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Galatians
Chapter I
VERSE 1. Paul, an apostle, (not of
men, neither by man, but by Jesus Christ, and God the
Father, who raised him from the dead).
St.
Paul wrote this epistle because, after his departure from
the Galatian churches, Jewish-Christian fanatics moved in,
who perverted Paul's Gospel of man's free justification by
faith in Christ Jesus.
The
world bears the Gospel a grudge because the Gospel
condemns the religious wisdom of the world. Jealous for
its own religious views, the world in turn charges the
Gospel with being a subversive and licentious doctrine,
offensive to God and man, a doctrine to be persecuted as
the worst plague on earth.
As
a result we have this paradoxical situation: The Gospel
supplies the world with the salvation of Jesus Christ,
peace of conscience, and every blessing. Just for that the
world abhors the Gospel.
These
Jewish-Christian fanatics who pushed themselves into the
Galatian churches after Paul's departure, boasted that
they were the descendants of Abraham, true ministers of
Christ, having been trained by the apostles themselves,
that they were able to perform miracles.
In
every way they sought to undermine the authority of St.
Paul. They said to the Galatians: "You have no right
to think highly of Paul. He was the last to turn to
Christ. But we have seen Christ. We heard Him preach. Paul
came later and is beneath us. It is possible for us to be
in error--we who have received the Holy Ghost? Paul stands
alone. He has not seen Christ, nor has he had much contact
with the other apostles. Indeed, he persecuted the Church
of Christ for a long time."
When men claiming such credentials come along, they
deceive not only the naive, but also those who seemingly
are well-established in the faith. This same argument is
used by the papacy. "Do you suppose that God for the
sake of a few Lutheran heretics would disown His entire
Church? Or do you suppose that God would have left His
Church floundering in error all these centuries?" The
Galatians were taken in by such arguments with the result
that Paul's authority and doctrine were drawn in question.
Against
these boasting, false apostles, Paul boldly defends his
apostolic authority and ministry. Humble man that he was,
he will not now take a back seat. He reminds them of the
time when he opposed Peter to his face and reproved the
chief of the apostles.
Paul
devotes the first two chapters to a defense of his office
and his Gospel, affirming that he received it, not from
men, but from the Lord Jesus Christ by special revelation,
and that if he or an angel from heaven preach any other
gospel than the one he had preached, he shall be accursed.
The
Certainty of Our Calling
Every
minister should make much of his calling and impress upon
others the fact that he has been delegated by God to
preach the Gospel. As the ambassador of a government is
honored for his office and not for his private person, so
the minister of Christ should exalt his office in order to
gain authority among men. This is not vain glory, but
needful glorying.
Paul
takes pride in his ministry, not to his own praise but to
the praise of God. Writing to the Romans, he declares,
"Inasmuch as I am the apostle of the Gentiles, I
magnify mine office," i.e., I want to be received not
as Paul of Tarsus, but as Paul the apostle and ambassador
of Jesus Christ, in order that people might be more eager
to hear. Paul exalts his ministry out of the desire to
make known the name, the grace, and the mercy of God.
VERSE
1. Paul, an apostle, (not of men,
etc.)
Paul
loses no time in defending himself against the charge that
he had thrust himself into the ministry. He says to the
Galatians: "My call may seem inferior to you. But
those who have come to you are either called of men or by
man. My call is the highest possible, for it is by Jesus
Christ, and God the Father."
When
Paul speaks of those called "by men," I take it
he means those whom neither God nor man sent, but who go
wherever they like and speak for themselves.
When
Paul speaks of those called "by man" I take it
he means those who have a divine call extended to them
through other persons. God calls in two ways. Either He
calls ministers through the agency of men, or He calls
them directly as He called the prophets and apostles. Paul
declares that the false apostles were called or sent
neither by men, nor by man. The most they could claim is
that they were sent by others. "But as for me I was
called neither of men, nor by man, but directly by Jesus
Christ. My call is in every respect like the call of the
apostles. In fact I am an apostle."
Elsewhere
Paul draws a sharp distinction between an apostleship and
lesser functions, as in I Corinthians 12:28: "And God
hath set some in the church; first, apostles; secondarily,
prophets; thirdly, teachers." He mentions the
apostles first because they were appointed directly by
God.
Matthias
was called in this manner. The apostles chose two
candidates and then cast lots, praying that God would
indicate which one He would have. To be an apostle he had
to have his appointment from God. In the same manner Paul
was called as the apostle of the Gentiles.
The
call is not to be taken lightly. For a person to possess
knowledge is not enough. He must be sure that he is
properly called. Those who operate without a proper call
seek no good purpose. God does not bless their labors.
They may be good preachers, but they do no edify. Many of
the fanatics of our day pronounce words of faith, but
they bear no good fruit, because their purpose is to turn
men to their perverse opinions. On the other hand, those
who have a divine call must suffer a good deal of
opposition in order that they may become fortified against
the running attacks of the devil and the world.
This
is our comfort in the ministry, that ours is a divine
office to which we have been divinely called. Reversely,
what an awful thing it must be for the conscience if one
is not properly called. It spoils one's best work. When I
was a young man I thought Paul was making too much of his
call. I did not understand his purpose. I did not then
realize the importance of the ministry. I knew nothing of
the doctrine of faith because we were taught sophistry
instead of certainty, and nobody understood spiritual
boasting. We exalt our calling, not to gain glory among
men, or money, or satisfaction, or favor, but because
people need to be assured that the words we speak are the
words of God. This is no sinful pride. It is holy pride.
VERSE
1. And God the Father, who raised him from the dead.
Paul
is so eager to come to the subject matter of his epistle,
the righteousness of faith in opposition to the
righteousness of works, that already in the title he must
speak his mind. He did not think it quite enough to say
that he was an apostle "by Jesus Christ"; he
adds, "and God the Father, who raised him from the
dead."
The
clause seems superfluous on first sight. Yet Paul had a
good reason for adding it. He had to deal with Satan and
his agents who endeavored to deprive him of the
righteousness of Christ, who was raised by God the Father
from the dead. These perverters of the righteousness of
Christ resist the Father and the Son, and the works of
them both.
In
this whole epistle Paul treats of the resurrection of
Christ. By His resurrection Christ won the victory over
law, sin, flesh, world, devil, death, hell, and every
evil. And
this His victory He donated unto us. These many tyrants
and enemies of ours may accuse and frighten us, but they
dare not condemn us, for Christ, whom God the Father has
raised from the dead is our righteousness and our victory.
Do
you notice how well suited to his purpose Paul writes? He
does not say, "By God who made heaven and earth, who
is Lord of the angels," but Paul has in mind the
righteousness of Christ, and speaks to the point, saying,
"I am an apostle, not of men, neither by man, but by
Jesus Christ, and God the Father, who raised him from the
dead."
VERSE
2. And all the brethren which are with me.
This
should go far in shutting the mouths of the false
apostles. Paul's intention is to exalt his own ministry
while discrediting theirs. He adds for good measure the
argument that he does not stand alone, but that all the
brethren with him attest to the fact that his doctrine is
divinely true. "Although the brethren with me are not
apostles like myself, yet they are all of one mind with
me, think, write, and teach as I do."
