Tuesday, February 2, 2021

NT BIBLE STORY--- ACTS AND EPISTLES #22--- GALATIANS #3

 New Testament BIBLE STORY


Paul writes Galatians - Part three




THE BOOK OF ACTS  AND RELATED EPISTLES


                            

PERTINENT COMMENTS


CHAPTER FOUR - TWO COVENANTS


     In verse 21 Paul resumes his talk and expounding of the TWO

covenants. As the Galatians seemed to want to be under the

observance of the entire Old Covenant and circumcision, as the

way to justification and inheritance of eternal life, he asks

them if they hear what that Old Covenant (the law) had to say.

     The law said that Abraham had TWO sons, the one by a

"bondwoman" - servant, and the other by a "free" woman - his

wife. The one of the bondwoman was born after the flesh - doing

things "their way" - without waiting on God's promise, without

faith, while the other son was born of the "free" woman -

according to God's promise which was based upon "faith" in that

promise. He is as they would certainly know, referring to the

births of Ishmael and Isaac, the birth of Ishmael by Hagar the

handmaid and Isaac from Sarah, Abraham;s wife (Genesis chapters

16-21).

     Paul says that these two births is an ALLEGORY - TYPE - A

TYPE OR REPRESENTATIVE  of the TWO COVENANTS!   

That's why I've said that this book of Galatians is a book about the 

TWO COVENANTS - one the Old, the one that came 430 years 

AFTER the PROMISE made to Abraham, a promise of FAITH, 

the entire Old Covenant, that gave emphasis to magnifying SIN, 

with all of its minute physical rites and Temple rituals and sacrifices, 

and importance on the physical rite of circumcision. This Covenant

was represented by Agar, the bondwoman, which Paul says is "mount

Sinai" or the Covenant given to Israel by Moses, and which is

BONDAGE. This answers to Jerusalem that is now, or to put it as

what Paul was meaning - this is the Jews of the Covenant

believing that if you obeyed the entire Old Covenant, with

especially the circumcision rite, you could be "justified" or

"made right with God" and so obtain salvation and eternal life.

This was being saved by "works of law" - no faith needed, no

Christ Jesus in the picture at all.

     Paul says of a truth that this way of trying to be saved was

indeed BONDAGE, for as he has pointed out, unless you could

observe the entire Old Covenant FAULTLESSLY, without ONE 

ERROR or SIN, you were condemned by the very Covenant you 

thought could save you. And as NOT ONE person (excluding Christ) 

ever came CLOSE to observing ALL the Old Covenant in PER-

FECTION, those who looked for justification through that means 

of "works of that Covenant" WITHOUT faith in the sacrifice of 

Jesus for sins, were truly in BONDAGE.

     The religious Jews of today who claim they are just as much

children of God and "saved' as are Christians, even as they do

not have Christ in their equation of justification, but only serve 

the Old Covenant, are still in utter BONDAGE to sin and error. 

They DO NOT have salvation and they are most definitely

NOT saved. They are still in their sins and so the penalty of sin

- death - still hangs over them. 

     Paul then draws on the type of Jerusalem above (not the

physical city that represented the Jews without Christ in their

equation) and Isaac, of the free woman, the promise through

faith, and so says that we Christians are the children of "promise." 

What a bondage indeed to NOT have Christ as your Savior, 

but to believe you must obtain salvation by works of law,

any law, for truly when you do not attain to the perfection of

the law you are trying to serve, your burden of guilt and

hopelessness, must be an anguish hardly able to bear.


     Christians, are under a New Covenant that has "faith" and

"grace" as it's bedrock. That New Covenant does not "do away

with" God's holy, and righteous law of His commandments (this is

clearly seen just by reading the entire New Testament, the

chapters of Romans 3 through 7, the book of James, the books 

of John, especially), and those who claim it does are surely the

bottom of the class in Bible reading, and are to put it bluntly,

false teachers, indeed as false as those Paul was writing against

in this epistle to the Galatians.

