STUDIES IN GALATIANS No. 20
Galatians 5:1-6
August 29, 1999
Text Comments
5:1 As you know, the process by which the Bible was divided into chapters and
verses stretched over many years, centuries indeed, and wasn't completed for the
NT until the 16th century. The divisions of the Bible, both chapter divisions
and verse divisions, are not original to it and not part of its inspiration.
They are the result of human editorial arrangement. Sometimes that arrangement
is ideal and sometimes not. Here there is a question whether verse one should be
the beginning of a new division, the end of the previous one, or, in some way, a
separate brief paragraph that both ends the former section and begins the next.
It is not always easy to know where to put the divisions.
The thought of v. 1 clearly continues the thought of v. 31: we have been made
free Paul says there, so, he goes on, do not enslave yourselves again. The
verses that follow are exhortation based on the fact that faith in Christ makes
slaves free and on the assumption that no one who has been a slave and then set
free, wants to become a slave again.
The "freedom" Paul is speaking of here is, of course, the freedom he
has been speaking about all along: the freedom from God's wrath, or the curse of
the law and the threat of its punishment for those who have disobeyed, freedom
that comes only through faith in Jesus Christ, and, especially in this context,
it is freedom from that judgment that the law pronounces on those who strive to
be justified by their own works. It is freedom from being "locked up",
"held prisoner" by the law, which is the fate of all who have not
believed in Christ for their peace with God (3:22-24; 4:3-7).
v.3 Paul has made this point before. "A Christ supplemented is a Christ
supplanted" [Hendriksen, 195]. You will notice in v. 2, once again that
Paul is not denying that Christ has a place in the judaizers' scheme. But his
argument, once more, is that if works are added to Christ, Christ and his grace
are nullified. Christ plus works is simply works. It is either grace and Christ
only or it is salvation by works and not Christianity and not the gospel at all.
Here remains our fundamental objection to Roman Catholicism and here is the
reason we cannot agree with the Protestant converts to Rome who are urging us to
reconsider and to repair the rift caused by the Reformation. Rome's position on
salvation, its soteriology, is materially identical to that of the judaizers. It
is Christ plus, Christ and our works for our peace with God. And Paul says that
any addition to Christ in the matter of one's justification makes Christ of no
value to a sinner. Rome has no answer to Paul's tremendous polemic in Galatians.
These judaizers believed in Christ too; they believed he was the Messiah; they
believed he died for sinners; they believed he rose from the dead; they believed
he was coming again to judge the living and the dead. They certainly would have
called him their Savior. But they believed his work for us had to be
supplemented by our work for him. And Paul regards that step as fatal to the
gospel and to salvation. It is either Christ alone, by grace alone, or you might
as well be a pagan idolater. That is what he has said twice in chapter 4 (v. 3;
vv. 8-9).
[What that means, as we have said before, is that the great divide is not found
between those who call themselves Christians and those who do not; but between
those whose hope of heaven is in Christ alone and not in any way in their own
efforts and those who think that in one way or another, to one degree or
another, they hold their salvation in their own hands.]
And his argument here enlarges that point. It is either Christ or the law that
justifies. And if Christ, it is Christ entirely and if it is law it is the law
entirely, which means that one can't pick and choose. If you are going to find
peace with God by your works, then you must do all the works of the law, not
just one or two, not just circumcision and feast days and clean and unclean
foods, but all the commandments of God. Paul has already made this point in 3:10
with a citation of Deuteronomy 27:26. [This is, by the way, the irony of all
legalisms. They make their principle obedience to the law, but then they gut
that obedience in order to make it do-able, realistic. Legalists always demand
much less of people than the gospel demands. The law party does much less
justice to the law than the gospel party! When you forsake all thought of
earning God's acceptance, you are finally free to face the entire, the
impossibly comprehensive and searching demands of God's law, you are free to see
that the law asks for nothing less than perfection in thought, word, and deed.
And you can now strive toward that perfection because your failures do not make
the effort useless. For your obedience is not your entrance to heaven, it is
only your love for the one who is taking you to heaven! Legalism is destroyed by
the thought that I must be perfect before God; the gospel aspires to that
perfection and inspires the soul to seek it for love and for gratitude's sake,
and we are not defeated in that striving because we know that our peace with
God, our acceptance with him does not depend upon the perfection of our own
obedience, but already rests eternally secure on the very real perfection of
Christ's obedience for us.]
