Verse 1
Galatians 3:1. St Paul having,
by many arguments, proved
himself to be a real apostle,
and showed that his knowledge of
the gospel was given him by
immediate revelation from the
Lord Jesus, proceeds in this and
the following chapter to treat
of the doctrines in dispute
between him and the false
teachers, and especially of that
of justification, which these
Jewish teachers affirmed could
not be obtained by the Gentiles
unless they were circumcised,
and observed the ceremonies of
the law of Moses; but which Paul
insisted, was simply and only by
faith in Christ. And to impress
the Galatians the more strongly
with a sense of the danger of
the doctrine which his opposers
taught, he here charges them
with want of understanding or
consideration, for listening to
it, saying: O foolish Galatians
— Or thoughtless, as the word
ανοητοι may be properly
rendered; for it not only
signifies persons void of
understanding, but also persons
who, though they have
understanding, do not form right
judgments of things, through
want of consideration. “The
apostle, by calling the
Galatians foolish, doth not
contradict our Saviour’s
doctrine, (Matthew 5:22,)
because he doth it not, εικη,
rashly, without cause, saith
Theophylact, nor out of anger
and ill-will to them, but from
an ardent desire to make them
sensible of their folly.” —
Whitby. Who hath bewitched, or
deceived, you — For the word
βασκανειν is often used for
deceiving another with false
appearances, after the manner of
jugglers; that ye should not
obey — Should not continue to
obey, that is, to be persuaded
of, and influenced by; the truth
— That has been so fully
declared and proved to you;
before whose eyes Jesus Christ
hath been evidently set forth —
By our preaching; as if he had
been crucified among you — As if
he had said, Who hath so deluded
you, as to prevail with you thus
to contradict both your own
reason and experience? For ye
have been as fully and clearly
informed of the nature and
design of Christ’s sufferings,
as if they had been endured by
him in your very sight; and you
have witnessed their efficacy in
procuring for you reconciliation
with God, peace of conscience,
and the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Verses 2-4
Galatians 3:2-4. This only would
I learn of you — That is, this
one argument might convince you;
received ye the Spirit — In his
gifts and graces, in his witness
and fruits. See Galatians 4:6;
Galatians 5:22. By the works of
the law — By your observing the
ceremonies of Moses’s law, or by
your embracing the doctrine
which inculcates the necessity
of complying with these rites?
or by the hearing of faith — By
receiving and obeying that
doctrine, which teaches that
justification is attained by
faith in Christ, and in the
truths and promises of his
gospel? Are ye so foolish — So
thoughtless, as not to consider
what you yourselves have
experienced? having begun in the
Spirit — Having entered upon
your Christian course under the
light and grace of the Holy
Spirit, received by faith in
Christ and his gospel; do you
now, when you ought to be more
enlightened and renewed, more
acquainted with the power of
faith, and therefore more
spiritual; expect to be made
perfect by the flesh? — Do you
think to retain and complete
either your justification or
sanctification, by giving up
that faith whereby you received
both, and depending on the law,
which is a gross and carnal
thing when opposed to the
gospel? “The law of Moses is
called the flesh,” says
Macknight, “because of the
carnal form of worship, by
sacrifices and purifications of
the body, which it prescribed;
because that form of worship did
not cleanse the conscience of
the worshipper, but only his
body, and because the Israelites
were put under the law by their
fleshly descent from Abraham.”
Have ye suffered — Both from the
zealous Jews and from the
heathen; so many things — For
adhering to the gospel; in vain
— So as to lose all the
blessings which ye might have
obtained by enduring to the end?
Will you give up the benefit of
all those sufferings, and lose,
in a great measure at least, the
reward of them, by relinquishing
what is so material in that
system of doctrine you have been
suffering for? If it be yet in
vain — Which I am willing to
hope it is not entirely, and
that, however your principles
may have been shaken, yet God
will preserve you from being
quite overthrown.
