Verses 1-3
Galatians 4:1-3. The apostle,
having established the
consolatory doctrine that
believers, in every age and
country of the world, are heirs
of the promises made to Abraham
and to his seed, goes on in this
chapter to answer an inquiry
which he knew would naturally
occur to his readers, but which,
according to his manner, he does
not formally state; namely,
Since all believers, from the
beginning, were heirs of the
promises, as well as of the
things promised, why were they
not put in possession of the
promises from the beginning, by
sending Christ into the world,
and introducing the gospel
dispensation in the first age;
that the promises, especially
the promise of pardon and
eternal life through faith,
might have been published
universally, and preserved for
the benefit of the heirs in
every age; and why were mankind
left for so many ages to the
direction of the laws of nature
and of Moses, neither of which
gave them any hope of pardon and
eternal life? To this inquiry
the apostle answers, that in not
giving the heirs the knowledge
of the promises, by introducing
the gospel dispensation
immediately after the fall, God
treated them as a prudent father
treats his son while under age.
During his nonage, he does not
allow him to possess the estate,
of which he is the heir, because
he has not discretion to use it
aright; but keeps him in the
condition of a bond-man. In the
same manner, though believers
from the beginning were heirs of
the promises, God did not, in
the early ages, put them in
possession of them, by
immediately setting up the
gospel dispensation; because, in
the first ages, the state of the
world did not admit of either
the universal publication of the
gospel, or of its preservation.
And that, as the heir of a great
estate must be prepared by a
proper education for managing
and enjoying it, and is
therefore in his childhood
placed under persons who
instruct him, manage his estate,
and supply him with necessaries,
till the time appointed in his
father’s will for taking
possession of his inheritance;
so, to prepare believers for the
actual inheritance of the gospel
dispensation, God judged it
proper to continue them for a
long time under the bondage of
the laws of nature, and of the
patriarchal and Mosaic
dispensations, that by
experiencing the hardships of
that bondage, they might be the
more sensible of the happiness
which they were to derive from
the liberty of the gospel. This
is the sense of the three first
verses, as appears by the
following short paraphrase.
Now — To illustrate, by a plain
similitude, the pre-eminence of
the Christian over the legal
dispensation; I say that the
heir — Of any estate, however
large; as long as he is a child
— Or is under age; differeth
nothing from a servant — With
respect to the free use and
enjoyment of his estate; though
he be lord of all — Proprietor
of it all, by right of
inheritance; but is placed under
tutors — As to his person; and
governors — οικονομους,
stewards, as to his substance;
until the time appointed of the
father — When he shall be deemed
of age, and be at liberty to
manage his affairs himself. So
we — The church of God, heirs of
the promises; when we were
children — In our minority, were
not put in possession of the
promises, by the introduction of
the gospel dispensation, but, to
fit us for it, were placed in
bondage — In a kind of servile
state; under the elements of the
world — Under the typical
observances of the patriarchal
and Mosaic dispensations, which
were like the first elements of
grammar, the ABC of children;
and were of so gross a nature as
hardly to carry men’s thoughts
beyond this world. Seeing the
apostle, in the close of the
preceding chapter, declared that
all who have put on Christ, (see
on Galatians 4:27-29,) whether
they be Jews or Gentiles, are
Christ’s brethren, and heirs
according to God’s promise, “it
is evident that in this chapter,
when he speaks concerning the
heir, and describes the
treatment which, by his father’s
appointment, he receives during
his minority, his discourse
cannot be restricted to the
Jews, as if they were the only
heirs, but must comprehend the
Gentiles also, describing their
condition under the discipline
of the law of nature, Galatians
4:8. In like manner the persons
in bondage to the elements of
the world, (Galatians 4:3,) and
under the law, (Galatians 4:5,)
who are said to be bought off by
Christ, (Galatians 4:5,) must be
the Gentiles as well as the
Jews; because Jews and Gentiles
equally were under the
discipline [and curse] of law.