VERSE
2. Unto the churches of Galatia.
Paul
had preached the Gospel throughout Galatia, founding many
churches which after his departure were invaded by the
false apostles. The Anabaptists in our time imitate the
false apostles. They do not go where the enemies of the
Gospel predominate. They go where the Christians are. Why
do they not invade the Catholic provinces and preach their
doctrine to godless princes, bishops, and doctors, as we
have done by the help of God? These soft martyrs take no
chances. They go where the Gospel has a hold, so that they
may not endanger their lives. The false apostles would not
go to Jerusalem of Caiaphas, or to the Rome of the
Emperor, or to any other place where no man had preached
before as Paul and the other apostles did. But they came
to the churches of
Galatia, knowing that where men profess the name of Christ
they may feel secure.
It
is the lot of God's ministers not only to suffer
opposition at the hand of a wicked world, but also to see
the patient indoctrination of many years quickly undone by
such religious fanatics. This hurts more than the
persecution of tyrants. We are treated shabbily on the
outside by tyrants, on the inside by those whom we have
restored to the liberty of the Gospel, and also by false
brethren. But this is our comfort and our glory, that
being called of God we have the promise of everlasting
life. We look for that reward which "eye hath not
seen, nor ear heard, neither hath entered into the heart
of man."
Jerome
raises the question why Paul called them churches that
were no churches, inasmuch as the Galatians had forsaken
the grace of Christ for the law of Moses. The proper
answer is: Although the Galatians had fallen away from the
doctrine of Paul, baptism, the Gospel, and the name of
Christ continued among them. Not all the Galatians had
become perverted. There were some who clung to the right
view of the Word and the Sacraments. These means cannot be
contaminated. They remain divine regardless of men's
opinion. Wherever the means of grace are found, there is
the Holy Church, even though Antichrist reigns there. So
much for the title of the epistle. Now follows the
greeting of the apostle.
VERSE
3. Grace be to you, and peace, from God the Father,
and from our Lord Jesus Christ.
The
terms of grace and peace are common terms with Paul and
are now pretty well understood. But since we are
explaining this epistle, you will not mind if we repeat
what we have so often explained elsewhere. The article of
justification must be sounded in our ears incessantly
because the frailty of our flesh will not permit us to
take hold of it perfectly and to believe it with all our
heart.
The
greeting of the Apostle is refreshing. Grace remits sin,
and peace quiets the conscience. Sin and conscience
torment us, but Christ has overcome these fiends now and
forever. Only Christians possess this victorious knowledge
given from above. These two terms, grace and peace,
constitute Christianity. Grace involves the remission of
sins, peace, and a happy conscience. Sin is not canceled
by lawful living, for no person is able to live up to the
Law. The Law reveals guilt, fills the conscience with
terror, and drives men to despair. Much less is sin taken
away by man-invented endeavors. The fact is, the more a
person seeks credit for himself by his own efforts, the
deeper he goes into debt. Nothing can take away sin except
the grace of God. In actual living, however, it is not so
easy to persuade oneself that by grace alone, in
opposition to every other means, we obtain the forgiveness
of our sins and peace with God.
The
world brands this a pernicious doctrine. The world
advances free will, the rational and natural approach of
good works, as the means of obtaining the forgiveness of
sin. But it is impossible to gain peace of conscience by
the methods and means of the world. Experience proves
this. Various holy orders have been launched for the
purpose of securing peace of conscience through religious
exercises, but they proved failures because such devices
only increase doubt and despair. We find no rest for our
weary bones unless we cling to the word of grace.
The
Apostle does not wish the Galatians grace and peace from
the emperor, or from kings, or from governors, but from
God the Father. He wishes them heavenly peace, the kind of
which Jesus spoke when He said, "Peace I leave unto
you: my peace I give unto you." Worldly peace
provides quiet enjoyment of life and possessions. But in
affliction, particularly in the hour of death, the grace
and peace of the world will not deliver us. However, the
grace and peace of God will. They make a person strong and
courageous to bear and to overcome all difficulties, even
death itself, because we have the victory of Christ's
death and the assurance of the forgiveness of our sins.
Men Should Not Speculate About the Nature of God
The
Apostle adds to the salutation the words, "and from
our Lord Jesus Christ." Was it not enough to say,
"from God the Father"?
It
is a principle of the Bible that we are not to inquire
curiously into the nature of God. "There shall no man
see me, and live," Exodus 33:20. All who trust in
their own merits to save them disregard this principle and
lose sight of the Mediator, Jesus Christ.
True
Christian theology does not inquire into the nature of
God, but into God's purpose and will in Christ, whom God
incorporated in our flesh to live and to die for our sins.
There is nothing more dangerous than to speculate about
the incomprehensible power, wisdom, and majesty of God
when the conscience is in turmoil over sin. To do so is to
lose God altogether because God becomes intolerable when
we seek to measure and to comprehend His infinite majesty.
We
are to seek God as Paul tells us in I Corinthians 1:23,
24:
We preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumbling
block, and unto the Greeks foolishness; but unto them
which are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power
of God, and the wisdom of God."
Begin with Christ. He came down to earth, lived among men,
suffered, was crucified, and then He died, standing
clearly before us, so that our hearts and eyes may fasten
upon Him. Thus we shall be kept from climbing into heaven
in a curious and futile search after the nature of God.
If
you ask how God may be found, who justifies sinners, know
that there is no other God besides this man Christ Jesus.
Embrace Him, and forget about the nature of God. But these
fanatics who exclude our Mediator in their dealings with
God, do not believe me. Did not Christ Himself say:
"I am the way, and the truth, and the life: no man
cometh unto the Father, but by me"? Without Christ
there is no access to the Father, but futile rambling; no
truth, but hypocrisy; no life, but eternal death.
When
you argue about the nature of God apart from the question
of justification, you may be as profound as you like. But
when you deal with conscience and with righteousness over
against the law, sin, death, and the devil, you must close
your mind to all inquiries into the nature of God, and
concentrate upon Jesus Christ, who says, "Come unto
me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give
you rest." Doing this, you will recognize the power,
and majesty condescending to your condition according to
Paul's statement to the Colossians, "In Christ are
hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge," and,
"In him dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead
bodily." Paul in wishing grace and peace not alone
from God the Father, but also from Jesus Christ, wants to
warn us against the curious incursions into the nature of
God. We are to hear Christ, who has been appointed by the
Father as our divine Teacher.
Christ
is God by Nature
At
the same time, Paul confirms our creed, "that Christ
is very God." We need such frequent confirmation of
our faith, for Satan will not fail to attack it. He hates
our faith. He knows that it is the victory which
overcometh him and the world. That Christ is very God is
apparent in that Paul ascribes to Him divine powers
equally with the Father, as for instance, the power to
dispense grace and peace. This Jesus could not do unless
He were God.
To
bestow peace and grace lies in the province of God, who
alone can create these blessings. The angels cannot. The
apostles could only distribute these blessings by the
preaching of the Gospel. In attributing to Christ the
divine power of creating and giving grace, peace,
everlasting life, righteousness, and forgiveness of sins,
the conclusion is inevitable that Christ is truly God.