Verses 5-9
Galatians 3:5-9. He therefore —
Namely, God; that ministereth to
you the Spirit — Who is
continually giving you
additional supplies of grace by
the Spirit; and worketh
miracles, &c. — Bestows the
extraordinary gifts of the
Spirit upon you; doeth he it by
the works of the law — Through
your hearing and embracing the
doctrine of those who inculcate
the necessity of observing the
ceremonies of the law; or by the
hearing of faith — By your
hearing, receiving, and
acquiescing in the doctrine of
justification and salvation by
faith in Christ and his gospel?
Or doeth he it in confirmation
of men’s preaching justification
by observing regal rites, or of
their preaching justification by
faith? Even as Abraham, &c. —
Doubtless he does it in
confirmation of that grand
doctrine, that we are justified
by faith even as Abraham was.
The apostle, both in this and in
the epistle to the Romans, makes
great use of the instance of
Abraham; the rather, because
from Abraham the Jews drew their
great argument (as they do at
this day) both for their own
continuance in Judaism, and for
denying the Gentiles to be the
church of God. As Abraham
believed God — When God said,
Thy seed shall be as the stars;
and it was accounted to him for
righteousness — Because his
belief of this promise implied
that he entertained just
conceptions of the divine power,
goodness, and veracity. See
notes on Romans 4:3-22. Know
then that they which are of
faith — Who receive God’s truths
and promises in faith, relying
on the power, goodness, and
faithfulness of God to fulfil
them; the same are the children
of Abraham — Show themselves to
be his spiritual children, of
the same disposition with him,
and entitled to the same
blessings of which he was the
heir. And the Scripture — That
is, the Holy Spirit, by whose
inspiration the Holy Scriptures
were written; foreseeing that
God would justify the heathen —
When he should call them by his
grace, in the same manner as he
justified Abraham; only through
faith, preached before the
gospel unto Abraham — Declared
to him the glad tidings of
salvation; saying, In, or
through thee — As the father of
the Messiah; shall all nations —
Gentiles as well as Jews; be
blessed — That is to say, by
their faith in that glorious
person who is to descend from
thee, all persons, of whatever
nation they be, who imitate thy
ready and obedient faith, shall
obtain justification, and all
other blessings, as Abraham did
by his faith. So then — The
inference to be drawn is; all
they — And they only; who are of
faith — Who believe God as
Abraham did, and show their
faith by their works; are
blessed with faithful Abraham —
Shall inherit the promises made
to him, and the blessings
promised, though they are as he
was when he first received these
promises, in a state of
uncircumcision, and always
remain in that state, and never
comply with the ceremonies of
the Mosaic law.
Verse 10
Galatians 3:10. As many as are
of the works of the law — Of the
number of those who seek
justification thereby; are under
— Or liable to; the curse: for
it is written, (Deuteronomy
27:26,) Cursed is every one that
continueth not in all things,
&c. — Or, as it is there
expressed, that confirmeth not
all the words of this law to do
them. So that it required what
no man on earth can perform,
namely, universal, perfect,
uninterrupted, and perpetual
obedience. The apostle, it must
be observed, in quoting this
passage from the book of
Deuteronomy, follows the
translation of the LXX., the
Hebrew word, which our
translators have rendered
confirmeth, signifying also
continueth, and having been so
translated, 1 Samuel 13:14, Thy
kingdom shall not continue; the
apostle, following the LXX., has
added the words, every one and
all, and written in this book.
“But,” as Macknight observes,
“they make no alteration in the
sense of the passage; for the
indefinite proposition, cursed
is he, hath the same meaning
with cursed is every one; and
all things written in the book
of the law, is perfectly the
same with the words of this law;
which, as is plain from the
context, means not any
particular law, but the law of
Moses in general.”
Verse 11-12
Galatians 3:11-12. That no man
is justified by his obedience to
the law in the sight of God —
Whatever he may be in the sight
of man; is further evident —
From the words of Habakkuk, who
hath said nothing of men’s being
justified by works, but hath
declared, The just shall live by
faith — That is, the man who is
accounted just or righteous
before God, shall be made and
continue such, and consequently
shall live a spiritual life
here, and receive eternal life
hereafter, by faith. This is the
way God hath chosen: see on
Romans 1:17. And the law —
Strictly considered; is not of
faith — Doth not allow, or
countenance, the seeking of
salvation in such a way. In
other words, the seeking
justification, by keeping the
law, whether moral or
ceremonial, is quite a different
thing from seeking it by faith.
