By J. W. McGarvey and Philip Y. Pendleton
Numbers within [ ] indicates original page numbers
EPISTLE TO THE GALATIANS. EXHORTATIONS TO STEADFASTNESS IN 5:1-6:18. I. EXHORTATION TO MAINTAIN FREEDOM 5:1-26. 1 For freedom did Christ set us
free: stand fast therefore, and be not entangled again in a yoke of bondage.
[This verse continues the thought of the last chapter, and forms a connecting
link between it and this section. It means that Christ made us free, not
incidentally, but with the very design that we should cherish and enjoy our
freedom, and we should therefore stand fast in it, and not return to bondage.] 2 Behold, I Paul say unto you, that, if ye receive
circumcision, Christ will profit you nothing. [By the use of an exclamation
followed by his name, Paul calls attention to the sentence, or decree, which, as
an apostle, he pronounces in the case. Though circumcision of itself might be
nothing (v. 6; Acts 16:3), yet if the Galatians looked to it, and through it to
the covenant which it represented, for justification, or even their perfection
in Christian grace, they forfeited all their rights in Christ. Though both
covenants were of God, they could not be confused without disastrous results.
Though a man's mortal and spiritual bodies may both be
from God, the soul which has advanced to the spiritual body would forfeit its
salvation by returning to the corrupt mortal body.] 3
Yea, I testify again to every man that receiveth of
[279] circumcision, that he is a debtor to do the whole
law. [The apostle here gives the reason for what he has said in the previous
verse. Circumcision was, in its symbolic significance, an entrance into
covenant relations with God under the terms of the old covenant, and as that
covenant embraced not a part, but the whole law, the covenantee,
or circumcised person, was obliged to observe the whole law, or forfeit his
claims to life. Paul had probably fully explained this fact on one of his
previous visits, and so he now reiterates it.] 4 Ye are
severed from Christ, ye who would be justified by the law; ye are fallen away
from grace. [Therefore, in being circumcised for the purpose of being
justified by the law ye have been guilty of a complete apostasy; there is no
longer any justification for you, for you are not under the grace of Christ,
but rest under the condemnation of the law.] 5 For we
through the Spirit by faith wait for the hope of righteousness. [That ye
have fallen from grace is apparent by your contrast with us; for we true
Christians, not trusting in carnal ordinances, but strengthened by the Spirit,
wait for the fulfillment of the hope which righteousness by faith, instead of
by law, insures to us.] 6 For
in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth
anything, nor uncircumcision; but faith working
through love. [It makes no difference in God's sight what a man has been,
whether a circumcised Jew, or an uncircumcised, Gentile. There is, in his
sight, no merit in either condition. That which he values is a faith in his
Son, Christ Jesus, which manifests itself in loving service to him.] 7 Ye were running well; who hindered you that ye should not
obey the truth? 8 This persuasion came not of him
that calleth you. [The apostle again borrows a
metaphor from the foot-race of the Grecian game. In their faith and love and
works the Christians were running in a course obedient to the truth, but some
one had broken up the race-course, and had persuaded them to desist from
running. Who had done this? Paul does not answer, but states the important fact
in the matter that whoever these persuaders were they were not the agents of
the God who had [280] called them to enter the race. The
term "hindered" is military and indicates the embarrassment of an
army's progress by tearing down bridges, etc.] 9 A
little leaven leaveneth the whole lump. [Paul
felt that by this time those who read his letter would be saying that he was
censuring the whole church for a course of conduct pursued only by a small
minority, but he quotes one of the proverbs of the New Testament (1 Cor. 5:6) to show that the effect of minorities, if
tolerated, becomes a menace to majorities.] 10 I have
confidence to you-ward in the Lord, that ye will be none otherwise minded: but
he that troubleth you shall bear his judgment,
whosoever he be. [The apostle here expresses his
confidence that they will take the same view of the situation that he does, and
avoid the contaminating influence of the minority by disciplining it or its
ringleader, no matter who he may be.] 11 But 1, brethren, if I still preach circumcision, why am I
still persecuted? then hath the stumbling-block of the
cross been done away. [It is evident that in this verse Paul defends
himself against the charge of having taught the necessity of circumcision by
having circumcised Timothy. His answer is that false brethren might misconstrue
his act for the purpose of founding false teaching upon it, but that the Jews,
the real parties in interest, placed a truer construction upon the act, for
they still continued to persecute him as an enemy to circumcision. If Paul had
preached circumcision, the stumbling-block of the cross would have been done away.