And having been bought off by
Christ, (Galatians 3:13,) they
were both of them, after his
death, placed under the gospel
dispensation, which is the
discipline of sons. See
Galatians 4:5.” — Macknight.
Verses 4-7
Galatians 4:4-7. But when the
fulness of time — Appointed by
the Father, (Galatians 4:2,) and
marked out by the predictions of
the prophets for the
accomplishment of this great
event; was come — And we were
arrived at the age proper for
our entering on our adult state,
and being put in possession of
the promises, by the
introduction of the gospel
dispensation; God sent forth —
From heaven into our world; his
Son — Miraculously made, or
rather, born, as the word
γενομενον may, with equal
propriety, be translated;
because, although Christ, as to
his body, or his human nature in
general, might be said to have
been made of a woman, and of the
seed of David, (Romans 1:3,) yet
as he was the Son of God, sent
forth from the Father, he was
not made at all, much less of a
woman. See on Hebrews 1:3-6;
Hebrews 7:3. Or the clause may
be read, made flesh of a woman,
namely, of a virgin, without the
concurrence of a man. Made under
the law — Under its discipline,
in all its rigour; subject not
only to the precepts, but to the
curse of the law, even the
Mosaic law; to redeem them that
were under the law — From the
curse of it, which he bore in
their stead, and from that low,
servile state in which they were
before; and that he might bring
them into a happy liberty from
any future obligation to observe
its ceremonial institutions. It
must be observed, however, that
the apostle had not only the
Jews in his view here, but the
Gentiles also, as is evident
from Galatians 4:8, where they
are addressed in particular. The
law from which all are redeemed,
or bought off, was not the law
of Moses alone, but the law of
nature, as a rule of
justification: see note on
Galatians 3:13. From both these
laws, with the religious
institutions attached to them,
Christ hath redeemed mankind by
his death, that he might place
them under the gracious
dispensation of his gospel. That
we — Whether Jews or Gentiles,
who believe; might receive the
adoption of sons — Might stand
related to God, not only as his
people, his true and spiritual
worshippers, his subjects and
his servants, but also as his
sons and daughters; might be
peculiarly near and dear to him;
made partakers of his nature,
favoured with his special
guidance, protection, and care;
might have continual liberty of
access to him and intercourse
with him; might have all our
wants, ghostly and bodily,
supplied by him here, and might
be constituted joint heirs with
his beloved Son of the heavenly
inheritance hereafter. See on
John 1:12; Romans 8:14-17.
Observe, reader, it is the
privilege of true believers in
the present life to have the
assurance of God’s love, peace
of conscience, protection from
their spiritual enemies,
assistance in times of trial and
temptation, and the certain hope
of eternal life. And because ye
are thus made his sons — By
adoption and regeneration; God
hath sent forth — From heaven,
as he sent forth his Son from
thence; the Spirit of his Son —
The very same Spirit of truth,
holiness, and consolation, which
dwelt in his Son; into your
hearts — To take up his abode
there; crying, Abba, Father —
Enabling you to call God your
reconciled Father in truth and
with assurance, and to call upon
him both with the confidence and
temper of dutiful children. The
Hebrew and Greek word signifying
father are here joined together,
to express the joint cry of Jews
and Gentiles. Wherefore thou —
Who believest in Christ, and art
a true member of the gospel
church, whether born a Jew or a
Gentile; art no more — No
longer; a servant — As formerly,
in a state of bondage, whether
to the legal dispensation of
Moses, or to the law of nature,
and the ceremonial institutions
attached to it, by custom or
divine appointment; but a son —
Of mature age; and if a son, an
heir of God — Entitled to the
everlasting inheritance, and
even to the enjoyment of the
all-sufficient God himself;
through Christ — Through his
sacrifice and intercession, and
my interest therein by faith.