     But the blessing that true Christians have is that when they

miss the mark, when they, through weakness of the flesh, sin,

break the commandments of God, they can repent, come to God

through Christ, ask for mercy, and the blood of Jesus' sacrifice

to be applied to them, and the Father will so grant it. They can

be forgiven, justified, through faith in the promise that Christ

would be our sin bearer. Christians also have the blessing of 

having Jesus NOW in heaven as their High Priest, interceding

on their behalf to the Father, for He knows what it is like to be

flesh and blood, He was tempted in all points as we are (so it is

written), yet did not sin, but He sure knows what it is like to

be a human person, and have the pulls of the flesh, the pressure

of the world, and Satan the Devil (and his helpers, the demons),

pulling at you. He is the most faithful mediator a Christian can

possible have.

     What a FREEDOM indeed to have Jesus Christ WITH you 

and IN you, the ones  Paul was denouncing here, did not have 

Jesus as their Savior and as their High Priest.


     As it was back in the days when God gave that "faith

promise" to Abraham, he that was born after the flesh (doing

things "my way"), persecuted him that was born after the

"faith promise." So, Paul says, it was that, the children of the

bond-woman (those under the Old Covenant "way of works" 

to try and be justified) were persecuting the children of the

free-woman, those under the New Covenant, of justification

through faith in Christ as sin bearer (verses 21-31).


CHAPTER FIVE


     Paul exhorts the Galatia Christians to stand fast in the

wonderful liberty they have in Christ and not to be brought under

bondage again. If they were going to look to physical

circumcision (and all the other rites of the Old Covenant) as the

means to justification then Christ profited them nothing. And if

they were going to look to physical circumcision as the way to

justification then they were under obligation to serve and obey

ALL the Old Covenant, in its entirety. Then, to give emphasis, he

again tells them that if they are going to believe justification

is by the works of the doing all the Old Covenant, then they have

fallen from grace, because they have "done away with" Jesus

Christ in their theology belief. Because he says, it is BY FAITH

that the Spirit gives us hope of righteousness, or right-standing

with God. For being physically circumcised or un-circumcised

amounts to NOTHING with God, but what avails with God, is 

FAITH that works by LOVE (verses 1-6).

     And if you want to know what the New Testament (the New

Covenant) has to say in its full completeness on LOVE, then take

a day or two and look up ever verse where the word "love" is

found. Strong's Concordance of the Bible, will give you EVERY

PLACE in the New Covenant Scriptures where "love" can be found.

And in your study you will be shown from the Lord's word what HE

SAY HIS LOVE IS!


     Paul tells them they did run well at one time, he wants them

to run the true race again. He says that a little "leaven" (often

used for "sin" and "wickedness" - see 1 Cor. 5 once more), leads

to ALL being leavened. He means that all of them would eventually

become deceived and led away into error and so be "fallen from

grace."

     He ends this thought with a "play on words" - he wished that

they who were troubling them, "were CUT OFF."  Physical

circumcision is cutting off some flesh of the sheaf that covers

the male penis, and throwing it away. So Paul wishes these

troublesome false teachers were cut off and thrown away from

troubling the Galatian Christians (verses 7-12).


     Paul had talked about "liberty" - "grace" and "being "free."

Some, as they do today, would surely NOT understand him, or

putting it another way, they would twist his words of "liberty"

into saying that Paul taught you could, as a Christian, live any

way you fancied, and still be saved. They would teach that Paul

taught "grace was a license" to give in to, and practice, any of

the works of the flesh. With a RESOUNDING FORCEFUL 

answer he CLEARLY teaches in the next verses that SUCH AN 

IDEA as that is WILD and certainly FAR away from the truth 

of the matter of what God teaches over and over again in 

His word.

     This section is worth quoting as the "New Living Translation" 

renders it:


      "For you, dear friends, have been called to live in freedom

     - not freedom to satisfy your sinful nature, but freedom to

     serve one another in love. For the whole law can be

     summed up in this one command: 'Love your neighbor as

     yourself' (Lev.19:18). But if instead of showing love among

     yourselves you are always biting and devouring one another,

     watch out! Beware of destroying one another. So I advise you

     to live according to your new life in the Holy Spirit. Then

     you won't be doing what your sinful nature craves.

     The old sinful nature loves to do evil, which is just

     opposite from what the Holy Spirit wants. And the Spirit 

     gives us desires that are opposite from what the sinful nature 

     desires. These two forces are constantly fighting each other, 

     and your choices are never free from this conflict. 