Similarly, St. John concludes from the works attributed to
the Father and the Son that they are divinely One. Hence,
the gifts which we receive from the Father and from the
Son are one and the same. Otherwise Paul should have
written: "Grace from God the Father, and peace from
our Lord Jesus Christ." In combining them he ascribes
them equally to the Father and the Son. I stress this on
account of the many errors emanating from the sects.
The Arians were sharp fellows. Admitting that Christ had
two natures, and that He is called "very God of very
God," they were yet able to deny His divinity. The
Arians took Christ for a noble and perfect creature,
superior even to the angels, because by Him God created
heaven and earth. Mohammed also speaks highly of Christ.
But all their praise is mere palaver to deceive men.
Paul's language is different. To paraphrase him: "You
are established in this belief that Christ is very God
because He gives grace and peace, gifts which only God can
create and bestow."
VERSE
4. Who gave himself for our sins.
Paul
sticks to his theme. He never loses sight of the purpose
of his epistle. He does not say, "Who received our
works," but "who gave." Gave what? Not
gold, or silver, or paschal lambs, or an angel, but
Himself. What for? Not for a crown, or a kingdom, or our
goodness, but for our sins. These words are like so many
thunderclaps of protest from heaven against every kind and
type of self-merit. Underscore these words, for they are
full of comfort for sore consciences.
How
may we obtain remission of our sins? Paul answers:
"The man who is named Jesus Christ and the Son of God
gave himself for our sins." The heavy artillery of
these words explodes papacy, works, merits, superstitions.
For if our sins could be removed by our own efforts, what
need was there for the Son of God to be given for them?
Since Christ was given for our sins it stands to reason
that they cannot be put away by our own efforts.
This
sentence also defines our sins as great, so great, in
fact, that the whole world could not make amends for a
single sin. The greatness of the ransom, Christ, the Son
of God, indicates this. The vicious character of sin is
brought out by the words "who gave himself for our
sins." So vicious is sin that only the sacrifice of
Christ could atone for sin. When we reflect that the one
little word "sin" embraces the whole kingdom of
Satan, and that it includes everything that is horrible,
we have reason to tremble. But we are careless. We make
light of sin. We think that by some little work or merit
we can dismiss sin.
This
passage, then, bears out the fact that all men are sold
under sin. Sin is an exacting despot who can be vanquished
by no created power, but by the sovereign power of Jesus
Christ alone.
All
this is of wonderful comfort to a conscience troubled by
the enormity of sin. Sin cannot harm those who believe in
Christ, because He has overcome sin by His death. Armed
with this conviction, we are enlightened and may pass
judgment upon the papists, monks, nuns, priests,
Mohammedans, Anabaptists, and all who trust in their own
merits, as wicked and destructive sects that rob God and
Christ of the honor that belongs to them alone.
Note
especially the pronoun "our" and its
significance. You will readily grant that Christ gave
Himself for the sins of Peter, Paul, and others who were
worthy of such grace. But feeling low, you find it hard to
believe that Christ gave Himself for your sins. Our
feelings shy at a personal application of the pronoun
"our," and we refuse to have anything to do with
God until we have made ourselves worthy by good deeds.
This
attitude springs from a false conception of sin, the
conception that sin is a small matter, easily taken care
of by good works; that we must present ourselves unto
God with a good conscience; that we must feel no sin
before we may feel that Christ was given for our sins.
This
attitude is universal and particularly developed in those
who consider themselves better than others. Such readily
confess that they are frequent sinners, but they regard
their sins as of no such importance that they cannot
easily be dissolved by some good action, or that they may
not appear before the tribunal of Christ and demand the
reward of eternal life for their righteousness. Meantime
they pretend great humility and acknowledge a certain
degree of sinfulness for which they soulfully join in the
publican's prayer, "God be merciful to me a
sinner." But the real significance and comfort of the
words "for our sins" is lost upon them.
The
genius of Christianity takes the words of Paul "who
gave himself for our sins" as true and efficacious.
We are not to look upon our sins as insignificant trifles.
On the other hand, we are not to regard them as so
terrible that we must despair. Learn to believe that
Christ was given, not for picayune and imaginary
transgressions, but for mountainous sins; not for one or
two, but for all; not for sins that can be discarded, but
for sins that are stubbornly ingrained.
Practice
this knowledge and fortify yourself against despair,
particularly in the last hour, when the memory of past
sins assails the conscience. Say with confidence:
"Christ, the Son of God, was given not for the
righteous, but for sinners. If I had no sin I should not
need Christ. No, Satan, you cannot delude me into thinking
I am holy. The truth is, I am all sin. My sins are not
imaginary transgressions, but sins against the first
table, unbelief, doubt, despair, contempt, hatred,
ignorance of God, ingratitude towards Him, misuse of His
name, neglect of His Word, etc.; and sins against the
second table, dishonor of parents, disobedience of
government, coveting of another's possessions, etc.
Granted that I have not committed murder, adultery, theft,
and similar sins in deed, nevertheless
I have committed them in the heart, and therefore I am a
transgressor of all the commandments of God.
"Because
my transgressions are multiplied and my own efforts at
self-justification rather a hindrance than a furtherance,
therefore Christ the Son of God gave Himself into death
for my sins." To believe this is to have eternal
life.
Let
us equip ourselves against the accusations of Satan with
this and similar passages of Holy Scripture. If he says,
"Thou shalt be damned," you tell him: "No,
for I fly to Christ who gave Himself for my sins. In
accusing me of being a damnable sinner, you are cutting
your own throat, Satan. You are reminding me of God's
fatherly goodness toward me, that He so loved the world
that He gave His only-begotten Son that whosoever
believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting
life. In calling me a sinner, Satan, you really comfort me
above measure." With such heavenly cunning we are to
meet the devil's craft and put from us the memory of sin.
St.
Paul also presents a true picture of Christ as the
virgin-born Son of God, delivered into death for our sins.
To entertain a true conception of Christ is important, for
the devil describes Christ as an exacting and cruel judge
who condemns and punishes men. Tell him that his
definition of Christ is wrong, that Christ has given
Himself for our sins, that by His sacrifice He has taken
away the sins of the whole world.
Make
ample use of this pronoun "our." Be assured that
Christ has canceled the sins, not of certain persons only,
but your sins. Do not permit yourself to be robbed of this
lovely conception of Christ. Christ is no Moses, no
law-giver, no tyrant, but the Mediator for sins, the Giver
of grace and life.
We
know this. Yet in the actual conflict with the devil, when
he scares us with the Law, when he frightens us with the
very person of the Mediator, when he misquotes the words
of Christ, and distorts for us our Savior, we so easily
lose sight of our sweet High-Priest.
For this reason I am so anxious for you to gain a true
picture of Christ out of the words of Paul "who gave
himself for our sins." Obviously, Christ is no judge
to condemn us, for He gave Himself for our sins. He does
not trample the fallen but raises them. He comforts the
broken-hearted. Otherwise Paul should lie when he writes
"who gave himself for our sins."