Verses 8-11
Galatians 4:8-11. Howbeit — αλλα,
but, or however, that ye
Gentiles may not foolishly
reject, neglect, or forfeit your
privileges, as the sons of God,
you ought to remember what your
condition was while under the
elements of the world, and
compare it with your present
happy state: that then, when ye
knew not the one living and true
God, ye did service — Performed
many degrading, burdensome,
irrational, and abominable acts
of worship and service, unto
them which by nature are no gods
— “This is a true description of
the idols worshipped by the
heathen, for either they had no
existence, being mere creatures
of the imagination; or, if any
of them existed, they were dead
men, or evil spirits, or the
luminaries of the heavens, [or
other creatures of God, as most
of the idols of Egypt were,]
deified by human folly: and
being destitute of divine
perfections, they were utterly
incapable of bestowing any
blessing whatever on their
worshippers.” But now, after ye
have known the only true God —
And his mind and will; or rather
are known of God — Are
acknowledged, approved, and
accepted, as his children; how
turn ye again to the weak and
beggarly elements — Weak,
utterly unable to purge your
conscience from guilt, and to
inspire you with filial
confidence in God, or to change
your nature, transform you into
his likeness, and to enable you
to do and suffer his will:
beggarly, or poor; that is,
incapable of enriching your
souls with such wisdom,
holiness, and happiness, as ye
are heirs to, or to give you a
hope of a blessed immortality
after death; whereunto ye desire
again to be in bondage — Though
of another kind: now to these
elements, as before to those
idols; changing indeed the form
and object of your ceremonies,
but retaining many of the same
low, perplexing, and
unprofitable observances. Ye
observe days — Jewish sabbaths;
and months — New moons; and
times — As that of the passover,
pentecost, and the feast of
tabernacles; and years — Annual
solemnities. The word does not
here mean sabbatic years: these
were not to be observed out of
the land of Canaan. This was
addressed to such of the
Galatians as had embraced
Judaism. Some think this verse
should be read interrogatively,
Do ye observe? &c, because it
seems to intimate a hope that it
might be otherwise. As a
question, it likewise expresses
the apostle’s surprise that the
Galatians observed these days. I
am afraid of you — See on 2
Corinthians 11:2-3; lest I have
bestowed upon you labour in vain
— As will be the case if you
continue the use of these
ceremonies and think to be
justified by them together with
Christ, Galatians 5:2.
Verses 12-14
Galatians 4:12-14. I beseech
you, be as I am — Follow my
example in laying aside your
opinion of the necessity of the
law; for I am — Or rather, I
was; as ye are — That is, I was
once as zealous of the law as
you are; but by the grace of God
I am now of another mind: be you
so too. See Philippians 3:7-8.
Or, as some understand the
verse, I beseech you to maintain
the same affectionate regard for
me as I bear toward you, and
candidly to receive those
sentiments which I, to whose
authority in the church ye can
be no strangers, have been
inculcating upon you. Ye have
not injured me at all — As if he
had said, What I have spoken
proceeds purely out of love, and
not from any anger or ill-will,
for which indeed you have given
me no occasion, as I have
received no personal injury from
you. “The apostle having sharply
rebuked the Galatians for their
attachment to Judaism, checks
himself, and turns his discourse
into the most affectionate
entreaties and expostulations,
in which he shows himself to
have had a great knowledge of
human nature. For he mentions
such things as must have deeply
affected the Galatians,
especially as he expressed them
in a simplicity and energy of
language which is inimitable.” —
Macknight. Ye know how through,
or in, infirmity of the flesh —
That is, in great bodily
weakness, and under great
disadvantage from the
despicableness of my outward
appearance; I preached the
gospel to you at the first. And
my temptation, which was in my
flesh — The peculiar trial
wherewith I was exercised,
namely, my thorn in the flesh,
see on 2 Corinthians 12:7; ye
despised not — Ye did not
slight, or disdain me; nor
rejected my person or ministry
on account of it; but received
me as an angel of God — As
though I had been a superior
being come down from heaven;
even as Christ Jesus — With as
much affection and submission as
it can be supposed you would
have shown to Christ himself,
if, instead of sending me as his
messenger, he had visited you in
person. The veneration with
which the Galatians regarded the
apostle at his first coming
among them, cannot be more
strongly painted than by these
expressions.