Note the two "I"s in vv. 2-3. "I, Paul..." and "Again
I..." Paul is projecting his personal presence, his apostolic authority as
much as possible. "This is Paul speaking to you, your father in the faith;
Christ's apostle; your brother..."
Now this is the first time in the letter when Paul makes explicit reference to
the demand the judaizers were making that these Galatian Gentile Christians be
circumcised. Circumcision was the key to the entire system and nothing could
more profoundly demonstrate that Gentiles had to become Jews in order to become
full Christians than that Gentile converts also submit to circumcision. To
become a Jew a Gentile had to be circumcised. And now the judaizers were saying
that the same applied to Christians.
v.4 It is interesting, the verb the NIV translates "alienated" is the
same word he uses in the opposite sense in Romans 7:6. There, by dying to sin we
are released from the law (that is, the law as a means of salvation and so a
means of our hopeless bondage to sin and guilt); here, by accepting the law as a
principle of justification we are released from Christ.
And "fallen away from grace" is the reverse of Romans 5:2: "we
have obtained access into this grace in which we stand..."
v.5 The righteousness for which we hope is that acquittal in the day of
judgment. There is a sense in which our justification is not complete until it
is declared in the verdict of the great day. But Christians are already assured
of that verdict. That is the sense of "hope" in the NT. Not a fond
wish, as in "I hope that God will receive me," but a confident
expectation based on the presence of the Holy Spirit and his communication of
the gospel to our hearts. We can eagerly, not fearfully await the day because of
the verdict of the last day is already realized in our hearts and lives. Paul
elsewhere develops this idea that the Holy Spirit within believers gives present
actuality to the prospect of future glory. Romans 5:1-5 is such a text. There
too Paul speaks of our rejoicing "in the hope of the glory of God" and
that this hope does not disappoint us, "because God has poured out his love
into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has given us." [The thought is
akin to other places in the Bible where a future state is said to exist already
in the present by means of our having grasping it by faith: by faith we have
eternal life, now; our citizenship is in heaven; we are seated with Christ in
the heavenly places, now; etc.]
v.6 Paul uses this form of words "Neither circumcision nor uncircumcision
has any value..." three times. Here, in 6:15 and in 1 Corinthians 7:19. In
the last case, strikingly, the only thing that counts is "keeping the
commandments of God." Paul is no antinomian! The opposite of legalism is
not lawlessness, and it isn't love replacing the law as many American
evangelicals have thought, but an embrace of grace that puts our obedience, even
stricter than the legalist's obedience, on a completely different foundation to
be offered for a completely different reason.
Again, in regard to Roman Catholicism, we have to say that the whole Bible
teaches us to put "baptism" in the place of "circumcision"
here and say the same thing. But the Roman Catholic will not say this. If Roman
Catholicism would just say that: "neither baptism nor unbaptism has any
value...but faith expressing itself through love..." the controversy would
be of an entirely different type and Protestants would not say that the very
gospel was at stake in the Protestant Reformation. But Roman Catholics do not
say this because they do not believe this.
Here faith is the root, love is the fruit. As the old adage has it: we are
justified by faith alone, but not by a faith that is alone. This is a faith that
is active in the heart, that produces gratitude and love, which, in turn,
produce an obedient life of faithful service. Paul and James come together here.
Now the gist of Paul's remarks is clear enough. But perhaps we will see the true
force of them better if we pause to ponder the fact that a great many people
don't agree with what Paul says here, nor do they accept the force of his
argument. It makes sense to us that if you embrace the principle of obedience
for justification you must keep all of the law and not just a few choice
commandments, such as circumcision, or, in our own day, baptism. But most people
don't think that.
They are quite happy to admit that they aren't perfect; they think and do wrong
things. But they also believe that they do enough to gain acceptance with God.