Paul taught that the whole Jewish system of ordinances perished at the cross, and that on the cross Jesus made the one and only
atonement for sin. Such teaching was a stumbling-block to the Jews. Had Paul
rejected the doctrine of the cross and preached circumcision, as these Judaizers contended that he did when they wished to
countenance their errors with his authority, he would have been a hero among
the Jews.] 12 I would that they that unsettle you would
even go beyond circumcision. [If those who trouble you insist on mutilating
themselves, I wish they would go further and cut [281] themselves
entirely off from the church. Having fully established the liberty of the
gospel, the apostle now turns to correct any false antinomian theories which
might have arisen out of a misconception of his words. |
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II. EXHORTATIONS TO MUTUAL HELPFULNESS. 6:1-18. 1 Brethren, even if a man be
overtaken [literally, caught] in any trespass, ye who are spiritual,
restore [a surgical term] such a one in a spirit of gentleness; looking
to thyself, lest thou also be tempted. [Brethren, if a
man be surprised, or caught unaware by temptation, and so fall into sin, ye who
have not so done, but have walked according to the guidance of the Spirit, deal
gently with such a sinner. Do not amputate him, as a piece of gangrene
flesh, from the church body, but so handle him as to restore him. Also do not
do this in a proud, Pharisaical spirit, but in the spirit of gentleness,
bearing in mind that thou thyself art not beyond the reach of temptation.] 2 Bear ye one another's burdens [Greek, bara, burden, or
distresses], and so fulfil the law of
Christ. 3 For if a man thinketh
himself to be [284] something when he is nothing, he
deceiveth himself. 4 But let each
man prove his own work, and then shall he have his glorying in regard of
himself alone, and not of his neighbor. 5 For each man
shall bear his own burden. [Greek, phortion,
burden or responsibility. Bear one another's burden of trial and
suffering, those burdens which come by reason of infirmity of the flesh, and so
fulfill the law of Christ, which bids us love one another (John 13:34; 15:12; 1
John 3:23). For if a man think himself to be something, etc., i. e., so good that he can not be
tempted, or so strong that he can not fall, or so perfect that he will never
need the patience and sympathy of his brethren, when in reality he is nothing, i. e., no better than other men, he
deceives himself. But let each man prove his own work instead of criticizing
and judging the work of others, and then shall he have glory in himself alone,
and not because he seems superior to his neighbor by comparison of his work
with that of his neighbor. And it behooves us to be concerned about our own
work, and to thus test it, for each one of us shall bear his own load of duty
and accountability, for which alone he shall be called to answer in the
judgment.] 6 But let him that is taught in the word
communicate unto him that teacheth in all good
things. [Let the one taught remunerate his teacher, bringing him pecuniary
aid, honor, reverence and all other good things. The financial support of
teachers is elsewhere referred to (1 Tim. 5:17). Failure to contribute funds to
this good end, no doubt, suggested what follows (compare 2 Cor.
9:7, 8); but the paragraph is by no means to be confined to such failure, for
the language is too general.] 7 Be not deceived; God is
not mocked: for whatsoever a man soweth, that shall
he also reap. 8 For he that soweth
unto his own flesh shall of the flesh reap corruption; but he that soweth unto the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap eternal
life. [God is not to be deceived by false appearances, and whoever hopes to
overreach him only deceives himself (2 Kings 5:15-27; Acts 5:4
,5, 9). It is a broad law of God's (and he can not be deceived about it)
that whatever a man sows he shall [285] reap. As in the
natural world he reaps grain for grain, so in the moral world, if he sows
fleshly indulgence, he shall reap corruption, and so in the spiritual world, if
he sows to the Spirit of God, he shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting.] 9 And let us not be weary in well-doing: for in due season
we shall reap, if we faint not. 10 So then, as we have
opportunity, let us work that which is good toward all men, and especially
toward them that are of the household of the faith. [And let us who are
sowing in this latter manner not grow weary in the good work, for in due season
we shall reap (Jas. 5:7, 8) if we do not grow disheartened and quit. And
because we are then sure to reap, let us sow our harvest of good deeds as often
as we have opportunity to sow, and let us do good toward all men, especially
toward all our brethren in God's household of believers.] 11
See with how large letters I write unto you with mine own hand. [There is
no indication that Paul had ever before written to the Galatians, and they were
probably not familiar with his handwriting. To call attention, therefore, to
the fact that the amanuensis has now turned over the stylus, or pen, to him,
and that he is putting his own closing lines as an autograph to the Epistle, he
bids them note the difference in the letters. They were much larger than those
of the amanuensis. This large lettering is taken by some as an
additional evidence that Paul's thorn in the flesh was defective
eyesight.] 12 As many as desire to make a fair show in
the flesh, they compel you to be circumcised; only that they may not be
persecuted for the cross of Christ. 13 For not even they
who receive circumcision do themselves keep the law; but they desire to have
you circumcised, that they may glory in your flesh. [In taking the pen in
his own hand it was natural that he should show his earnestness in what he had
dictated about circumcision and the Judaizers,
tracing with his own fingers a line or two more on that subject. This,
therefore, he does, telling them that all those who desire to make a fair show
in the flesh, i. e., to please men
by complying with worldly demand, seek to compel them (the Galatians) to be
[286] circumcised. They did this for no zeal for
circumcision, but in order to escape the persecution of their Jewish brethren
for adherence to the doctrine of the cross. Moreover, these Judaizers
who were thus urging circumcision did not do so from any zeal for the law, for
they made no effort themselves to keep it, but they did it that they might
boast to other strict and unconverted Jews how they were making Jews out of
Gentile Christians. Thus their motives were not religious and holy, but base
and selfish.] 14 But far be it
from me to glory, save in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the
world hath been crucified unto me, and I unto the world. [Let these glory
if they will, in their wicked activity against the cross, but God forbid that I
should glory save in that very cross against which they lift their hands, the
cross by which the world has died to me, so that it no longer allures me with
its false glories, or terrifies me with its frowns and threats; and by which I,
in my turn, have died with Christ as to the world, so that I no longer enjoy or
take part in its sinful lusts, and no longer rest under its sentence of
condemnation.] 15 For neither is
circumcision anything, nor uncircumcision, but a new
creature. [I glory in this cross of death from which I have been born
again, a new creature in Christ, because, in this new dispensation of Christ's,
former things have lost their value. As a Jew I once held myself superior to
Gentiles, and despised them ; and had I been of the
Gentiles I would, no doubt, have looked at things from their standpoint, and so
I should have looked with contempt upon the Jews; but in Christ I have died to
all this worldly pride, for in his dispensation there is no advantage or profit
in the circumcision which makes a Jew, or the lack of it which makes a Gentile.
The whole profit lies in being born again from either of these states (John 3:3)
so as to become a child of grace, a recipient of justification, an heir of God.] 16 And as many as
shall walk by this rule, peace be upon them,
and mercy, and upon the |
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