jesus Christ, might be given to those who believe.” (Galatians 3:18, 22)
 “And live a life of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.” (Ephesians 5:2)
 “Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her.” (Ephesians 5:25)
 “[Christ] gave himself as a ransom for all men—the testimony given in its proper time.” (1 Timothy 2:6)
 “[Christ] gave himself for us to redeem us from all wickedness and to purify for himself a people that are his very own, eager to do what is good.” (Titus 2:14)
(The above verses are quoted from the NIV.)
The benefits cannot be fully appreciated until they are personally appropriated. Have you received Jesus, who gave himself for you?

The result of Jesus’ gift of himself was to rescue us from the present evil age. The Greek word for “rescue” (exeletai) could also be translated “deliver.” The nrsv used “to set us free” to emphasize the result of Jesus’ action; the rescue and deliverance had a purpose—to set us free. Christ not only gave himself for our sins; he also delivers us from the helpless condition where we cannot resist sin (present evil age) to his kingdom where he is Lord. Paul wanted his brothers and sisters in Galatia to be alarmed that they had exchanged their freedom in Christ for slavery under a system based on human effort.

 LIFE APPLICATION – RESCUE MISSION
Every rescue operation begins with an awareness of a problem. God’s rescue plan for us can be broken down into four specific components:
1. We recognize that we live in an evil age. Sin has created a world hostile to God’s love and toward the church, or body of Christ, those who have been transformed by that love.
2. We admit that without Christ our sins have enslaved us and keep us trapped in the evil age. Therefore, we acknowledge that Christ’s giving himself for us was necessary. Our helplessness required his personal intervention.
3. We confess our willing participation in sin and our inability to rescue ourselves from it. Help and hope must come from outside our resources.
4. We accept the loving Father’s concern for us and his provision of escape by faith in Jesus Christ. We acknowledge and submit to Jesus as our deliverer.

This rescue or deliverance does not remove believers from the world (at least not yet); instead, it gives us the blessings of our future eternity with Christ and offers us his guidance and presence as we serve him in “the present evil age.” Indeed, if all the early believers had been rescued out of the evil age in which they lived, there would have been no hope for us. To use Jesus’ expression, though we are still “in” the world, we are no longer “of” the world (see John 17:15-18). In his letter to the Colossians, Paul enlarged his picture of Christ’s deliverance: “For he has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of the Son he loves” (Colossians 1:13 niv). From outward appearances we are still living in the same world, but our allegiance and “nationality” have been changed! (This is similar to Paul’s message to the Romans in Romans 12:1-2.)

Paul’s “present age” was “evil”; our present age could also be characterized as evil because Satan rules the world (1 John 5:19). The present evil age of Paul’s time was the Greco-Roman world. It was known for its intrigues, murders, adulteries, and military oppression. Has our age gone farther into decadence? Each newspaper contains stories of great wickedness. A man kills a woman because she won’t have sex with him. Several people kill another for twenty dollars so they can buy drugs. A neighbor systematically abuses young children. Millions of unborn children are destroyed with little if any remorse. Satan acts in every age, but we must see the tragedy of sin and the necessity for rescuing people in our own present evil age. The early believers committed themselves to their mission to carry the gospel down through the ages to us. Are we as committed to passing the gospel on to future generations?

 LIFE APPLICATION – DELIVER ME
God’s plan all along was to save us through Jesus’ death. We have been delivered from the power of this present evil age—a world ruled by Satan and full of cruelty, tragedy, temptation, and deception. Being delivered from this evil age means, not that we are taken out of it, but that we are no longer enslaved to it. You were saved to live for God. Does your life reflect your gratitude for being rescued? In what specific ways have you transferred your loyalty from this world to Christ?

According to the will of our God and Father. God’s will is to bring people to himself (1 Timothy 2:4). But sin separates sinful people from a holy God. Thus, God made a way of salvation—the ultimate sacrifice of sending his only Son to die on the cross, taking the penalty for humanity’s sins. People can only be saved through Christ. Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me” (John 14:6 nkjv). Salvation lies in Christ’s work, not in any works we do. Our role is to be glad receivers of what we neither deserve nor earn.