Even in Paul's own day, there were many Jews, even rabbis, who didn't think that
perfect obedience was required for justification. Some held that view. But
others had a much more liberal interpretation of the amount of obedience
actually required for justification before God. One rabbi, the famous Aqiba,
seemed sometimes to say that a single act of meritorious obedience would be
enough to win entrance into heaven, never mind the many acts, the lifetime, of
disobedience. He turned James right around. James, you remember (2:10), says
that if you offend against any part of the law of God you have offended against
it all; break one commandment you might as well have broken them all. (It is a
theoretical argument, of course, as Paul here; no one keeps any of the
commandments, much less all of them!) Aquiba, on the other hand, virtually says
that if you kept any part of the law you kept it all! [Bruce, NIGNT, 230]
I suppose the ordinary theology of the average American, Christian or otherwise,
lies somewhere between the two. Your merits must accumulate to some point, where
that point is God only knows, but the assumption is that only the truly,
egregiously wicked go to hell, the Hitlers of this world. For, by and large,
there is enough good in almost everyone's life. It is why we have a firestorm of
protest and outrage whenever it is suggested in public that someone might have
been condemned to hell for the life he or she led. The very idea is outrageous
to our day and time.
[As an aside, this may be in part because the church has not spoken more
decisively and resolutely about the sinfulness that brings damnation, especially
not about the fact that the worst sinners in hell will always be church-goers
not mass murderers. The worst criminals against God and man will be found in a
church, not a prison. To whom much is given much is required; let few be
teachers (of God's Word) for theirs is the stricter judgment; it is a lesser
thing to kill the body than to kill the soul.]
But back to our main point, legalism is not some particular calculation of the
merit required for entrance into heaven, it is the idea that human merit, the
sinner's merit, has anything to do with justification at all. Whether one needs
100%, 51%, or something less, if my own performance, my own obedience, my own
good works are any part of the calculation of my acceptance with God, any part
of the ground, the reason for my acceptance with God, then I am a legalist,
whether or not I employ some concept of God's grace, God's leniency, or even
Christ's righteousness, to fill in the rest of what is needed to get me to
heaven.
That is Paul's point, but the judaizers didn't agree, and, to be honest, most
people who have been counted as Christians in the history of the world since,
haven't agreed with Paul either.
But think about it. How would you ever know exactly how a person was to obtain
acceptance with God? Well, says Paul, I can tell you because I am Christ's
apostle and I speak for God and for the Son of God. We know about justification
in the only way anyone could ever know: God has spoken. And what God has said, I
am telling you, Paul says. I can tell you that, in fact, if you embrace the
principle of justification by your own works, by your own goodness, then you
must keep every commandment perfectly if you hope for peace with God and a place
in heaven. God requires perfect righteousness. Christ's righteousness is
perfect. If your righteousness is part of the whole, then it must be perfect
too. That is because God is holy, so holy nothing less than perfect
righteousness and perfect obedience will receive his acceptance and reward.
Faith, true and living faith in Christ, sees the force of Paul's argument,
agrees that it is the teaching of Holy Scripture, Deuteronomy and James to name
just two places.
You must believe the Bible's, the apostles' teaching about justification, for
there is no other way to know how sinners can be made right with God. Anything
else is the guess work of people who are rendered incapable by sin to think
wisely and well about God or the judgment day. Leave this fundamental religious
question to human opinion and you will end up with the stoicheia, the ABCs that
lie beneath every man-made religion. That is what Paul said in chapter 4. Pagan
idolatry and sophisticated first century Judaism amount to the same thing: do
this and live; legalism.
But you must believe, faith is the key also because the consequences of faith
and works likewise cannot simply be read off the face of human life or deducted
from theological premises.
We wish that they could. We wish very much that everyone who embraced the works
principle, whether in a Christian or a pagan form, betrayed the consequences of
that false principle in his or her daily life. We wish that it were perfectly
obvious that, as Paul says here, all legalists were obviously and evidently
slaves and all true Christians were just as obviously free. We wish we could see
the slavery on the faces of the unbelieving and the liberty on the faces of the
gospel's sons and daughters.
But we can't, most of the time. All of us know unbelieving people who, to be
honest, seem happier and better adjusted than some Christian folk we know. Many
unrighteous people look and act like they are free and greatly enjoying their
freedom, so much so that we Christians can envy them. And many Christians look
and act like slaves. That is the truth of the matter and we all know it and have
seen it. We all have seen it ourselves! It is one of the most important lessons
you young people must come to terms with as you grow up. The world often looks
very appealing to you; worldly people look and sound appealing to you.
Christians can often, by comparison, seem dull and uninteresting. It would be so
much easier if unbelievers shuffled through life stooped over, defeated in
spirit, looking like the slaves that they are and it was the Christians who had
the spring in their step and the sense of thrill in their freedom.