For the law saith not, Believe,
but, Do, and live; its language
is, The man that doeth them —
Namely, the things commanded;
shall live in, or by them — That
is, he who perfectly and
constantly conforms himself to
these precepts, shall have a
right to life and everlasting
happiness, in consequence
thereof; but he that breaks them
must bear the penalty, without
any further assistance from a
law, which, being in one
instance violated, must for ever
condemn the transgressor. See on
Leviticus 18:5.
Verse 13-14
Galatians 3:13-14. Christ —
Christ alone; the abruptness of
the sentence shows a holy
indignation at those who reject
so great a blessing; hath
redeemed us — Or, hath bought us
off, whether Jews or Gentiles;
from the curse of the law — The
curse which the law denounces
against all transgressors of it,
or the punishment threatened to
them. Dr. Whitby proves, in his
note on this verse, that the
violation of the law given to
Adam was attended with a curse,
as well as that given to the
Israelites by Moses, and that it
is the more general curse.
Nearly to the same purpose
speaks Dr. Macknight, thus: —
“That the persons here said to
be bought off from the curse of
the law, are the Gentiles as
well as the Jews, is evident
from Galatians 3:10, where the
apostle tells us, As many as are
of the works of the law are
under the curse; for the
proposition being general, it
implies that the Gentiles as
well as the Jews are under the
curse, and need to be bought
off. This appears likewise from
the purpose for which Christ is
said (Galatians 3:14) to have
bought us off; namely, that the
blessing of Abraham might come
on the nations, that is, on both
Jews and Gentiles. Next, the
curse of the law, from which all
are bought off by Christ, is not
a curse peculiar to the law of
Moses. For as the Gentiles never
were under that law, they could
have no concern with its curse.
But it is the curse of that more
ancient law of works, under
which Adam and Eve fell, and
which, through their fall, came
on all their posterity. Also it
is the curse of the law of
nature, under which all mankind,
as the subjects of God’s
universal moral government, are
lying for having broken that
law. These curses are called by
the general name of the curse of
the law; not as being peculiar
to the law of Moses, but because
they were published in the law
of Moses. From this curse of the
law of works, Christ hath bought
us off, by becoming a curse for
us. For in the view of his
death, to be accomplished in due
time, God allowed Adam and his
posterity a short life on earth,
and resolved to raise them all
from the dead, that every one
may receive reward, or
punishment, according to the
deeds done by him in the body.
Further, being bought off by
Christ from the curse of the law
of works, mankind, at the fall,
were bought off from law itself;
not indeed as a rule of life,
but as a rule of justification;
and had a trial appointed to
them under a more gracious
dispensation, in which not a
perfect obedience to law, but
the obedience of faith is
required in order to their
obtaining eternal life. Of this
gracious dispensation, or
covenant, St. Paul hath given a
clear account,” Romans 5:18. The
same writer observes further
here, “Christ’s dying on the
cross is called his becoming a
curse; that is, an accursed
person, a person ignominiously
punished as a malefactor: not
because he was really a
malefactor, and the object of
God’s displeasure, but because
he was punished in the manner in
which accursed persons, or
malefactors, are punished. He
was not a transgressor, but he
was numbered with the
transgressors, Isaiah 53:12.”
That the blessing of Abraham —
The blessing promised to him;
might come on the Gentiles also;
that we — Who believe, whether
Jews or Gentiles; might receive
the promise of the Spirit
through faith — As the evidence
of our being justified by faith,
and of our being the sons of
God, Galatians 4:5-7. This
promise of the Spirit, which
includes all the other promises,
is not explicitly mentioned in
the covenant with Abraham, but
it is implied in the promise,
(Genesis 22:17,) In blessing I
will bless thee; and is
expressly mentioned by the
prophets, Isaiah 44:3; Ezekiel
39:29; Joel 2:28.