God is the Father, he is also our God and Father. All who believe are adopted into God’s family, becoming heirs with Christ of all God’s promises. Paul expands this theme in chapter 4 of this letter to the Galatians.

1:5 To whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.NKJV Paul’s spiritual depth broke through as he uttered an expression of love and awe upon speaking the holy names “our God and Father” (1:4). Thoughts of God’s love, mercy, and guidance, and Christ’s ultimate sacrifice on our behalf evoke words of praise and thanks. Does the glory of God mean that much to us? Glory belongs to God alone. Even if God had not done so much for us, he would still be the only one deserving glory from his creation.

As believers, we will be able to glorify our God forever and ever because of the promise of eternal life with him. All I know about Jesus Christ lies in His name.

Martin Luther

 

 LIFE APPLICATION – NAMING NAMES
The third commandment (Exodus 20) may bear the distinction of being the most frequently broken of the Decalogue. God’s name is used in vain regularly. But using God’s name this way by unbelievers should not be surprising—those people are being consistent with their attitude toward God.
We believers, on the other hand, ought to reflect on our familiar use of God’s name and the ways in which we refer to Christ. Do we convey reverence and awe? Can those who overhear us give examples of our respect and honor for the Lord’s name? How can we demonstrate for them what the name Jesus really means to us?

With a decisive Amen (“Let it be so,” “Let it come to pass”), Paul closed his introduction to this letter. In these first five verses, Paul touched on what would be the intent of his letter: his authority as an apostle, and the fact that salvation is not by works but by grace through faith in Christ alone.

CARING CONFRONTATION / 1:6-10

Paul was amazed at how easily the believers in the Galatian churches had given up the good news of the gospel of Christ for the bad news that they had been taught. Paul’s concern was not over alternative viewpoints of interpretation; he was warning Galatian Christians about turning from the truth to lies, from what was right to what was wrong.

The apostle made it clear that he was not concerned about competing in popularity with other messengers. He wanted it understood that once the truth of the gospel had been declared, all amendments were false. Paul also predicted dire consequences to those who propagate any false gospel. One of the great difficulties is to keep before the audience’s mind the question of Truth. They always think you are recommending Christianity not because it is true but because it is good.

C. S. Lewis

 

1:6 I am astonished that you are so quickly deserting the one who called you in the grace of Christ and are turning to a different gospel.NRSV The news that the apostle had received about the Galatians left him stunned. In most of his letters, Paul would follow his greeting with a prayer of thanks for his readers based on what he had recently heard about them. Paul thanked God for the Romans and commended them for their well-known faith (Romans 1:8); he thanked God for the Corinthians (despite the moral lapses that he denounced in his letter, 1 Corinthians 1:4-9); he thanked God for the Ephesians (Ephesians 1:15-16), the Philippians (Philippians 1:3-10), the Colossians (Colossians 1:3), and the Thessalonians (1 Thessalonians 1:2-3).

However, no words of thanks occur in this letter; instead, Paul immediately expressed astonishment at the Galatians’ behavior. The expression “I am astonished” (thaumazo) conveys a rebuke similar to our expression, “I can hardly believe what I am hearing about you!” Paul found it difficult to comprehend that the believers could desert the one who called them. The believers were turning away from God (or Christ) himself—the God who loved them and called them because of his great grace in Christ. These believers were throwing aside that grace in order to try to earn their salvation. Paul was amazed that someone would insist on attempting to pay for a free (and priceless) gift!

The verb is in the present tense, “are . . . deserting” (metatithesthe), and was used in military circles to indicate that a soldier was AWOL (absent without leave). The process of desertion, of turning away from the faith, was happening as Paul wrote. This desertion connoted apostasy. Those who turned to this different gospel would no longer be Christians. Because it was in process, Paul was warning them against apostasy. Paul hoped to stop it immediately because desertion from the faith held dire consequences. Part of Paul’s astonishment focused on how quickly the believers were deserting—that is, so soon after Paul’s last visit and/or so soon after the false teachers had begun their destructive work. Apparently, it wasn’t taking much for the Galatians to be led away from the faith and to become enthusiastic about this different gospel.

What was the “different gospel”? If the original gospel involved God calling the Galatians by the grace of Christ, then this alternative “gospel” must invite a different trust and response. The Galatians were being invited to desert the kingdom of Christ for service in a kingdom without grace and, therefore, without hope.