I
do not bother my head with speculations about the nature
of God. I simply attach myself to the human Christ, and I
find joy and peace, and the wisdom of God in Him. These
are not new truths. I am repeating what the apostles and
all teachers of God have taught long ago. Would to God we
could impregnate our hearts with these truths.
VERSE
4. That he might deliver us from this present evil
world.
Paul
calls this present world evil because everything in it is
subject to the malice of the devil, who reigns over the
whole world as his domain and fills the air with
ignorance, contempt, hatred, and disobedience of God. In
this devils's kingdom we live.
As
long as a person is in the world he cannot by his own
efforts rid himself of sin, because the world is bent upon
evil. The people of the world are the slaves of the devil.
If we are not in the Kingdom of Christ, it is certain we
belong to the kingdom of Satan and we are pressed into his
service with every talent we possess.
Take
the talents of wisdom and integrity. Without Christ,
wisdom is double foolishness and integrity double sin,
because they not only fail to perceive the wisdom and
righteousness of Christ, but hinder and blaspheme the
salvation of Christ. Paul justly calls it the evil or
wicked world, for when the world is at its best the world
is at its worst. The grossest vices are small faults in
comparison with the wisdom and righteousness of the world.
These prevent men from accepting the Gospel of the
righteousness of Christ. The white devil of spiritual sin
is far more dangerous than the black devil of carnal sin
because the
wiser, the better men are without Christ, the more they
are likely to ignore and oppose the Gospel.
With
the words, "that he might deliver us," Paul
argues that we stand in need of Christ. No other being can
possibly deliver us from this present evil world. Do not
let the fact disturb you that a great many people enjoy
excellent reputations without Christ. Remember what Paul
says, that the world with all its wisdom, might, and
righteousness is the devil's own. God alone is able to
deliver us from the world.
Let
us praise and thank God for His mercy in delivering us
from the captivity of Satan, when we were unable to do so
by our own strength. Let us confess with Paul that all our
work-righteousness is loss and dung. Let us condemn as
filthy rags all talk about free will, all religious
orders, masses, ceremonies, vows, fastings, and the like.
In
branding the world the devil's kingdom of iniquity,
ignorance, error, sin, death, and everlasting despair,
Paul at the same time declares the Kingdom of Christ to be
a kingdom of equity, light, grace, remission of sin,
peace, saving health, and everlasting life into which we
are translated by our Lord Jesus Christ, to whom be glory
forever.
In
this passage Paul contends against the false apostles for
the article of Justification. Christ, says Paul, has
delivered us from this wicked kingdom of the devil and the
world according to the good will, the pleasure and
commandment of the Father. Hence we are not delivered by
our own will, or shrewdness, or wisdom, but by the mercy
and love of God, as it is written, I John 4:10,
"Herein is love, not that we loved God, but that he
loved us, and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our
sins."
Another
reason why Paul, like John, emphasizes the Father's will
is Christ's habit of directing attention to the Father.
For Christ came into the world to reconcile God with us
and to draw us to the Father.
Not
by curious inquiries into the nature of God shall we know
God and His purpose for our salvation, but by taking hold
of Christ, who according to the will of the
Father has given Himself into death for our sins. When we
understand this to be the will of the Father in Christ,
then shall we know God to be merciful, and not angry. We
shall realize that He loved us wretched sinners so much
indeed that He gave us His only-begotten Son into death
for us.
The
pronoun "our" refers to both God and Father. He
is our God and our Father. Christ's Father and our Father
are one and the same. Hence Christ said to Mary Magdalene:
"Go to my brethren, and say unto them, I ascend unto
my Father, and your Father; and to my God, and your
God." God is our Father and our God, but only in
Christ Jesus.
VERSE
5. To whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.
Hebrew
writing is interspersed with expressions of praise and
gratitude. This peculiarity can be traced in the apostolic
writings, particularly in those of Paul. The name of the
Lord is to be mentioned with great reverence and
thanksgiving.
VERSE
6. I marvel.
How
patiently Paul deals with his seduced Galatians! He does
not pounce on them but, like a father, he fairly excuses
their error. With motherly affection he talks to them yet
he does it in a way that at the same time he also reproves
them. On the other hand, he is highly indignant at the
seducers whom he blames for the apostasy of the Galatians.
His anger bursts forth in elemental fury at the beginning
of his epistle. "If any may," he cries,
"preach any other gospel unto you than that ye have
received, let him be accursed." Later on, in the
fifth chapter, he threatens the false apostles with
damnation. "He that troubleth you shall bear his
judgment, whosoever he be." He pronounces a curse
upon them. "I would they were even cut off which
trouble you."
He
might have addressed the Galatians after this fashion:
"I am ashamed of you. Your ingratitude grieves me.
I am angry with you." But his purpose was to call
them back to the Gospel. With this purpose in his mind he
speaks very gently to them. He could not have chosen a
milder expression than this, "I marvel." It
indicates his sorrow and his displeasure.
Paul
minds the rule which he himself lays down in a later
chapter where he says: "Brethren, if a man be
overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such
an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself,
lest thou also be tempted." Toward those who have
been misled we are to show ourselves parentally
affectionate, so that they may perceive that we seek not
their destruction but their salvation. Over against the
devil and his missionaries, the authors of false doctrines
and sects, we ought to be like the Apostle, impatient, and
rigorously condemnatory, as parents are with the dog that
bites their little one, but the weeping child itself they
soothe.
The
right spirit in Paul supplies him with an extraordinary
facility in handling the afflicted consciences of the
fallen. The Pope and his bishops, inspired by the desire
to lord it over men's souls, crack out thunders and curses
upon miserable consciences. They have no care for the
saving of men's souls. They are interested only in
maintaining their position.
VERSE
6. That ye are so soon.
Paul
deplores the fact that it is difficult for the mind to
retain a sound and steadfast faith. A man labors for a
decade before he succeeds in training his little church
into orderly religion, and then some ignorant and vicious
poltroon comes along to overthrow in a minute the patient
labor of years. By the grace of God we have effected here
in Wittenberg the form of a Christian church. The Word of
God is taught as it should be, the Sacraments are
administered, and everything is prosperous. This happy
condition, secured by many years of arduous labors, some
lunatic might spoil in a moment. This happened in the
churches of Galatia which Paul had brought into life
in spiritual travail. Soon after his departure, however,
these Galatian churches were thrown into confusion by the
false apostles.
The
church is a tender plant. It must be watched. People hear
a couple of sermons, scan a few pages of Holy Writ, and
think they know it all. They are bold because they have
never gone through any trials of faith. Void of the Holy
Spirit, they teach what they please as long as it sounds
good to the common people who are ever ready to join
something new.
We
have to watch out for the devil lest he sow tares among
the wheat while we sleep. No sooner had Paul turned his
back on the churches of Galatia, than the false apostles
went to work. Therefore, let us watch over ourselves and
over the whole church.
VERSE
6. I marvel that ye are so soon
removed.
Again
the Apostle puts in a gentle word. He does not berate the
Galatians, "I marvel that ye are so unsteady,
unfaithful." He says, "I marvel that ye are so
soon removed." He does not address them as evildoers.
He speaks to them as people who have suffered great loss.