Verse 15
Galatians 3:15. I speak after
the manner of men — I illustrate
this by a familiar instance,
taken from the practice of men:
or, I argue on the principles of
common equity, according to what
is the allowed rule of all human
compacts: Though it be but a
man’s covenant — That is, the
covenant of a man with his
fellow-creature: yet if it be
confirmed — Legally, by mutual
promise, engagement, and seal;
no man — No, not the covenanter
himself, unless something
unforeseen occur, which cannot
be the case with God;
disannulleth — What was agreed
to by it; or addeth thereto —
Any new condition, or altereth
the terms of it, without the
consent of the other stipulating
party.
Verse 16
Galatians 3:16. Now to Abraham,
&c. — To apply this to the case
before us. The promises relating
to the justification of
believers, and the blessings
consequent thereon, were made
first by God to Abraham and his
seed, who are expressly
mentioned as making a party with
him in the covenant. He saith
not, And to seeds, as of many —
As if the promises belonged to
all his seed, both natural and
spiritual, or to several kinds
of seed; but as of one — “The
apostle having affirmed,
(Galatians 3:15,) that,
according to the customs of men,
none but the parties themselves
can set aside or alter a
covenant that is ratified, he
observes, in this verse, that
the promises in the covenant
with Abraham were made to him
and his seed;” to him, Genesis
12:3; In thee shall all the
families, or tribes, of the
earth be blessed: to his seed,
Genesis 22:18; and in thy seed
shall all the nations of the
earth be blessed. “Now, since by
the oath, which God sware to
Abraham, after he had laid Isaac
on the altar, both promises were
ratified, the apostle reasons
justly, when he affirms that
both promises must be fulfilled.
And having shown, (Galatians
3:9,) that the promise to
Abraham, to bless all the
families of the earth in him,
means their being blessed as
Abraham had been, not with
justification through the law of
Moses, as the Jews affirmed, but
with justification by faith, he
proceeds, in this passage, to
consider the promise made to
Abraham’s seed, that in it
likewise all the nations of the
earth should be blessed. And
from the words of the promise,
which are not, And in thy seeds,
but, And in thy seed, he argues
that the seed in which the
nations of the earth should be
blessed, is not Abraham’s seed
in general, but one of his seed
in particular, namely, Christ;
who, by dying for all nations,
hath delivered them from the
curse of the law, that the
blessing of justification by
faith might come on believers of
all nations, through Christ, as
was promised to Abraham and to
Christ. To this argument it hath
been objected, that the word
seed was never used by the
Hebrews in the plural number,
except to denote the seeds of
vegetables, Daniel 1:12.” To
this it may be answered, “That,
notwithstanding the Hebrews
commonly used the word seed
collectively, to denote a
multitude of children, they used
it likewise for a single person,
and especially a son, Genesis
3:15; I will put enmity between
thy seed and her seed: it shall
bruise thy head, and thou shalt
bruise his heel. And Eve,
speaking of Seth, says, (Genesis
4:25,) God hath appointed me
another seed instead of Abel,
whom Cain slew. The word seed
being thus applied to denote a
single person, as well as a
multitude, is ambiguous, and
therefore the Jews could not
certainly know that they were to
be instruments of blessing the
nations, unless it had been
said, And in thy seeds, or sons.
And from the apostle’s argument,
we may presume the word was used
in the plural, to denote either
a multitude or a diversity of
children. In this sense, Eve had
two seeds in her two sons, as is
evident from her calling Seth
another seed. So likewise
Abraham had two seeds in Isaac
and Ishmael. See Genesis
21:12-13. Now, because God
termed Ishmael Abraham’s seed,
perhaps Ishmael’s descendants
affirmed that they also were the
seed of Abraham in which the
nations were to be blessed. And
if the Jewish doctors confuted
their claim, by observing, that
in the promise it is not said,
in seeds, that is, in sons, as
God would have said, if he had
meant both Ishmael and Isaac,
but in thy seed, the apostle
might, with propriety, turn
their own argument against
themselves, especially as the
Jews were one of the nations of
the earth that were to be
blessed in Abraham’s seed.
Lastly, to use the word seed for
a single person was highly
proper in the covenant with
Abraham, wherein God declared
his gracious purpose of saving
mankind; because that term leads
us back to the original promise,
that the seed, or son of the
woman, should bruise the
serpent’s head.” — Macknight.
