- Righteousness
by Faith
- Glad Tidings
- By E.J. Waggoner
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- Chapter 4 The
Adoption of Sons
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IT is absolutely impossible to exhaust any
portion of Scripture. The more one studies it, the more one sees
in it, and not only that, but the more one becomes conscious
of the fact that there is much more in it than appears to view.
The Word of God, like Himself, is absolutely unfathomable. One's
understanding of any given portion of the Scripture depends on
the thoroughness of his knowledge of that which precedes it.
Let us, therefore, give a little further attention to that portion
of the third chapter of this Epistle which treats of The Seed.
- First of all, it must be borne in mind
that Christ is the Seed. That is plainly stated. But Christ did
not live for Himself, and He is not heir simply for Himself.
He has won an inheritance, not for Himself, but for His brethren.
God's purpose is to "gather together in one all things in
Christ." He will finally put an end to divisions of every
kind, and He does it now in those who accept Him. In Christ there
are no distinctions of nationality, and no classes and ranks.
No Christian thinks of any other man as English, German, French,
Russian, Turk, Chinese, or African, but simply as a man, and,
therefore, a possible heir of God through Christ. If that other
man, no matter what his race or nation, be also a Christian,
then the bond becomes mutual, and, therefore, still stronger.
"There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor
free, there is neither male nor female; for ye are all one in
Christ Jesus." It is for this reason that it is impossible
for a Christian to engage in war. He knows no distinction of
nationality, but regards all men as his brothers. But the chief
reason why he can not engage in warfare is that the life of Christ
is his life, for he is one with Christ; and it would be as impossible
for him to fight as it would be for Christ to seize a sword and
wield it in self-defense; and two Christians can no more fight
against each other than Christ can fight against Himself.
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- However, we are not now engaged in discussing
war, but are merely showing the absolute unity of believers in
Christ. They are one. There is, therefore, but one Seed, and
that is Christ; for, however many millions of true believers
there may be, they are only one in Christ. Each man has his own
individuality, but it is in every case only the manifestation
of some phase of the individuality of Christ. In a human body
there are many members, and all members have not the same office,
but differ in their individuality; yet there is absolute unity
and harmony in every healthy body. With those who have put on
the new man, which is renewed in knowledge after the image of
Him that created him,
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- Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free; but
Christ is all, and in all." Col.3:11.
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- In Christ's explanation of the parable
of the tares and the wheat, we are told that "the good seed
are the children of the kingdom." Matt.13:38. The man would
not allow the tares to be pulled out of the wheat, because in
the early stage it would be difficult to distinguish in every
case between the wheat and the tares, and some of the wheat would
be destroyed. So he said, "Let both grow together until
the harvest; and in the time of harvest I will say to the reapers,
Gather ye together first the tares, and bind them in bundles
to burn them; but gather the wheat into my barn." It is
in the harvest that the seed is gathered. Everybody knows that.
But what the parable especially shows is that it is in the harvest
that the seed is fully manifested; in short, that the seed comes
at harvest time. The harvest only waits for the seed to be fully
manifested and matured. But "the harvest is the end of the
world." So the time when "the seed should come to whom
the promise was made," is the end of the world, when the
time comes for the promise of the new earth to be fulfilled.
Indeed, the seed can not possibly be said to come before that
time, since the end of the world will come just as soon as the
last person who can be induced to accept Christ has done so;
and the seed is not complete as long as there is one grain lacking.
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- Read now, in the nineteenth verse of the
third chapter, that the law was spoken because of transgression,
"till the seed should come to whom the promise was made."
What do we learn from that?--Simply this, that the law as spoken
from Sinai, without the change of a single letter, is an integral
part of the Gospel, and must be presented in the Gospel until
the second coming of Christ, at the end of the world. "Till
heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in nowise
pass from the law." And what of the time when heaven and
earth pass, and the new heaven and the new earth come?--Then
the law will not be needed written in a book, for men to preach
to sinners, showing them their sins, for it will be in the heart
of every man. Heb.8:10,11. Done away?--Not by any means; but
indelibly engraved in the heart of every individual, written
not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God.
- With the truth concerning the seed before
us, and the parable of the wheat and the tares fresh in our minds,
let us proceed in our study.
-
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- "But I say that so long as the heir
is a child, he differeth nothing from a bond-servant, though
he is lord of all; but is under guardians and stewards until
the term appointed of the father. So we also, when we were children,
were held in bondage under the rudiments of the world; but when
the fullness of the time came, God sent forth His Son, born of
a woman, born under the law, that He might redeem them which
were under the law, that we might receive the adoption of sons.
And because ye are sons, God sent forth the Spirit of His Son
into our hearts, crying, Abba, Father. So that thou art no longer
a bond-servant, but a son; and if a son, then an heir through
God.
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- "Howbeit at that time, not knowing
God, ye were in bondage to them which by nature are no gods;
but now that ye have come to know God, or rather to be known
of God, how turn ye back again to the weak and beggarly rudiments,
whereunto ye desire to be in bondage over again? Ye observe days,
and months, and seasons, and years. I am afraid of you, lest
by any means I have bestowed labor upon you in vain.