He condemns those who removed them rather than the
Galatians. At the same time he gently reproves them for
rather themselves to be removed. The criticism is implied
that they should have been permitting a little more
settled in their beliefs. If they had taken better hold of
the Word they could not have been removed so easily.
Jerome
thinks that Paul is playing upon the name Galatians,
deriving it from the Hebrew word Galath, which means
fallen or carried away, as though Paul wanted to say,
"You are true Galatians, i.e., fallen away in name
and in fact." Some believe that the Germans are
descended from the Galatians. There may be something to
that. For the Germans are not unlike the Galatians in
their lack of constancy. At first we Germans are very
enthusiastic, but presently our emotions cool and we
become slack. When the light of the Gospel first came to
us many were zealous, heard sermons greedily, and held the
ministry of God's Word in high esteem. But now that
religion has been reformed, many who formerly were such
earnest disciples have discarded the Word of God, have
become sow-bellies like the foolish and inconsistent
Galatians.
VERSE
6. From him that called you into the
grace of Christ.
The
reading is a little doubtful. The sentence may be
construed to read: "From that Christ that called you
into grace"; or it may be construed to read:
"From God that called you into the grace of
Christ." I prefer the former for it seems to me that
Paul's purpose is to impress upon us the benefits of
Christ. This reading also preserves the implied criticism
that the Galatians withdrew themselves from that Christ
who had called them not unto the law, but unto grace. With
Paul we decry the blindness and perverseness of men in
that they will not receive the message of grace and
salvation, or having received it they quickly let go of
it, in spite of the fact that the Gospel bestows all good
things spiritual: forgiveness of sins, true righteousness,
peace of conscience, everlasting life; and all good things
temporal: good judgment, good government and peace.
Why
does the world abhor the glad tidings of the Gospel and
the blessings that go with it? Because the world is the
devil's. Under his direction the world persecutes the
Gospel and would if it could nail again Christ, the Son of
God, to the Cross although He gave Himself into death for
the sins of the world. The world dwells in darkness. The
world is darkness.
Paul
accentuates the point that the Galatians had been called
by Christ unto grace. "I taught you the doctrine of
grace and of liberty from the Law, from sin and wrath,
that you should be free in Christ, and not slaves to the
hard laws of Moses. Will you allow yourselves to be
carried away so easily from the living fountain of grace
and life?"
VERSE
6. Unto another gospel.
Note
the resourcefulness of the devil. Heretics do not
advertise their errors. Murderers, adulterers, thieves
disguise themselves. So the devil masquerades all his
devices and activities. He puts on white to make himself
look like an angel of light. He is astoundingly clever to
sell his patent poison for the Gospel of Christ. Knowing
Satan's guile, Paul sardonically calls the doctrine of the
false apostles "another gospel," as if he would
say, "You Galatians have now another gospel, while my
Gospel is no longer esteemed by you."
We
infer from this that the false apostles had depreciated
the Gospel of Paul among the Galatians on the plea that it
was incomplete. Their objection to Paul's Gospel is
identical to that recorded in the fifteenth chapter of the
Book of Acts to the effect that it was not enough for the
Galatians to believe in Christ, or to be baptized, but
that it was needful to circumcise them, and to command
them to keep the law of Moses, for "except ye be
circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be
saved." As though Christ were a workman who had begun
a building and left it for Moses to finish.
Today
the Anabaptists and others, finding it difficult to
condemn us, accuse us Lutherans of timidity in professing
the whole truth. They grant that we have laid the
foundation in Christ, but claim that we have failed to go
through with the building. In this way these perverse
fanatics parade their cursed doctrine as the Word of God,
and, flying the flag of God's name, they deceive many. The
devil knows better than to appear ugly and black. He
prefers to carry on his nefarious activities in the name
of God. Hence the German proverb: "All mischief
begins in the name of God."
When
the devil sees that he cannot hurt the cause of the Gospel
by destructive methods, he does it under the
guise of correcting and advancing the cause of the Gospel.
He would like best of all to persecute us with fire and
sword, but this method has availed him little because
through the blood of martyrs the church has been watered.
Unable to prevail by force, he engages wicked and ungodly
teachers who at first make common cause with us, then
claim that they are particularly called to teach the
hidden mysteries of the Scriptures to superimpose upon the
first principles of Christian doctrine that we teach. This
sort of thing brings the Gospel into trouble. May we all
cling to the Word of Christ against the wiles of the
devil, "for we wrestle not against flesh and blood,
but against principalities, against powers, against the
rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual
wickedness in high places."
VERSE
7. Which is not another; but there
be some that trouble you.
Here
again the apostle excuses the Galatians, while he blames
the false apostles for disturbing their consciences and
for stealing them out of his hand. How angry he gets at
these deceivers! He calls them troublemakers, seducers of
poor consciences.
This
passage adduces further evidence that the false apostles
defamed Paul as an imperfect apostle and a weak and
erroneous preacher. They condemn Paul, Paul condemns them.
Such warfare of condemnation is always going on in the
church. The papists and the fanatics hate us, condemn our
doctrine, and want to kill us. We in turn hate and condemn
their cursed doctrine. In the meanwhile the people are
uncertain whom to follow and which way to turn, for it is
not given to everybody to judge these matters. But the
truth will win out. So much is certain, we persecute no
man, neither does our doctrine trouble men. On the
contrary, we have the testimony of many good men who thank
God on their knees for the consolation that our doctrine
has brought them. Like Paul, we
are not to blame that the churches have trouble. The fault
lies with the Anabaptists and other fanatics.
Every
teacher of work-righteousness is a trouble-maker. Has it
never occurred to you that the pope, cardinals, bishops,
monks, and that the whole synagogue of Satan are
trouble-makers? The truth is, they are worse than false
apostles. The files apostles taught that in addition to
faith in Christ the works of the Law of God were necessary
unto salvation. But the papists omit faith altogether and
teach self-devised traditions and works that are not
commanded of God, indeed are contrary to the Word of God,
and for these traditions they demand preferred attention
and obedience.
Paul
calls the false apostles troublers of the church because
they taught circumcision and the keeping of the Law as
needful unto salvation. They insisted that the Law must be
observed in every detail. They were supporters in this
contention by the Jews, with the result that those who
were not firmly established in faith were easily persuaded
that Paul was not a sincere teacher of God because he
ignored the Law. The Jews were offended at the idea that
the Law of God should be entirely ignored by Paul and that
the Gentiles, former idol-worshippers, should gratuitously
attain to the station of God's people without
circumcision, without the penitentiary performance of the
law, by grace alone through faith in Christ Jesus.
These
criticisms were amplified by the false apostles. They
accused Paul of designs to abolish the law of God and the
Jewish dispensation, contrary to the law of God, contrary
to their Jewish heritage, contrary to apostolic example,
contrary to Paul's own example. They demanded that Paul be
shunned as a blasphemer and a rebel, while they were to be
heard as true teachers of the Gospel and authentic
disciples of the apostles. Thus Paul stood defamed among
the Galatians. He was forced to attack the false apostles.
He did so without hesitation.
VERSE 7. And would
pervert the gospel of Christ.