The false teachers, Judaizers, taught that to be saved, Gentile believers had to follow Jewish laws and customs, especially the rite of circumcision. Faith in Christ was not enough. Note that they may have included in their teachings the need for faith in Christ for salvation, but they taught that additional requirements had to be met before true salvation could occur. Their message was “faith plus.” This infuriated Paul because the Judaizers’ message undermined the truth of the good news that salvation is a gift, not a reward for certain works.

Jesus Christ has made the gift of salvation available to all people, not just to Jews. And faith in Christ is the only requirement for salvation. Beware of people who say that we need more than simple faith in Christ to be saved. When people set up additional requirements for salvation, they deny the power of Christ’s death on the cross (see 3:1-5).

 LIFE APPLICATION – THE FATAL FLAW
The gospel of Jesus Christ is good news because it gives us the true life-changing message of hope from God. The world today is flooded with different “gospels,” each claiming to offer an easier, better, more meaningful, more effective plan than God’s original version. Not only do these “gospels” abound in the world; sadly, they even invade the church.
The fatal flaw in every different gospel lies in ignoring or trying to bypass grace. These gospels develop their “hope” from the wisdom of humans (technology, education, science). They assign divine value to ideas and principles limited to this present physical world (humanism, materialism, determinism, scientism), and they glorify self-effort (design-your-own-spirituality, moral progress, self-perfection through some program, or even reincarnation).
We must analyze ourselves and our faith in light of biblical truth. Helpful questions include: Is my life squarely founded on Christ’s gospel? Have I been taking grace for granted? Have I allowed other “requirements” to take their place alongside faith in Christ in my understanding of salvation? Am I living by “another gospel”?

1:7 Not that there is another gospel.NRSV Paul’s sarcastic words in verse 6, “a different gospel,” were still too positive for the error he was resisting; so Paul pointed out that the Judaizers’ teaching was no gospel at all. There is only one way given to us by God to be forgiven of sin—through believing in Jesus Christ as Savior and Lord. No other person, method, or ritual can give eternal life. Attempting to be open-minded and tolerant, some people assert that all religions are equally valid paths to God. In a free society, people have the right to their religious opinions, but this doesn’t guarantee that their ideas are right. God does not accept human-made religion as a substitute for faith in Jesus Christ. He has provided just one way—Jesus Christ (John 14:6). That message alone constitutes the true gospel.

But there are some who are confusing you and want to pervert the gospel of Christ.NRSV The people who were confusing the Galatian believers were zealous Jewish Christians who believed that the Old Testament practices, such as circumcision and dietary restrictions, were required of all believers (see 5:10). As long as Jewish believers made up the majority of the church, their emphasis made little difference. But the influx of Gentile believers with no Jewish background caused problems. Because these teachers wanted to turn the Gentile Christians into Jews, they were called “Judaizers.” This teaching confused the Galatians because they hadn’t heard from Paul about all these acts that they were being told were requirements.

In any event, the Judaizers had perverted the gospel of Christ. This term can be understood as a subjective genitive (Christ’s gospel—the gospel given to us by Christ) and an objective genitive (the gospel about Christ—Christ is the content of the gospel).

 LIFE APPLICATION – IT’S SIMPLE, BUT NOT CHEAP!
Make no mistake, people still find the bold simplicity of the gospel scandalous. “There must be more to it,” they say, “than merely realizing we are sinners, repenting of our sins, and accepting God’s absolutely free gift of forgiveness.”
But we wouldn’t think of asking a baby to pay for the costs of being brought into the world. So how could we imagine any way of meeting the cost for our spiritual birth? Confusion among Christians usually results from forgetting about God’s amazing grace in Jesus Christ. His grace keeps us from confusion.