Which is Christ — In Christ, and
in no other of Abraham’s seed,
have all the nations of the
earth been blessed. They have
not been blessed in Isaac,
although it was said of him, In
Isaac shall thy seed be called.
Neither have they all been
blessed in Abraham’s posterity
collectively as a nation; nor in
any individual of his posterity,
except in Christ alone. He
therefore is the only seed of
Abraham spoken of in the
promise, as the apostle
expressly assures us. Besides,
Peter, long before Paul became a
Christian, gave the same
interpretation of this promise,
as we see Acts 3:25.
Verse 17-18
Galatians 3:17-18. And this I
say — What I mean by the
foregoing example of human
covenants is this; The covenant
that was confirmed before of God
— By the promise itself, by the
repetition of it, and by a
solemn oath, concerning the
blessing all nations through
Christ; the law, which was four
hundred and thirty years after
the date of it, cannot disannul
— Abolish, or make it void, by
introducing a new way of
justification, or of blessing
the nations, namely, by the
works of the Mosaic law; so as
to make the promise of no
effect: 1st, With regard to
other nations, which would be
the case if only the Jews could
obtain the accomplishment of it:
yea, 2d, With regard to them
also, if it were to be by works
superseding it, and introducing
another way of obtaining the
blessing. “The apostle’s
argument proceeds on this
undeniable principle of justice,
that a covenant made by two
parties cannot, after it is
ratified, be altered or
cancelled, except with the
consent of both parties: who in
the present case were, on the
one hand, God; and on the other,
Abraham and his seed, Christ.
Wherefore, as neither Abraham
nor his seed, Christ, was
present at the making of the
Sinai covenant, nothing in it
can alter or set aside the
covenant with Abraham,
concerning the blessing of the
nations in Christ.”
It must be observed, that the
four hundred and thirty years
here spoken of are not to be
computed from the time when the
covenant was confirmed, but from
the time when it was first made,
as mentioned Genesis 12:3, when
Abraham was yet in Ur of the
Chaldees, and was seventy-five
years old, Galatians 3:4. From
that time to the birth of Isaac,
which happened when Abraham was
one hundred years old, are
twenty-five years, Genesis 21:5.
To the birth of Jacob were sixty
years, Isaac being sixty years
old when Jacob was born, Genesis
25:26. From Jacob’s birth to his
going into Egypt were one
hundred and thirty years, as he
says to Pharaoh, Genesis 47:9;
and according to the LXX. the
Israelites sojourned in Egypt
two hundred and fifteen years;
for thus they translate Exodus
12:40 : Now the sojourning of
the children of Israel in the
land of Egypt, and in the land
of Canaan, was four hundred and
thirty years, the number
mentioned by the apostle. For —
Or, besides, this being a new
argument, drawn not from the
time, as the former was, but
from the nature of the
transaction; if the inheritance
— Of the blessing promised to
Abraham; be of the law — Be
suspended on such a condition
that it cannot be obtained but
by the observation of the Mosaic
law, it must then follow that it
is no more of promise — By
virtue of a free gratuitous
promise; but that cannot be
said, for God gave it to Abraham
by promise — It must therefore
be by it, and not by the law,
which must have been given for
some other and subordinate end,
as the next verse shows.
Verse 19
Galatians 3:19. Wherefore then
serveth the law — If the
inheritance was not by the law,
but by the promise, as a free
gift, for what purpose was the
law given, or what significancy
had it? It was added because of
transgressions — That is, to
restrain the Israelites from
transgressions, particularly
idolatry, and the vices
connected with idolatry, the
evil of which the law discovered
to them by its prohibitions and
curse. Agreeably to this account
of the law, idolatry, and all
the abominations practised by
the Canaanites, and the other
heathen nations who surrounded
the Israelites, were forbidden
in the law under the severest
penalties. Maimonides, a learned
Jew, acknowledges, in his
More-Nevochim, that the
ceremonial law was given for the
extirpation of idolatry; for,
saith he, “When God sent Moses
to redeem his people out of
Egypt, it was the usual custom
of the world, and the worship in
which all nations were bred up,
to build temples in honour of
the sun, moon, and stars, and to
offer divers kinds of animals to
them, and to have priests
appointed for that end.