Verse 15-16
Galatians 4:15-16. Where is then
the blessedness ye spake of — On
which ye so congratulated one
another? Since ye once thought
yourselves so happy in my
presence with, and my preaching
among you, how happens it that
you are now so alienated from
me? For if it had been possible
— If it had been a thing
allowable, and I could have
received any benefit by it; ye
would have plucked out your
eyes, and have given them to me
— As a convincing proof of your
affection for me. Am I become
your enemy — Or have you any
reason to account me such;
because I tell you the truth? —
And bear a faithful testimony to
the uncorrupted gospel, which I
desire to maintain among you in
all the purity in which I
planted it? “The apostle’s
address, in thus putting the
Galatians in mind of their
former affection and gratitude
to him, as their spiritual
father, and his contrasting it
in this verse with their present
temper of mind, is admirable.”
Verse 17-18
Galatians 4:17-18. They
zealously affect you — The
Judaizing teachers who are come
among you express an
extraordinary regard for you;
but not well — Their zeal is not
according to knowledge, neither
have they a single eye to God’s
glory, and your spiritual
advantage. Yea, they would
exclude you — From me and from
the blessings of the gospel;
that ye might effect — Might
love and esteem them. Or, as
some read this clause, they
would exclude us, that is, me,
your spiritual father, and my
fellow-labourers in the gospel,
from your affection, that ye may
love them ardently, as the only
faithful teachers of the gospel.
But it is good — καλον, comely,
honourable, and commendable; to
be zealously affected always in
a good thing — In what is really
worthy of our zeal: for as the
beauty and excellence of zeal is
to be estimated not by the
degree of it, considered in
itself, but by the object to
which it is directed; so too the
warmth of your affection toward
an object truly worthy of it,
should be, at all times, equally
maintained; and the same fervent
zeal which you have formerly
expressed, ought to be
manifested by you, not only when
I am present with you, but in my
absence also, if you really
think me to deserve your
regards, and have indeed
received the truth in the love
of it. It may be proper to
observe, that the original
expression “may refer either to
a good person or a good thing,
and may be understood of their
continuing zealous in their
affection, either to himself, or
to the truth which he preached;
but as he had been speaking of
himself in the foregoing verses,
he likewise seems to have still
in view the warmth of their
affection to him when he was
present with them; though he
expresses it in a graceful way,
with such a latitude as may
include their zeal for his
doctrine as well as for his
person.” — Doddridge.
Verse 19-20
Galatians 4:19-20. My little
children — Converted to the
faith by my ministry. He speaks
as a parent, both with authority
and the most tender sympathy
toward weak and sickly children:
of whom I travail in birth again
— As I did before, (Galatians
4:13,) in vehement pain, sorrow,
desire, prayer; till Christ be
formed in you — Till you be made
fully acquainted with, and
established in, the belief of
every part of his doctrine; and
till you be so endowed with the
graces of his Spirit, that all
the mind is in you that was in
him. The image here used by the
apostle is beautiful and
expressive. He alludes to a
mother, who, having undergone
the labour and pains of
childbearing, cannot but be
concerned for the safety and
welfare of the children, in the
birth of which she had suffered
so much: and if the life or
health of any of them be in
imminent danger, suffers
distress and anguish of mind,
nearly, if not altogether, equal
or even superior, to the pain
and torture of body she endured
in bearing them. So the apostle,
who had once before suffered
labour and pains like those of
childbearing, when he converted
the Galatians to the truth, now
suffered those pangs a second
time, while he endeavoured to
bring them back to that faith of
the gospel from which they had
departed. It is not possible by
words to express the anxiety of
desire and affection which he
felt on this occasion more
strongly than he has done by
this image; and what a lesson
does this teach every minister
of the gospel, intrusted with
the care of immortal souls! What
distress ought they to feel, how
deeply ought they to be
concerned, when they observe any
of the souls that they had
gained, backsliding from the
truth and grace of God, and
drawing back unto perdition! and
what anxiety should they
manifest, and what pains should
they take, to recover and
restore them. I desire — Or I
could wish; to be present with
you now — Particularly in this
exigence; and to change my voice
— To adapt my manner of speaking
to the state you are in; for I
stand in doubt of you — So that
I am at a loss how to speak at
this distance; for though I do
not absolutely despair of your
recovery and establishment, yet
I am not without very
discouraging apprehensions,
lest, after all the pains that I
have taken with you, the good
effects of my labours among you
should in a great measure be
lost.