Many of the newer Galatian Christians were Greeks who were unfamiliar with Jewish laws and customs. The Judaizers were an extreme faction of Jewish Christians. Both groups believed in Christ, but their lifestyles differed considerably. We do not know why the Judaizers traveled so far to teach their mistaken notions to the new Gentile converts in Galatia. They may have been motivated by (1) a sincere wish to integrate Judaism with the new Christian faith, (2) a sincere love for their Jewish heritage, or (3) a jealous desire to destroy Paul’s authority. Whether or not the Judaizers were sincere, their teaching threatened these new churches and had to be countered. Based on Acts 15:24, the elders in Jerusalem denied giving any sanction to the teaching of the Judaizers, so any claim for their authority was false. But more to the point, the effect these “teachers” had on young Christians bears chilling similarities with Jesus’ description of the missionary efforts of the Pharisees: “Woe to you, teachers of the law and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You travel over land and sea to win a single convert, and when he becomes one, you make him twice as much a son of hell as you are” (Matthew 23:15 niv). Whatever the Judaizers’ intentions, their efforts led to confusion. They were loading down people with the requirements of the “law” instead of encouraging them to live by grace in joyful obedience to Christ.

 LIFE APPLICATION –  THE TWIST
A twisting of the truth is more difficult to spot than an outright lie. The Judaizers were twisting the truth about Christ. They claimed to follow him, but they denied that Jesus’ work on the cross was sufficient for salvation. There will always be people who pervert the Good News. Either they do not understand what the Bible teaches, or they are uncomfortable with the truth as it stands. How can we tell when people are twisting the truth? Before accepting the teachings of any group, find out what the group teaches about Jesus Christ. If their teaching does not match the truth in God’s Word, then it is not true.

When Paul said others wanted to pervert the gospel of Christ, he was not rejecting everything Jewish. Paul was a Jew who worshiped in the temple and attended the religious festivals. But he was concerned that nothing get in the way of the simple truth of his message: salvation, for Jews and Gentiles alike, is through faith in Jesus Christ alone. Any other teaching is a perversion of that truth. The term “pervert” (metastrepsai) goes beyond the idea of confusion or complication; it implies reversal, or making something the opposite of what it was originally. Those who were trying to “improve” on Paul’s message to the Galatians were in danger of destroying their faith.

Paul’s concern invites the question: What is the gospel of Christ to which he was referring? At this time, the Galatians would not have had much more than eyewitness accounts of the life and ministry of Jesus. The application of that history and the invitation to believe had been given to them through Paul. We who have the Gospels in hand are perhaps able to answer the question: Was Paul himself consistent to the message and claims of Jesus as they are recorded in the Gospels? How did Jesus define the gospel?

The book of Mark introduces itself as “the gospel about Jesus Christ, the Son of God” (Mark 1:1). Mark’s record of Jesus’ first public message indicates that Jesus was the source of the term good news, or gospel in referring to himself and his message: “Jesus came to Galilee, proclaiming the good news of God, and saying, ‘The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God has come near; repent, and believe in the good news'”(Mark 1:14-15 nrsv). Twice in this Gospel (Mark 8:35; 10:29) Jesus placed equal and supreme value on the gospel and himself, claiming that he and the gospel were worthy of the most devoted followers. Jesus also prophesied that the gospel would be carried worldwide (Mark 13:10). Jesus and the gospel cannot be separated; to understand either one properly you must understand both. Jesus presents in person the invitation described in the gospel: Repent and believe. Paul was rightly amazed that the Galatian believers were swallowing the pseudomedicine of those who offered a works religion when they already knew they could be healed by God’s grace.

 LIFE APPLICATION – ON GUARD!
People pervert the gospel of Jesus Christ in many ways. Some are blatant; some are more subtle. Be on guard against the following strategies of those who pervert:
Weakening: those who undermine or deny the foundation of Jesus Christ and faith in him. They say, for example, that the Bible isn’t true and that the Resurrection is a myth.
Diluting: those who allow half measures to stand instead of absolute moral claims. They say, for example, that sex outside of marriage is all right for consenting adults.
Distorting: those who misrepresent what the Bible says in order to make it either “more palatable” or to make it appear to say what it does not. They say, for example, that the Bible only applied to people at the time it was written.
Blending: those who readily admit as authoritative the teachings of sources other than the Bible. For example, the Mormons regard the Book of Mormon as authoritative in addition to the Bible.
Poisoning: those who deliberately mix dangerous error and lies in with their teaching. They say, for example, that you should leave your spouse if you’re not being fulfilled in your marriage.
Deflecting: those who ricochet off of key words to promote their own ideas. They use the “church of Christ” to promote their own empire.