Therefore God, knowing it is
beyond the strength of human
nature instantly to quit that
which it hath been long
accustomed to, and so is
powerfully inclined to, would
not command that all that kind
of worship should be abolished,
and that he should be worshipped
only in spirit; but required
that he only should be the
object of this outward worship;
that temples and altars should
be built to him alone;
sacrifices offered to him only,
and priests consecrated to his
service.” So Cedrenus, of their
festivals, separations,
purgations, oblations, &c.,
observing, God enjoined them,
that, being employed in doing
these things to the true God,
they might abstain from
idolatry. And thus, saith Dr.
Spencer, were they kept under
the discipline of the law, and
shut up from the idolatrous
rites and customs of the heathen
world, by the strictness of
these legal observances, and the
penalties denounced against the
violators of them. “And it is
well-known,” says Whitby, “that
all the ancient fathers were of
this opinion, that God gave the
Jews only the decalogue, till
they had made the golden calf;
and that afterward he laid this
yoke of ceremonies upon them to
restrain them from idolatry,
(see Ezekiel 20:7; Ezekiel
20:11; Ezekiel 20:24-25,) called
by the apostle the law of carnal
commandments, which he says, was
abolished for the weakness and
unprofitableness of it, Hebrews
7:16. Hence these ceremonies
were called by St. Paul,
στοιχεια του κοσμου, the
rudiments of the world,
Galatians 4:3; Colossians 2:8;
namely, because for matter they
were the same which the heathen
used before to their false gods.
But this ancient exposition,
though partly true, does not
contain the whole truth; for the
apostle, in the Epistle to the
Romans, informs us, that the law
entered that sin might abound;
that is, might appear to abound,
unto death, that sin might
appear sin, working death in,
us, Romans 5:20; Romans 7:13.
And that the law worketh wrath,
namely, by giving us the
knowledge of that sin which
deserves it, Romans 3:20; Romans
4:15. And this answers to what
the apostle here saith, that the
law was added because of
transgressions, namely, to
discover them, and the
punishment due to them. See on
Galatians 3:22; Galatians 3:24.
So also Macknight: “The law was
added after the promise, to show
the Israelites what things were
offensive to God, Romans 3:20.
Also, that by the manner in
which it was given, becoming
sensible of their
transgressions, and of God’s
displeasure with them for their
transgressions, and of the
punishment to which they were
liable, they might be
constrained to have recourse to
the covenant with Abraham, in
which justification was promised
through faith, as it is now
promised in the gospel. See
Colossians 2:14.” Till the seed
should come — That illustrious
seed, the Messiah; to whom the
promise was made — “It was not
fit that the law of Moses, which
condemned every sinner to death,
should continue any longer than
till the seed should come to
whom it was promised that in him
all nations should be blessed,
by having their faith counted
for righteousness. For Christ
having come, and published in
his gospel God’s gracious
intention of justifying
believers of all nations by
faith, if the law of Moses,
which condemned every sinner to
death without mercy, had been
allowed to remain, it would have
contradicted the gospel, and
have made the promise of no
effect. It was, therefore,
abrogated with great propriety
at the death of Christ;
especially as the gospel was a
dispensation of religion more
effectual than the law for
destroying idolatry, and
restraining transgression.” And
was ordained — Greek, διαταγεις,
appointed, promulgated, or
spoken, as it is expressed
Hebrews 2:2. This is affirmed
likewise by Stephen, Acts 7:38;
Acts 7:53. In the hand of a
mediator — Namely, Moses, then
appointed by God to act the part
of a mediator between him and
the people of Israel. The law
was not given to Israel, as the
promise was to Abraham,
immediately from God himself,
but was conveyed by the ministry
of angels to Moses, and
delivered into his hand as a
mediator between God and them,
and as a type of the great
Mediator.
Verse 20
Galatians 3:20. Now a mediator
is not a mediator of one — There
must be two parties, or there
can be no place or use for a
mediator: but God, who made the
free promise to Abraham, is only
one of the parties; the other,
Abraham, was not present at the
time of Moses. Therefore, in the
affair of the promise, Moses had
nothing to do: the law, wherein
he was concerned, was a
transaction of quite another
nature. Or, as Dr. Doddridge
paraphrases this difficult
passage more at large,
following, as he says, Mr.