I don't say that that is the way it ought to be, of course. If a Christian is
living as though he or she were a slave to sin, guilt, or fear of judgment, he
or she clearly is not embracing the gospel as he or she should and could. And
there can be many reasons why. Troubles in one's past can cause even true
believers to struggle to accept the full freedom that Christ bestows on his
children. When one's life has become used to slavery, it can be hard to adjust
to freedom, hard to believe it, hard to trust it, fearful to practice it. Like a
convict who has been in prison so long, he is scared to death of having to live
the life of a free man with all of that responsibility.
Bad teaching can produce a similar result, even good teaching that lacks balance
can do that. I was reading recently of the ministry of James Fraser of Alness,
an 18th century Scottish minister and the author of one of the most celebrated
works on sanctification in the Reformed tradition, an examination of Paul's
teaching from Romans 6:1 to 8:4. But his own preaching concentrated too much on
the law and conviction of sin, he labored too much to awaken consciences and not
enough to heal the wounded, and a number of the people in the parish began to go
to the next parish to get more grace and forgiveness for themselves. Fraser's
preaching depressed and discouraged them, it didn't lift them up. So many, in
fact, were in the habit of going from Alness to Kilmuir that the Kilmuir
congregation began to complain about the crowding in their church. The Kilmuir
session finally asked their minister to speak to Mr. Fraser about it, but Fraser
himself felt it was all of the Lord and wasn't bothered.
I say, a lack of a true and living sense of one's liberty in Christ can result
from many things. It also is one of the Devil's primary interests, enslaving
Christian hearts again and taking from them the power and blessing of the
gospel. He is known as the "accuser of the brethren" and what are his
accusations designed to produce in us but a looking at ourselves and our sins
again instead of at Christ and his perfect righteousness that makes any and all
accusations irrelevant. And our hearts easily take to the yoke again. The human
heart in sin is fond of fetters and is always ready to forge a new set for
itself. And so we begin to think about our failures and worry about more to
come; we begin to compare our lives with the lives of others and wonder why they
have what we do not; we begin to think about everything but Christ for us the
hope of glory. We wonder what we have done that accounts for our disappointments
and wonder what we must do to escape them. And we are no longer putting faith
first and Christ first as Paul says we must in v. 6.
So it is not a small thing Paul is speaking of here. It is not an easy thing or
a thing to be taken for granted. Many slaves read this text and think Paul is
numbering them among the free men. And many freemen have read this text and
wondered if they were still among the slaves.
Take Paul at his apostolic word. This freedom that is ours in Christ can be
squandered. It must not be taken for granted. It must be practiced. One must get
up in the morning and believe oneself a free man, a free woman. One must
remember that freedom and thank God for it, and bless Christ and his cross for
it ten times a day. One must see those without Christ as the slaves they are
whether they know it or not or act like it or not, or look like it or not. For
the worst slavery of all is that of the slave who discovers only at the Last Day
that he has been a slave all his life. And you must remember that though the
public demonstration of your acceptance with God must await the last judgment,
that acceptance is already yours and you are to live in the power and joy of it
every day.
I love the way Alexander Whyte put this. He was preaching on the robe that the
father in the parable ordered to be brought for his prodigal son who had
returned home. "Bring forth the best robe and put it on him," which
Whyte naturally and rightly likened to what the Bible calls the robe of Christ's
righteousness which is put on the saints and by which their sins are covered and
in which they will stand on the last day.
"...we are always returning home from the far country and we are always
saying, 'Father, I have sinned.' And our Father is always saying over us, 'Bring
forth the best robe and put it on him.' Every morning you rise put on again the
best robe. And every returning night lie down again in it. Go out to your day's
work always wearing it. Make it your morning coat and your evening dress. Be
married in it, if you would be married in the Lord, and make it your winding
sheet, if you would die in the Lord. Die in it and awake in it and go up to the
judgment in it. Stand at the right hand of the great white throne in it, and
enter heaven shining like the sun in it." [Thomas Shepard, 161-162]
Which is just a more homely way of saying what Paul has said to us here: 'Stand
firm, then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.'
Be the free men and women Christ has made you to be. You are impervious to
condemnation. No one can reach you or touch you in that way. You are free in
Christ. You are already in heaven. Already living forever. Now live accordingly.
Eagerly await the demonstration of what is already yours and give yourself to a
life of faith expressing itself through love. Make sure that is the principle of
your life. Do that and you do all.