1:8 But even if we or an angel from heaven should preach a gospel other than the one we preached to you, let him be eternally condemned!NIV Paul denounced the Judaizers’ perversion of the gospel of Christ. Using strong language to deal with this life-or-death issue, Paul said that even if an angel from heaven were to come preaching another message, that angel should be eternally condemned (other versions say “accursed,” meaning doomed to destruction). If an angel came preaching another message, he would not be from heaven, no matter how he looked. (This passage, for instance, strongly refutes the claim by Mormons regarding the source of Joseph Smith’s teaching, that the angel Moroni appeared to him.)

Some think that Paul was referring ironically to the leaders of the Jerusalem church. Others think he was springboarding off the Jewish belief that angels had delivered the Law to Moses at Mount Sinai (3:19; Hebrews 2:2). Most likely, Paul was referring to the emissaries of Satan. The outward person of the messenger does not validate his message; rather, the nature of the message validates the messenger.

Alan Cole

 

 LIFE APPLICATION – SLIPS AND FALLS
Paul included himself among those who ought to be held suspect if they preach a different message. Once right does not necessarily mean always right. Recent times have been filled with stories of ministers who have fallen into sin. Their failures have done great harm to those who trusted in Christ under their ministries.
Is it possible that God allows some very successful ministers to fall in order to remind all of us who we are supposed to be trusting? Charisma or past effectiveness does not exempt anyone from remaining true to God’s Word. None of us become spiritual enough to make our own rules as we go along!

In 2 Corinthians 11:14-15, Paul warned that Satan masquerades as an angel of light. Here he invoked a curse (anathema, see note below at 1:9) on any angel who spreads a false gospel—a fitting response to an emissary of hell. Paul extended that curse to include himself and any of the apostles (we) if they should pervert the gospel. For in the case of both apostles or angels, faithfulness in communicating the unchanging truth from God was the ultimate test of their rightful authority.

If the truth is changed, the teacher is false, regardless of his or her qualifications, accomplishments, or experience. Paul has already noted that there is no other gospel (1:7), thus a gospel other than the one we preached to you would be false. The gospel teaching must not be changed, for the truth of the gospel never changes.

1:9 As we have already said, so now I say again: If anybody is preaching to you a gospel other than what you accepted, let him be eternally condemned!NIV Paul’s words As we have already said could refer to a warning Paul gave the Galatian Christians at the time he and Barnabas preached the gospel to them, or simply to his words in verse 8. In either case, Paul knew that some would come to distort the gospel, and so he had warned the new converts. Indeed Jesus himself had warned his disciples that false teachers would come, attempting to lead people away from the truth (Matthew 24:11; Mark 13:22-23).

In verse 8, Paul condemned anyone who preached a gospel “other than the one we preached to you”; here, he condemned anyone who preached a gospel other than what you accepted. In both cases, the gospel is the same—the apostles taught and the Galatians had believed the truth of the gospel of Jesus Christ. The tense of the verb “accepted” (parelabete) signifies once-for-all action. Paul and Barnabas preached; the Galatians accepted. That decisive experience did not need to be added to by certain actions required by the false teachers. The acceptance of the message alone accomplished their salvation.

 LIFE APPLICATION – THE CURSE
Paul’s repeated use of the condemnation “let that one be accursed!” (1:8-9 nrsv) conveys the most severe penalties imaginable for distorting the truth of the gospel. In the larger biblical context, “accursed” (anathema) relates to the extreme curses that were invoked and carried out against blatant sin in the Old Testament (see Exodus 17:13-16; Numbers 21:2-3; Joshua 6:17; 7:12). The deliberate repetition by Paul indicates that the curse was no angry outburst. His intent was deadly serious. And he included himself as liable to the same judgment of God if he were to be guilty of preaching an altered gospel. The matter was of such importance that Paul was willing to endure the same measure on himself that he invoked for others (Matthew 7:1-2).