Locke’s interpretation, not
without attentively comparing a
variety of others, “A mediator
is not merely the mediator of
one party, but at least of two,
between which he must pass, and,
by the nature of his office,
transact for both; but God is
only one party in that covenant
made with Abraham, and Abraham
and his seed, including all that
believe, both Jews and Gentiles,
are the other. As Moses,
therefore, when the law was
given, stood at that time,
between the Lord and Israel,
(Deuteronomy 5:5,)
and did not pass between the
whole collective body of
Abraham’s seed and the blessed
God; so nothing was transacted
by him with relation to those
for whom he did not appear, and
consequently nothing in that
covenant wherein he did mediate
could disannul the promise, or
affect the right accruing to any
from a prior engagement, in
which the Gentiles were
concerned as well as the
Israelites; for no covenant can
be altered but by the mutual
consent of both parties; and in
what was done at mount Sinai by
the mediation of Moses, there
was none to appear for the
Gentiles; so that this
transaction between God and the
Israelites could have no force
to abrogate the promise, which
extended likewise to the
Gentiles, or to vacate a
covenant that was made between
parties of which one only was
there.”
Verse 21-22
Galatians 3:21-22. Is the law
then — Which requires perfect
obedience, and subjects all that
in any respect violate it, to
the curse, against, or contrary
to, the promises of God —
Wherein he declares that he will
justify men by faith? God forbid
— That we should intimate any
thing of that kind! On the
contrary, it was intended to be
subservient to the promise, by
leading those who were under it
to a higher and better
dispensation, by subjecting them
to the curse, without giving
them the least hope of mercy, to
oblige them to flee to the
promises for justification. For
if there had been a law given
which could have given life —
Either spiritual or eternal; if
any law, considered in itself
alone, could have been a
sufficient mean of justification
and eternal happiness, then
verily righteousness —
Justification, and the blessings
consequent thereon; would have
been by the Mosaic law — Which
is so holy, just, and good in
all its moral precepts. By this
the apostle shows that the law
of Moses was utterly incapable
of giving the Jews life and
salvation; because, considered
in itself, independent of the
covenant of grace, it neither
promised them the pardon of sin
on their repentance, nor the
influences of the divine Spirit
to enable them to overcome and
mortify the corruption of their
nature; and of consequence,
neither gave them a title to,
nor a meetness for, eternal
life. Justification, therefore,
was not to be obtained by that
law. On the contrary, the
Scripture — Wherein that law is
written; hath concluded all
under sin — Hath shut them up
together, (so the word
συνεκλεισεν properly signifies,)
as in a prison, under sentence
of death; that is, hath declared
them all to be so shut up; that
the promise — That is, the
blessing of life and salvation,
promised through faith in Jesus
Christ, might be freely given to
them that truly believe in him,
and in the truths and promises
of his gospel.
Verse 23
Galatians 3:23. But before faith
— That is, the gospel
dispensation, came, we — The
nation of the Jews; were kept
under the law — Under that
dispensation, as condemned
malefactors are guarded in close
custody; shut up — As prisoners
under sentence; unto the faith
which should afterward be
revealed — Reserved and prepared
for the gospel. Observe here,
reader, 1st, “The gospel is
called faith, (Galatians 3:2;
Galatians 3:23; Galatians 3:25,)
and the law of faith, (Romans
3:27,) because it requires
faith, instead of perfect
obedience, as the means of men’s
justification. This law of
faith, or method of
justification, came at the fall:
it was then established; and
till it came, Adam was kept in
ward without hope, under the law
he had broken. In like manner
the Gentiles, under the law of
nature, and the Jews, under the
law of Moses, were kept in ward,
as criminals, and had no hope of
pardon, but what the law of
faith gave them, as made known
obscurely in the first promise,
(Genesis 3:15,) and afterward in
the covenant with Abraham. 2d,
The law of Moses, instead of
being contrary to the promises
of God, or covenant with
Abraham, effectually co-operates
therewith. By the perfection and
spirituality of its moral
precepts, it makes us sensible
of our inability to obey it
perfectly; and by its curse,
denounced against every one who
does not obey perfectly, it
makes us flee, trembling and
affrighted, to the method of
salvation revealed to us in the
covenant with Abraham, and
published to all mankind in the
gospel.” — Macknight.