To
paraphrase this sentence: "These false apostles do
not merely trouble you, they abolish Christ's Gospel. They
act as if they were the only true Gospel-preachers. For
all that they muddle Law and Gospel. As a result they
pervert the Gospel. Either Christ must live and the Law
perish, or the Law remains and Christ must perish; Christ
and the Law cannot dwell side by side in the conscience.
It is either grace or law. To muddle the two is to
eliminate the Gospel of Christ entirely."
It
seems a small matter to mingle the Law and Gospel, faith
and works, but it creates more mischief than man's brain
can conceive. To mix Law and Gospel not only clouds the
knowledge of grace, it cuts out Christ altogether.
The
words of Paul, "and would pervert the gospel of
Christ," also indicate how arrogant these false
apostles were. They were shameless boasters. Paul simply
had to exalt his own ministry and Gospel.
VERSE
8. But though we, or an angel from
heaven, preach any other gospel unto you than that which
we have preached unto you, let him be accursed.
Paul's
zeal for the Gospel becomes so fervent that it almost
leads him to curse angels. "I would rather that I, my
brethren, yes, the angels of heaven be anathematized than
that my gospel be overthrown."
The
Greek word
anathema
, Hebrew
herem
, means to accurse, execrate, to damn. Paul first
(hypothetically) curses himself. Knowing persons first
find fault with themselves in order that they may all the
more earnestly reprove others.
Paul
maintains that there is no other gospel besides the one he
had preached to the Galatians. He preached, not a gospel
of his own invention, but the very same Gospel God had
long ago prescribed in the Sacred Scriptures. No wonder
Paul pronounces curses upon himself and upon others,
upon the angels of heaven, if anyone should dare to preach
any other gospel than Christ's own.
VERSE
9. As we said before, so say I now
again. If any man preach any other gospel unto you than
that ye have received, let him be accursed.
Paul
repeats the curse, directing it now upon other persons.
Before, he cursed himself, his brethren, and an angel from
heaven. "Now," he says, "if there are any
others who preach a gospel different from that you have
received from us, let them also be accursed." Paul
herewith curses and excommunicates all false teachers
including his opponents. He is so worked up that he dares
to curse all who pervert his Gospel. Would to God that
this terrible pronouncement of the Apostle might strike
fear into the hearts of all who pervert the Gospel of
Paul.
The
Galatians might say: "Paul, we do not pervert the
Gospel you have brought unto us. We did not quite
understand it. That is all. Now these teachers who came
after you have explained everything so beautifully."
This
explanation the Apostle refuses to accept. They must add
nothing; they must correct nothing. "What you
received from me is the genuine Gospel of God. Let it
stand. If any man brings any other gospel than the one I
brought you, or promises to deliver better things than you
have received from me, let him be accursed."
In
spite of this emphatic denunciation so many accept the
pope as the supreme judge of the Scriptures. "The
Church," they say, "chose only four gospels. The
Church might have chosen more. Ergo the Church is above
the Gospel." With equal force one might argue:
"I approve the Scriptures. Ergo I am above the
Scriptures. John the Baptist confessed Christ. Hence he is
above Christ." Paul subordinates himself, all
preachers, all the angels of heaven, everybody to the
Sacred Scriptures. We are not the masters, judges, or
arbiters, but witnesses, disciples,
and confessors of the Scriptures, whether we be pope,
Luther, Augustine, Paul, or an angel from heaven.
VERSE
10. For do I now persuade men, or
God?
With
the same vehemence Paul continues: "You Galatians
ought to be able to tell from my preaching and from the
many afflictions which I have endured, whether I serve men
or God. Everybody can see that my preaching has stirred up
persecution against me everywhere, and has earned for me
the cruel hatred of my own people, in fact the hatred of
all men. This should convince you that by my preaching I
do not seek the favor and praise of men, but the glory of
God."
No
man can say that we are seeking the favor and praise of
men with our doctrine. We teach that all men are naturally
depraved. We condemn man's free will, his strength,
wisdom, and righteousness. We say that we obtain grace by
the free mercy of God alone for Christ's sake. This is no
preaching to please men. This sort of preaching procures
for us the hatred and disfavor of the world, persecutions,
excommunications, murders, and curses.
"Can't
you see that I seek no man's favor by my doctrine?"
asks Paul. "If I were anxious for the favor of men I
would flatter them. But what do I do? I condemn their
works. I teach things only that I have been commanded to
teach from above. For that I bring down upon my head the
wrath of Jews and Gentiles. My doctrine must be right. It
must be divine. Any other doctrine cannot be better than
mine. Any other doctrine must be false and wicked."
With
Paul we boldly pronounce a curse upon every doctrine that
does not agree with ours. We do not preach for the praise
of men, or the favor of princes. We preach for the favor
of God alone whose grace and mercy we proclaim. Whosoever
teaches a gospel contrary to ours, or different from ours,
let us be bold to say that he is sent of the devil.
VERSE 10. Or do I
seek to please men?
"Do
I serve men or God?" Paul keeps an eye on the false
apostles, those flatterers of men. They taught
circumcision to avoid the hatred and persecution of men.
To
this day you will find many who seek to please men in
order that they may live in peace and security. They teach
whatever is agreeable to men, no matter whether it is
contrary to God's Word or their own conscience. But we who
endeavor to please God and not men, stir up hell itself.
We must suffer reproach, slanders, death.
For
those who go about to please men we have a word from
Christ recorded in the fifth chapter of St. John:
"How can ye believe, which receive honor one of
another, and seek not the honor that cometh from God
alone?"
VERSE
10. For if I yet pleased men, I
should not be the servant of Christ.
Observe
the consummate cleverness with which the false apostles
went about to bring Paul into disrepute. They combed
Paul's writings for contradictions (our opponents do the
same) to accuse him of teaching contradictory things. They
found that Paul had circumcised Timothy according to the
Law, that Paul had purified himself with four other men in
the Temple at Jerusalem, that Paul had shaven his head at
Cenchrea. The false apostles slyly suggested that Paul had
been constrained by the other apostles to observe these
ceremonial laws. We know that Paul observed these decora
out of charitable regard for the weak brethren. He did not
want to offend them. But the false apostles turned Paul's
charitable regard to his disadvantage. If Paul had
preached the Law and circumcision, if he had commended the
strength and free will of man, he would not have been so
obnoxious to the Jews. On the contrary they would have
praised his every action.
VERSES 11, 12. But
I certify you, brethren, that the gospel which was
preached of me is not after man. For I neither received it
of man, neither was I taught it, but by the revelation of
Jesus Christ.
This
passage constitutes Paul's chief defense against the
accusations of his opponents. He maintains under oath that
he received his Gospel not from men, but by the revelation
of Jesus Christ.
In
declaring that his Gospel is not after man, Paul does not
merely wish to state that his Gospel is not mundane. The
false apostles made the same claim for their gospel. Paul
means to say that he learned his Gospel not in the usual
and accepted manner through the agency of men by hearing,
reading, or writing. He received the Gospel by special
revelation directly from Jesus Christ.
Paul
received his Gospel on the way to Damascus when Christ
appeared to him. St. Luke furnishes an account of the
incident in the ninth chapter of the Book of Acts.