1:10 Am I now seeking human approval, or God’s approval? Or am I trying to please people? If I were still pleasing people, I would not be a servant of Christ.NRSV Undoubtedly the Judaizers had accused Paul of compromise, saying that he taught freedom from the Jewish law to the Gentiles in order to meet their approval and thus win as many converts as possible. The little word now has great meaning, for Paul meant, in essence, “Reread what I just said and tell me whose approval I’m seeking.” Anyone seeking approval from either human camp—the Galatian believers or the Judaizers—would not use such harsh language, berating the believers and cursing the false teachers. No, Paul’s purpose was always to seek God’s approval.

 LIFE APPLICATION – WAS PAUL TOO NARROW-MINDED?
No! Everything that we know about Paul shows him to have been a man of keen intellect, eager to engage in debate and reason about the truth of the gospel. This letter itself demonstrates that Paul could exercise authority without being autocratic.
But here he was dealing with the gospel itself. He was not discussing a theory, view, or concept about which there might be several human perspectives. Rather, the subject was the unchangeable truth of God’s message. The gospel was revealed by God (see 1:1, 11, 16). Paul did not own the message; he was owned by it! Christ had ordered him to pass on a dynamic message of salvation (see Romans 1:16) that must be kept pure and direct.
Some will always be offended by the truth of Christ. Both subtle and forceful pressure will come to change the message. But our efforts to be tolerant of others must never bring us to the point of betraying the gospel of Jesus Christ.

Much of church growth philosophy centers on a “market” approach, discovering what people want and need. For a culture that treats God and the Bible as irrelevant, this approach may be the only way to break through barriers. But we must have our motives clearly understood. If our desire is to please people, our packaging of the gospel may take priority over the content. If our purpose is evangelism, then reaching people through felt needs can be legitimate. We must not forget that our allegiance to Christ comes first. We must never water down his authority in the life of a believer in order to bring him or her into a church.

While it is noteworthy that in some instances Paul did attempt to reconcile disagreeing believers when no vital issue was at stake (see, for example, 1 Corinthians 8-9), he was completely unbending when the truth of the gospel was the issue. There could be no compromise—the truth stood on its own, unchanging. Paul’s conversion itself displeased many people (especially his fellow Jewish zealots), so Paul knew from the beginning of his Christian life that his goal could never be to please people.

 LIFE APPLICATION – CONFLICT OF INTEREST
Pleasing people conflicts with being Christ’s servant. True servants know the master and the master’s priorities. They are not diverted from the main tasks by what other “servants” or would-be “masters” tell them to do.
Gaining the approval of others distracts us from pleasing God. As we do God’s will, we must resist the desire to please people.
The clarifying question of the believer will always be, Who am I really serving? If the answer is “people,” then we will be tossed back and forth by their conflicting demands and expectations. But if our answer is consistently “Christ,” we will only have one person to please and not have to worry about how much or how little we are pleasing others. Seeking to serve Christ alone will settle many conflicts of interest!

Paul’s use of the word still offers us a glimpse into his inner self and his past life as a Pharisee. Paul understood that by living a strict, law-abiding, judgmental, and appearance-focused life of a Pharisee, his goal had really been to please people. Religious and pious people may receive mountains of praise for their supposed character and good works. Christians are rarely accorded such praise. Thus if Paul were still pleasing people, he would not be a servant of Christ. As there is no compromise with the truth, there is no compromise for the Christian with the “present evil age” (1:4). The life of serving Christ does not put people in the limelight, offer great material rewards, or promise worldly security. Thus, if Paul wanted to please people, he could have chosen many other routes or stayed a Jewish Pharisee. Instead, Paul’s conversion changed his life so completely that his only goal was to please God and serve Christ (see also 6:12-14; 1 Thessalonians 2:4). A servant can have only one master (Matthew 6:24).

 LIFE APPLICATION – PLEASE, PLEASE
Do you spend your life trying to please everybody? Paul had to speak harshly to the Christians in Galatia because they were in serious danger. He did not apologize for his straightforward words, knowing that he could not serve Christ faithfully if he allowed the Galatian Christians to remain on the wrong track. Whose approval are you seeking—others’ or God’s? Pray for the courage to seek God’s approval above anyone else’s.

Source: Bruce B. Barton et al., Life Application Bible Commentary – Galatians, (Wheaton, IL: Tyndale, 1994), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, Under: “GALATIANS 1”.

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