Verses 21-23
Galatians 4:21-23. Tell me, ye
that desire to be under the law
— Of Moses, as the rule of your
justification; do ye not hear
the law? — Regard what it says?
how it teaches that Abraham’s
children, by faith, who are
heirs of the promises, are free
from the bondage of the law?
“The argument the apostle is
going to use being taken from
the law of Moses, was urged with
much propriety, not only against
the Judaizers, who affirmed that
obedience to the law of Moses
was necessary to men’s
salvation, but against those
Gentiles also whom the Judaizers
had seduced to receive the law.
For if the apostle made it
evident, from the law of Moses
itself, that Abraham’s children,
by faith, were free from the
bondage of the law, no further
argument was necessary to prove
that obedience to the law is not
necessary to justification.” —
Macknight. It is written that
Abraham had two sons — Here he
illustrates the doctrine of
justification by faith, and of
the abolition of the legal
dispensation, by the history of
Abraham’s family, in which it
was prefigured. The plain import
of what he advances is this:
That as in Abraham’s family
there were two mothers, and two
sorts of children, which were
differently treated; so, in the
visible church, there are two
sorts of professors; some that
seek justification by the works
of the law, who are in a servile
and miserable condition, and
shall at last be cast out from
the presence of God, and the
society of the saints; others
that seek justification by faith
in Christ, and in the promises
of God through him: and these
are the free sons of God’s
family, and in a happy
condition, and shall at last
certainly obtain the inheritance
of eternal life. The one —
Namely, Ishmael, by Hagar, a
bond-maid, the other — Namely,
Isaac, by Sarah, a free-woman.
But there was a great difference
between them; for he who was of
the bond-woman — That is,
Ishmael; was born only after the
flesh — In the common order of
nature, without any particular
promise of God, or any unusual
interposition of his power and
providence. But he of the
free-woman — That is, Isaac; was
by promise — Through the
strength supernaturally
communicated to his parents by
the promise, Lo Sarah, thy wife,
shall have a son; and, like his
mother, being free, was his
father’s heir.