Verses 24-26
Galatians 3:24-26. Wherefore the
law was our schoolmaster — That
is, the instructer of the
childhood of us Jews, or of the
church of God, in its state of
minority; see on Galatians 4:3;
to bring us unto Christ — To
train us up for him. And this it
did, both by its precepts, which
showed us the need we had of his
atonement, and by its
sacrifices, oblations,
purifications, and other
ceremonies, which all pointed us
to him; that we might be
justified by faith — In him, and
so might obtain the benefit of
the promise. But after that
faith is come — The gospel
dispensation being fully
revealed, and the law of faith
promulgated; we are no longer
under that schoolmaster —
The Mosaic law, but pass over
into a more liberal and happy
state. For ye — Who have
believed on Christ, with a faith
working by love; are all — Not
merely the subjects and servants
of God, your Lord and Master,
but his children, by faith in
Christ Jesus — The sons and
daughters of the Lord Almighty;
yea, his heirs, and joint heirs
with his beloved Son: and to you
his commandments are not
grievous.
Verses 27-29
Galatians 3:27-29. For as many
of you as have been baptized
into Christ — In consequence of
your believing in him with your
heart unto righteousness, and
have thereby testified and
professed your faith in him;
have put on Christ — Have
received him as your
righteousness and
sanctification; have obtained
union with him, and in
consequence thereof a conformity
to him; have in you the mind
which was in him, and walk as he
walked. “In the expression, have
put on Christ, there is an
allusion to the symbolical rite
which in the first age usually
accompanied baptism. The person
to be baptized put off his old
clothes before he went into the
water, and put on new or clean
raiment when he came out of it;
to signify that he had put off
his old corrupted nature, with
all his former bad principles
and corrupt practices, and was
become a new man. Hence the
expressions, putting off the old
man, and putting on the new,
Ephesians 4:22; Ephesians 4:24.”
— Macknight. There is neither
Jew nor Greek, &c. — That is,
the distinctions, which were
before so much regarded, are in
a manner done away, with respect
to such: for under the gospel
dispensation, God pays no regard
to persons on account of their
descent, their station, or their
sex; but all who truly believe
in Christ, have an equal right
to the privileges of the gospel,
are equally in favour with God,
and are equal in respect and
dignity. The Greek has the same
privileges with the Jew, and the
Jew may, without offending God,
use the same freedom in
approaching him with the Greek.
To the Judaizing teachers, who
imagined that the being
Abraham’s children, according to
the flesh, would of itself
secure their acceptance with
God, this must have appeared a
most humiliating doctrine. But
to the Galatians it was of
singular use, to prevent their
being seduced by those teachers,
who strongly affirmed that the
Gentiles could not share in the
privileges of the people of God,
without being circumcised. There
is neither bond nor free — But
slaves are now the Lord’s
free-men, and freemen the Lord’s
servants; and this consideration
makes the freeman humble, and
the slave cheerful; swallowing
up, in a great measure, the
sense of his servitude. There is
neither male nor female — Under
the law, males had greater
privileges than females. For
males alone bare in their bodies
the sign of God’s covenant; they
alone were capable of the
priesthood and of the kingdom;
and heritages belonged to them,
preferably to females, in the
same degree. For ye are all one
in Christ Jesus — Are equally
accepted in him; and being made
one body in him, believers, of
whatever nation, or sex, or
condition they be, are all
cemented in the bonds of holy
love, and animated with the
views of the same happiness. And
if ye be Christ’s — By faith
united to him, who is the
promised seed, in whom all the
nations shall be blessed; then
are ye the true seed of Abraham
— And are equally so whether ye
be circumcised or not; and
therefore are heirs according to
the promise — Have a right to
the heavenly inheritance by
virtue of the promise made to
Abraham. |