"Arise," said Christ to Paul, "and go into
the city, and it shall be told thee what thou must
do." Christ did not send Paul into the city to learn
the Gospel from Ananias. Ananias was only to baptize Paul,
to lay his hands on Paul, to commit the ministry of the
Word unto Paul, and to recommend him to the Church.
Ananias recognized his limited assignment when he said to
Paul: "Brother Saul, the Lord, even Jesus, that
appeared unto thee in the way as thou camest, hath sent
me, that thou mightest receive thy sight, and be filled
with the Holy Ghost." Paul did not receive
instruction from Ananias. Paul had already been called,
enlightened, and taught by Christ in the road. His contact
with Ananias was merely a testimonial to the fact that
Paul had been called by Christ to preach the Gospel.
Paul
was forced to speak of his conversion to combat the
slanderous contention of the false apostles to the effect
that this apostleship was inferior to that of the other
apostles.
If it were not for the example of the Galatian churches I
would never have thought it possible that anybody who had
received the Word of God with such eagerness as they had,
could so quickly let go of it. Good Lord, what terrible
mischief one single false statement can create.
The
article of justification is fragile. Not in itself, of
course, but in us. I know how quickly a person can forfeit
the joy of the Gospel. I know in what slippery places even
those stand who seem to have a good footing in the matters
of faith. In the midst of the conflict when we should be
consoling ourselves with the Gospel, the Law rears up and
begins to rage all over our conscience. I say the Gospel
is frail because we are frail.
What
makes matters worse is that one-half of ourselves, our own
reason, stands against us. The flesh resists the spirit,
or as Paul puts it, "The flesh lusteth against the
Spirit." Therefore we teach that to know Christ and
to believe in Him is no achievement of man, but the gift
of God. God alone can create and preserve faith in us. God
creates faith in us through the Word. He increases,
strengthens and confirms faith in us through His word.
Hence the best service that anybody can render God is
diligently to hear and read God's Word. On the other hand,
nothing is more perilous than to be weary of the Word of
God. Thinking he knows enough, a person begins little by
little to despise the Word until he has lost Christ and
the Gospel altogether.
Let
every believer carefully learn the Gospel. Let him
continue in humble prayer. We are molested not by puny
foes, but by mighty ones, foes who never grow tired of
warring against us. These, our enemies, are many: Our own
flesh, the world, the Law, sin, death, the wrath and
judgment of God, and the devil himself.
The
arguments which the false apostles advanced impress people
to this day. "Who are you to dissent from the fathers
and the entire Church, and to bring a contradictory
doctrine? Are you wiser than so many holy men, wiser than
the whole Church?" When Satan, abetted by
our own reason, advances these arguments against us, we
lose heart, unless we keep on saying to ourselves: "I
don't care if Cyprian, Ambrose, Augustine, Peter, Paul,
John, or an angel from heaven, teaches so and so. I know
that I teach the truth of God in Christ Jesus."
When
I first took over the defense of the Gospel, I remembered
what Doctor Staupitz said to me. "I like it
well," he said, "that the doctrine which you
proclaim gives glory to God alone and none to man. For
never can too much glory, goodness, and mercy be ascribed
unto God." These words of the worthy Doctor comforted
and confirmed me. The Gospel is true because it deprives
men of all glory, wisdom, and righteousness and turns over
all honor to the Creator alone. It is safer to attribute
too much glory unto God than unto man.
You
may argue that the Church and the fathers are holy. Yet
the Church is compelled to pray: "Forgive us our
trespasses," I am not to be believed, nor is the
Church to be believed, or the fathers, or the apostles, or
an angel from heaven, if they teach anything contrary to
the Word of God. Let the Word of God abide forever.
Peter
erred in life and in doctrine. Paul might have dismissed
Peter's error as a matter of no consequence. But Paul saw
that Peter's error would lead to the damage of the whole
Church unless it were corrected. Therefore he withstood
Peter to his face. The Church, Peter, the apostles, angels
from heaven, are not to be heard unless they teach the
genuine Word of God.
This
argument is not always to our advantage. People ask:
"Whom then shall we believe?" Our opponents
maintain that they teach the pure Word of God. We do not
believe them. They in turn hate and persecute us for vile
heretics. What can we do about it? With Paul we glory in
the Gospel of Jesus Christ. What do we gain? We are told
that our glorying is idle vanity and unadulterated
blasphemy. The moment we abase ourselves and give in to
the rage of our opponents, Papists and Anabaptists grow
arrogant. The Anabaptists hatch out some new monstrosity
. The Papists revive their old abominations. What to do?
Let everybody become sure of his calling and doctrine,
that he may boldly say with Paul: "But though we, or
an angel from heaven, preach any other gospel unto you
than ye have received, let him be accursed."
VERSES
13, 14. For ye have heard of my
conversation in time past in the Jews' religion, how that
beyond measure I persecuted the church of God, and wasted
it: And profited in the Jews' religion above many my
equals in mine own nation.
This
passage does not contain doctrine. Paul adduces his own
case for an example. "I have," he says, "at
one time defended the traditions of the Pharisees more
fiercely than any of your false apostles. Now, if the
righteousness of the Law had been worth anything I would
never have forsaken it. So carefully did I live up to the
Law that I excelled many of my companions. So zealous was
I in defense of the Law that I wasted the church of
God."
VERSE
14. Being more exceedingly zealous
of the traditions of my fathers.
Speaking
now of the Mosaic Law, Paul declares that he was wrapped
up in it. To the Philippians he wrote: "As touching
the law, a Pharisee; concerning zeal, persecuting the
church; touching the righteousness which is in the law,
blameless." He means to say, "I can compare
myself with the best and holiest of all those who are of
the circumcision. Let them show me if they can, a more
earnest defender of the Mosaic Law than I was at one time.
This fact, O Galatians, should have put you on your guard
against these deceivers who make so much of the Law. If
anybody ever had reason to glory in the righteousness of
the Law, it was I."
I
too may say that before I was enlightened by the Gospel, I
was as zealous for the papistical laws and traditions of
the fathers as ever a man was. I tried hard to
live up to every law as best I could. I punished myself
with fasting, watching, praying, and other exercises more
than all those who today hate and persecute me. I was so
much in earnest that I imposed upon my body more than it
could stand. I honored the pope as a matter of conscience.
Whatever I did, I did with a single heart to the glory of
God. But our opponents, well-fed idlers that they are,
will not believe what I and many others have endured.
VERSES
15, 16, 17. But when it pleased God, who separated me
from my mother's womb, and called me by his grace.
To
reveal his Son in me, that I might preach him among the
heathen; immediately I conferred not with flesh and blood:
Neither
went I up to Jerusalem to them which were apostles before
me; but I went into Arabia, and returned again unto
Damascus.
Here
Paul relates that immediately upon being called by God to
preach the Gospel to the Gentiles, he went into Arabia
without consulting a single person. "When it had
pleased God," he writes, "I did not deserve it.