Verse 24
Galatians 4:24. Which things are
an allegory — That is, a
figurative speech, wherein one
thing is expressed, and another
intended. Or, as Macknight
explains the expression more at
large: “Properly, an allegory
is, when persons and events,
present or near at hand, with
their qualities and
circumstances, are considered as
types or representations of
persons and events more remote,
to which they have a
resemblance. Of this kind were
the histories of some persons
and events recorded in the Old
Testament. For the qualities and
circumstances of these persons
were, it seems, so ordered by
God, as to be apt
representations of such future
persons and events as God
intended should attract the
attention of mankind. This,
however, is to be laid down as a
fixed rule, that no ancient
history is to be considered as
allegorical but those which God
himself, or persons inspired by
him, have interpreted
allegorically. Wherefore, since
the apostle tells us that what
Moses hath written concerning
the wives of Abraham is an
allegorical representation of
the two covenants by which men
are made the church and people
of God, and that his sons, by
these wives, represent the
persons born under the two
covenants, together with the
treatment they are to receive
from God, he must be believed,
on account of the inspiration by
which he wrote; especially as,
in Galatians 4:27, he hath
appealed to the prophet Isaiah,
as giving the same account of
these matters, Isaiah 54:1. And
seeing the prophet, as well as
the apostle, (Galatians 4:26,)
considers Sarah as the mother of
all true believers, may we not
suppose she was made to conceive
her son supernaturally, that she
might be a type of the covenant
under which believers are
regenerated by the power of God;
and that her son might be a type
of all who by regeneration
become members of the true
church of God, called,
(Galatians 4:26,) the Jerusalem
above, which is free, both from
the bondage and from the curse
of the law? In like manner,
Abraham’s son, by Hagar the
bond-maid, may have been
begotten by the natural strength
of his parents, and born in
bondage, that he might be a
proper representation of such of
Abraham’s children as are God’s
visible church merely by being
his children according to the
flesh; consequently a type, or
allegorical representation of
the Jerusalem which existed when
the apostle wrote, or of the
then present Jewish church,
which was in bondage to the
law.” For these two persons —
Hagar and Sarah; are — That is,
may well be considered as
representing the two covenants —
Or the two dispensations of the
law and gospel, the tenor of
which is so different: the one
covenant given from mount Sinai,
which beareth children to
bondage — That is, by this
covenant the Israelites were
made the visible church of God,
and put in bondage to the law,
and were, by its curse, excluded
from the heavenly inheritance,
if they had no other relation to
Abraham than that of natural
descent; which covenant is
typified by Agar. — “The Jews
are very properly said to have
been brought forth into bondage
by the covenant from Sinai,
because the worship enjoined in
that covenant was extremely
troublesome and expensive;
particularly their frequent
separations on account of
uncleanness, their purifications
and washings, their numerous
sacrifices, and especially their
three annual journeys to
Jerusalem;” all which things
were the more grievous, in that
they did not obtain for them
justification before God, or
peace of conscience; but with
whatever anxious care and
trouble the Jews that were
piously disposed performed these
things, their sense of sin and
dread of punishment remained as
great as before, Hebrews 9:9-10;
Hebrews 10:1-3. “Besides, the
covenant from Sinai rendered all
that were under it slaves, by
the rigour of its precepts, and
the terror of its curse. But the
covenant or law, which went
forth from mount Zion, (Isaiah
2:3,) the gospel covenant, by
abolishing these ineffectual
rites of worship, and by
erecting the Christian Church
with its spiritual worship,
makes all its members freemen
and sons, who obey God from
love, and who can address him
with confidence by the endearing
appellation of Father.”
Verses 25-27
Galatians 4:25-27. For this Agar
is mount Sinai — That is, is a
type of that mount. The whole of
that mountainous ridge in Arabia
Petrea, of which Sinai was a
part, was called Horeb, probably
on account of its excessive
dryness. It was called by Moses,
the mountain of God, (Exodus
3:1,) because on it God gave the
law to the Israelites. Grotius
says, Sinai is called Hagar, or
Agar, synecdochically, because
in that mountain there was a
city which bare Hagar’s name. It
is by Pliny called Agra, and by
Dio, Agara, and its inhabitants
were named Hagarenes, Psalms
83:6. Whitby thinks the allusion
is taken from the meaning of the
word Hagar, which, in the
Hebrew, signifies a rock. And
answereth — Namely, in the
allegory; or resembles,
Jerusalem, which now is, and is
in bondage — As being in
subjection to so many ritual
observances, and under a
sentence of wrath on the
commission of the least wilful
offence, and as being also in
bondage to the Romans. But
Jerusalem, which is above — The
church of Christ, so called,
because its most perfect state
will be in heaven; is free —
ελευθερα εστι, is the free
woman, that is, is represented
by Sarah; who is the mother of
us all — Who believe. The
Jerusalem above, the spiritual
Jerusalem, or church of Christ,
consisting of believers of all
nations, with the covenant on
which it is formed, is fitly
typified by Isaac, and his
mother Sarah, the free-woman,
because she was constituted by
God the mother of all believers,
on account of her bringing forth
Isaac supernaturally, by virtue
of the promise. For it is
written, &c. — As if he had
said, My interpretation of the
things respecting Abraham’s
wives and sons is not new; it is
alluded to by Isaiah 54:1;
Rejoice, thou barren, that
bearest not — Ye heathen
nations, who, like a barren
woman, were destitute for many
ages of a seed to serve the
Lord; break forth, &c., thou
that, in former ages, travailest
not, for such is now thy happy
state, that the desolate, &c. —
Ye, that were so long utterly
desolate, shall at length bear
more children than the Jewish
Church, which was of old
espoused to God.