     But when you are directed by the Holy Spirit, you are no 

     longer subject to the law 


     ("under the law" as the KJV is. The context tells you how 

     Paul is using such a phrase, as he uses it in various ways 

     within a certain context. Here it is, you are not under the law's

     penalty of sin and death - the context of Paul is obviously

     the context of living in a life style of sin or living in a

     life style of being led by the Spirit, which he has just

     stated, will lead away from the life of the sinful nature -

     Keith Hunt). 


     When you follow the desires of your sinful nature, your

     lives will produce these evil results: sexual immorality;

     impure thoughts, eagerness for lustful pleasure, idolatry,

     participation in demonic activities, hostility, quarrelling,

     jealousy, outbursts of anger, selfish ambition, divisions,

     the feeling that everyone is wrong except those in your own

     little group, envy, drunkenness, wild parties, and other

     kinds of sin. Let me tell you again, as I have told you

     before, that anyone living that sort of life will not

     inherit the kingdom of God.


     But when the Holy Spirit controls our lives, he will produce

     this kind of fruit in us: love, joy, peace, patience,

     kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and

     self-control. Here there is no conflict with the law 


     (Ah, yes, Paul is not abolishing God's law, but showing

     that a life led by the Spirit leads to being WITHIN law, not

     being "out-laws" but being in no conflict with the law. The

     New Covenant does not mean you obey law to earn

     justification, or forgiveness {for that can only come by

     grace through faith in Jesus' sacrifice for your sins} but

     it means, being under God's grace, you can NOT live

     according to your will, ideas, or sinful nature - Keith

     Hunt).


     Those who belong to Christ Jesus have nailed the passions

     and desires of their sinful nature to His cross and crucified 

     them there. If we are living now by the Holy Spirit, let us 

     follow the Holy Spirit's leading in every part of our lives. 

     Let us not become conceited, or irritate one another, or be 

     jealous of one another "(verses 13-26).


     This section of Paul is pretty clear, and when we are

willing to read every word of Paul, in all of his other epistles,

we see that he never for one second, thought or taught, that

God's holy and righteous and perfect law of the Ten Commandments

(and as magnified by Christ and the rest of God's word), was ever

"done away with" or abolished at the cross, or under the New

Covenant. It would be the furthest things from Paul's mind to

ever think such an idea, as abolishing the Ten Commandments. 

We shall see clearly Paul's mind and teaching on this matter in even

more detail, as we next examine and comment on his epistle to the

Romans, after we finish this one to the Galatians.


CHAPTER SIX


     Paul's mind, now talking about sin, goes to a problem among

the brethren that they were not handling correctly. The problem

of another brother living in gross sin, a sin they were practicing 

as a way of life; and how the other brethren should correct the 

Christian overcome by the sin or sins they were living in. 

This is, from the very wording, the context of a brother living in 

gross sin, as we saw in the situation with the Corinthian church, 

I refer you back to 1 Corinthians, chapter five.

     I will again quote from the "New Living Translation"  - all

emphasis is mine:


     "Dear friends, if a Christian is overcome by some sin, you

     who are godly should GENTLY and HUMBLY help that person 

     back onto the right path. And be careful not to fall into the

     same temptation yourself. Share each other's troubles and

     problems, and in this way obey the law of Christ. If you

     THINK you are too IMPORTANT to help someone in need,

     you are only fooling yourself. You are really a NOBODY.

     Be sure to do what you should, for then you will enjoy the

     personal satisfaction of having done your work well, and you

     won't need to compare yourself to anyone else. For we are

     each responsible for our own conduct "(verses 1-5).


     Each Christian does have a responsibility towards their

fellow Christian. Paul gives here one of those responsibilities.

The responsibility to help guide back to the right pathway of

living, for those who have gone astray, is to be done in kind

gentleness with all humility, the one doing the guiding

remembering they are also weak flesh and blood, and could also 

go off the straight and narrow pathway that leads to eternal life. 