I had been an enemy of Christ. I had blasphemed His
Gospel. I had shed innocent blood. In the midst of my
frenzy I was called. Why? On account of my outrageous
cruelty? Indeed not. My gracious God who shows mercy unto
whom He will, pardoned all mine iniquities. He bestowed
His grace upon me, and called me for an apostle."
We
also have come to the knowledge of the truth by the same
kindness of God. I crucified Christ daily in my cloistered
life, and blasphemed God by my wrong faith. Outwardly I
kept myself chaste, poor, and obedient. I was much given
to fasting, watching, praying, saying of masses, and the
like. Yet under the cloak of my outward respectability I
continually mistrusted, doubted, feared, hated, and
blasphemed God. My righteousness was a filthy puddle.
Satan loves such saints. They are his darlings,
for they quickly destroy their body and soul by depriving
them of the blessings of God's generous gifts.
I
tell you I stood in awe of the pope's authority. To
dissent from him I considered a crime worthy of eternal
death. I thought of John
Huss as a cursed heretic. I counted it a sin even
to think of him. I would gladly have furnished the wood to
burn him. I would have felt I had done God a real service.
In
comparison with these sanctimonious hypocrites of the
papacy, publicans and harlots are not bad. They at least
feel remorse. They at least do not try to justify their
wicked deeds. But these pretended saints, so far from
acknowledging their errors, justify them and regard them
as acceptable sacrifices unto God.
VERSE
15a. When it pleased God.
"By
the favor of God I, a wicked and cursed wretch, a
blasphemer, persecutor, and rebel, was spared. Not content
to spare me, God granted unto me the knowledge of His
salvation, His Spirit, His Son, the office of an apostle,
everlasting life." Paul speaking.
God
not only pardoned our iniquities, but in addition
overwhelmed us with blessings and spiritual gifts. Many,
however, are ungrateful. Worse, by opening again a window
to the devil many begin to loathe God's Word, and end by
perverting the Gospel.
VERSE
15. Who separated me from my
mother's womb.
This
is a Hebrew expression, meaning to sanctify, ordain,
prepare. Paul is saying, "When I was not yet born God
ordained me to be an apostle, and in due time confirmed my
apostleship before the world. Every gift, be it small or
great, spiritual or temporal, and every good thing I
should ever do, God has ordained while I was yet in my
mother's womb where I could neither think nor perform any
good thing. After I was born God supported me. Heaping
mercy upon mercy, He freely forgave my sins, replenishing
me with His grace to enable me to learn what
great things are ours in Christ. To crown it all, He
called me to preach the Gospel to others."
VERSE
15. And called me by his grace.
"Did
God call me on account of my holy life? Or on account of
my pharisaical religion? Or on account of my prayers,
fastings, and works? Never. Well, then, it is certain God
did not call me on account of my blasphemies,
persecutions, oppressions. What prompted Him to call me?
His grace alone."
VERSE
16. To reveal his Son to me.
We
now hear what kind of doctrine was committed to Paul: The
doctrine of the Gospel, the doctrine of the revelation of
the Son of God. This doctrine differs greatly from the
Law. The Law terrorizes the conscience. The Law reveals
the wrath and judgment of God. The Gospel does not
threaten. The Gospel announces that Christ is come to
forgive the sins of the world. The Gospel conveys to us
the inestimable treasures of God.
VERSE
16. That I might preach him among
the heathen.
"It
pleased God," says the Apostle, "to reveal
himself in me. Why? For a twofold purpose. That I
personally should believe in the Son of God, and that I
should reveal Him to the Gentiles."
Paul
does not mention the Jews, for the simple reason that he
was the called and acknowledged apostle of the Gentiles,
although he preached Christ also to the Jews.
We
can hear the Apostle saying to himself: "I will not
burden the Gentiles with the Law, because I am their
apostle and not their lawgiver. Not once did you Galatians
hear me speak of the righteousness of the Law or of works.
My job was to bring you the Gospel. Therefore you ought to
listen to no teachers of the Law, but the Gospel: not
Moses, but the Son of God; not the righteousness of works,
but the righteousness of faith must be proclaimed
to the Gentiles. That is the right kind of preaching for
Gentiles."
VERSE
16. Immediately I conferred not with
flesh and blood.
Once
Paul had received the Gospel from Christ, he conferred
with nobody in Damascus. He asked no man to teach him. He
did not go up to Jerusalem to sit at the feet of Peter and
the other apostles. At once he preached Jesus Christ in
Damascus.
VERSE
17. Neither went I up to Jerusalem
to them which were apostles before me; but I went into
Arabia, and returned again unto Damascus.
"I
went to Arabia before I saw any of the apostles. I took it
upon myself to preach the Gospel to the Gentiles without
delay, because Christ had called me for that
purpose." This statement refutes the assertion of the
false apostles that Paul had been a pupil of the apostles,
from which the false apostles inferred that Paul had been
instructed in the obedience of the Law, that therefore the
Gentiles also ought to keep the Law and submit to
circumcision.
VERSES
18, 19. Then after three years I
went up to Jerusalem to see Peter, and abode with him
fifteen days. But other of the apostles saw I none, save
James the Lord's brother.
Paul
minutely recounts his personal history to stop the cavil
of the false apostles. Paul does not deny that he had been
with some of the apostles. He went to Jerusalem uninvited,
not to be instructed, but to visit with Peter. Luke
reports the occasion in the ninth chapter of the Book of
Acts. Barnabas introduced Paul to the apostles and related
to them how Paul had met the Lord Jesus on the way to
Damascus, also how Paul had preached boldly at Damascus in
the name of Jesus. Paul says that he saw Peter and James,
but he denies that he learned anything from them.
Why does Paul harp on this seemingly unimportant fact? To
convince the churches of Galatia that his Gospel was the
true Word of Christ which he learned from Christ Himself
and from no man. Paul was forced to affirm and re-affirm
this fact. His usefulness to all the churches that had
used him as their pastor and teacher was at stake.
VERSE
20. Now the things which I write
unto you, behold, before God, I lie not.
Was
it necessary for Paul to go under oath? Yes. Paul is
reporting personal history. How else would the churches
believe him? The false apostles might say, "Who knows
whether Paul is telling the truth?" Paul, the elect
vessel of God, was held in so little esteem by his own
Galatians to whom he had preached Christ that it was
necessary for him to swear an oath that he spoke the
truth. If this happened to Paul, what business have we to
complain when people doubt our words, or hold us in little
regard, we who cannot begin to compare ourselves with the
Apostle?
VERSE
21. Afterwards I came into the
regions of Syria and Cilicia.
Syria
and Cilicia are adjacent countries. Paul traces his
movements carefully in order to convince the Galatians
that he had never been the disciple of any apostle.
VERSE
22, 23, 24. And was unknown by face
unto the churches of Judaea which were in Christ: But they
had heard only, that he which persecuted us in times past
now preacheth the faith which once he destroyed. And they
glorified God in me.
In
Syria and Cilicia Paul won the indorsement of all the
churches of Judea, by his preaching. All the churches
everywhere, even those of Judea, could testify that he had
preached the same faith everywhere. "And," Paul
adds, "these churches glorified God in me, not
because I taught that circumcision and the law of Moses
should be observed, but because I urged upon all faith in
the Lord Jesus Christ."
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