Verses 28-30
Galatians 4:28-30. Now — That I
may apply what has just been
advanced to ourselves; we,
brethren — Who believe, whether
Jews or Gentiles; as Isaac was —
κατα ισαακ, after the manner of
Isaac; are children of promise —
Are children of God, being
children of Abraham and Sarah,
by the promise which made him
the father, and her the mother,
of nations. In other words, we
are children, not born in a
natural way, but by the
supernatural power of God; and
as such, we are heirs of the
promise made to believing
Abraham. And, “if believers,
after the manner of Isaac, are
children begotten to Abraham by
the divine power accompanying
the promise, can it be doubted
that they were typified by
Isaac, and that his procreation
was deferred till the bodies of
his parents were dead as to
these things, that being
supernaturally begotten, he
might be a fit type of those who
by divine power become the seed
of Abraham, through faith.” But
— Indeed the parallel holds
further still; for as then, he
that was born after the flesh —
That is, Ishmael, in whose
production there was nothing
beyond the common course of
nature, and who was related to
Abraham by natural descent only;
persecuted him who was born
after the Spirit — That is,
Isaac, who was produced by the
special energy of God’s
miraculous power; even so it is
now — The carnal Jews, who are
the seed of Abraham after the
flesh, abuse and persecute us
who believe in Christ, and are
therefore Abraham’s seed after
the Spirit. Ishmael’s
persecution of Isaac consisted
in his mocking at the feast of
his weaning, Genesis 21:9. “No
doubt he pretended that by right
of primogeniture he was his
father’s heir, and therefore he
ridiculed the feast made in
honour of Isaac as the heir,
together with Sarah’s laying
claim to the whole of the
inheritance for her son. This
action was typical of the
contempt with which the Jews,
Abraham’s natural posterity,
would treat his spiritual seed,
and their hopes of salvation
through faith; typical also of
the claim which the natural seed
would set up, of being the only
heirs of God, because they were
first his people.” But what
saith the Scripture — Showing
the consequence of this? Cast
out the bond-woman and her son —
Who mocked Isaac. Which
sentence, however grievous it
might be to Abraham, when
pronounced by Sarah, God
confirmed, and they were cast
out of Abraham’s family. And so,
as the apostle’s discourse
implies, shall all who reject
Christ, and seek justification
and salvation by the law of
Moses, notwithstanding their
boasted descent from Abraham, be
cast out of the church and
family of God, and rejected from
being his people; especially if
they persecute them who are his
children by faith; and they
shall not be permitted to be
heirs of his promise with them.
So that, as in his birth and
condition, his character and
actions; so likewise in his
being cast out of his father’s
house, Ishmael was a fit type of
the unbelieving and disobedient
Jews. So then — To sum up all;
we — Who believe; are not the
children of the bond-woman — Are
not under subjection to the
servile dispensation of the law,
nor have any thing to do with
it; but we are children of the
free-woman — And have the
privilege of being called into a
state of liberty under the
spiritual covenant of the
gospel, being free from the
curse and bond of the law, and
from the power of sin and Satan. |