We are to share our troubles and problems with each other, at

times, when appropriate, with the person/s who can possibly help

us. Then those who are to be used, and it could be any of us, in

whatever situation of any particular circumstance, must never

think so highly of themselves that they are over and beyond

helping a brother of sister in need. In other words we are to be

able to come down to the level of and stand alongside, putting

ourselves in their shoes, with our fellow Christian who is

needing a helping hand in their time of spiritual weakness or

difficulty. We are to do whatever we can to serve and help the 

needs of others. If we do all this in meekness we will never

need to compare ourselves with one another, for there may come 

a time when we are the one needing help from others. We must be

careful at all times for our own conduct in life, but we are to help 

each other when help is needed.


     Verse 8 is missed by far too many in the Christian church.

There is to be "good communication" with those being taught in

the word and those doing the teaching, and vice versa. From the

context, no one is to be thinking of themselves too highly, we

are all on the same road moving along together, and so we are to

serve and help each other as we head for the destination of the

Kingdom of God. The spiritual teacher is not to think of

themselves too "high" to be helped by those they are teaching,

and so it is the other way also. Sometimes those who need to be

taught are too proud to humble themselves to be guided and

taught. It should never be this way, all are to be humble with

each other in spiritual matters as the situation warrants it.


     Paul goes on to say that what he has said cannot be ignored.

It is part and parcel of sowing and reaping in the spiritual life. 

For what we sow, he says, we shall also reap. If we sow wild oats, 

satisfying the pulls of the sinful flesh, we will reap in the end, 

only decay and spiritual death. Not being willing to be guided 

and corrected by God, sometimes through other human persons, 

will result in spiritual death. But those who will live in the Spirit, 

willing to be taught, and guided, will harvest everlasting life from 

the Spirit. 

     Paul says, we must not give up being in the right spiritual

attitude of life, we should not get discouraged and give up. We

are, as the opportunity appears, to do good to all persons, but

especially to our fellow Christian brothers and sisters. Then in

the end we will reap a harvest of blessings (verses 9-10).


     Paul finishes his epistle to the Galatians telling them that

those who are teaching a "works of the law" to justification and

salvation, a way to obtain it without Christ Jesus in the picture, 

are doing so in part, because they do not want to receive persecution 

from the larger religious section of Jews and their leaders. They did 

not want to be persecuted for teaching the cross of Christ, as came 

upon Paul and others like him who did teach justification and 

salvation through Christ.

     He tells them that even those who were teaching "works of

law" and physical circumcision, to salvation, in fact did not

themselves observe the whole law. They only wanted to see others

literally circumcised to brag about it and claim them are their

disciples. They got some kind of a "kick" out of seeing people

get circumcised. It was like a game to them, a point of victory

marked up on a sheet, to show to others, whenever they persuaded

someone to circumcise themselves.


     As for Paul, he said, "God forbid that I should boast about

anything except in the cross of Christ" as the way to

justification and salvation. It was through Christ that Paul

said he had died (been crucified) to the world (the wrong way to

teach and live) and the world to him. Through Jesus nothing

matters but HIS truth and HIS way of life. And it was surely true

that in Christ physical circumcision meant absolutely NOTHING,

but the important thing was a new way of conduct and belief.


     To those who had and held to the truth of this matter, Paul

prayed God's mercy and peace upon them. They were the new and

true Israel of God. 

     He did not want any more trouble from the matter he had

corrected, for he bore in his body the physical marks of the

scars of physical persecutions he had received over the years,

for being a disciple of Jesus. He bore the physical scars of

teaching the true way of salvation, which was only through Jesus

the Christ and Him crucified for the justification/forgiveness of

sins, and not through trying to observe the Old Covenant and

physical circumcision (verses 11-17).


     Paul's salutation: "My dear brothers, the grace of our Lord

Jesus Christ be with your spirit. Amen."


     What a wonderful epistle of truth is Galatians, when you

understand why it had to be written, and what was being taught by

false teachers, with their false theology of Jesus Christ not

being needed for salvation. It is as Albert Barnes pointed out

correctly in his Bible Commentary, an epistle designed to meet an

unconverted religious Jew in his Jewishness.


     In the epistle to the Romans, which we shall undertake to

comment on next, Paul there answers two theological views, one

that the moral law of God's Ten Commandments justifies you, and

the second, that justification coming by faith and grace through 

God's Messiah the Christ, abolishes the law, so you then do not 

have to obey it.

     Neither view, Paul answers, is correct Bible understanding.


                  ........................


May 2004


TO BE CONTINUED


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