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- "I beseech you, brethren, be as I
am, for I am as ye are. Ye did me no wrong; but ye know that
because of an infirmity of the flesh I preached the Gospel unto
you the first time; and that which was a temptation to you in
my flesh ye despised not, nor rejected; but ye received me as
an angel of God, even as Christ Jesus. Where then is that gratulation
of yourselves? for I bear you witness, that, if possible, ye
would have plucked out your eyes and given them to me. So then
am I become your enemy, because I tell you the truth? They zealously
seek you in no good way; nay, they desire to shut you out, that
ye may seek them. But it is good to be zealously sought in a
good matter at all times, and not only when I am present with
you. My little children, of whom I am again in travail until
Christ be formed in you, yea, I could wish to be present with
you now, and to change my voice; for I am perplexed about you.
-
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- "Tell me, ye that desire to be under
the law, do ye not hear the law? For it is written, that Abraham
had two sons, one by the handmaid, and one by the freewoman.
Howbeit the son by the handmaid is born after the flesh; but
the son by the freewoman is born through promise. Which things
contain an allegory; for these women are two covenants; one from
Mount Sinai, bearing children unto bondage, which is Hagar. Now
this Hagar is Mount Sinai in Arabia, and answereth to the Jerusalem
that now is; for she is in bondage with her children. But the
Jerusalem that is above is free, which is our mother. For it
is written:-- "Rejoice, thou barren that bearest not; For
more are the children of the desolate than of her which hath
the husband." Now we, brethren, as Isaac was, are children
of promise. But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted
him that was born after the Spirit, even so it is now. Howbeit
what saith the Scripture? Cast out the handmaid and her son;
for the son of the handmaid shall not inherit with the son of
the freewoman. Wherefore, brethren, we are not children of a
handmaid, but of a freewoman." Galatians 4, R.V.
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- It must be apparent to all that the chapter
division makes no difference in the subject. The third chapter
closes with a statement as to who are heirs, and the fourth chapter
proceeds with a study of the question of heirship. The first
two verses explain themselves. They are a simple statement of
fact. Although a child may be heir to a vast estate, he has no
more to do with it until he is of age, than a servant has. If
he should never come of age, then he would never actually enter
upon his inheritance. He would have lived all his life as a servant,
so far as any share in the inheritance is concerned. Now for
- The Application.
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- "So we also, when we were children,
were held in bondage under the rudiments of the world."
If we look ahead to the fifth verse, we shall see that the state
here known as "children" is that before we receive
"the adoption of sons." It represents the condition
before we were redeemed from the curse of the law, that is, before
we were converted. It does not, therefore, mean children of God,
as distinguished from worldlings, but the "children"
of whom the apostle speaks in Eph.4:14, "tossed to and fro,
and carried about with every wind of doctrine, by the sleight
of men, and cunning craftiness, whereby they lie in wait to deceive."
In short, it refers to us in our unconverted state, when we "were
by nature the children of wrath, even as others."
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- "When we were children," we
were in bondage under the rudiments of the world. No one who
has the slightest acquaintance with the Lord needs to be told
that the rudiments of the world have nothing in common with Him,
and do not proceed from Him. "For all that is in the world,
the lust of the flesh, and the lust of the eyes, and the pride
of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world. And the world
passeth away, and the lust thereof." 1Joh.2:16,17. The friendship
of the world is enmity with God. "Whosoever therefore will
be a friend of the world is the enemy of God." Jam.4:4.
It is from "this present evil world" that Christ came
to deliver us. We are warned to "take heed lest there shall
be any one that maketh spoil of you through his philosophy and
vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments
of the world, and not after Christ." Col.2:8. The bondage
to the rudiments of the world is the condition of walking "according
to the course of this world," "in the lusts of our
flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind;"
being "by nature the children of wrath." Eph.2:1-3.
It is the same bondage that is described in Gal.3:22-24, before
faith came, when we were under the law, "under sin."
It is the condition of men who are "without Christ, being
aliens from the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the
covenants of promise, having no hope, and without God in the
world." Eph.2:12.
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- It may be asked, If such is the condition
of those here referred to as "children," how can they
be spoken of as heirs? The answer is plain. It is on the principle
that it is not manifest who constitute the seed, until the harvest.
God has not cast off the human race; therefore, since the first
man created was called "the son of God," it follows
that all men are heirs in the sense that they are in their minority.
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- As already learned, "before faith
came," although all were wanderers from God, we were kept
under the law, guarded by a severe master, "shut up,"
in order that we might be led to accept the promise. What a blessed
thing it is that God counts even the ungodly, those who are in
the bondage of sin, as His children,--wandering, prodigal sons,
but still children. God has made all men "accepted in the
Beloved." This probationary life is given us for the purpose
of giving us a chance to acknowledge Him as Father, and to become
sons indeed. But, unless we come back to Him, we shall die as
slaves of sin.
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- Christ came in the fullness of time. A
parallel statement to this is found in Rom.5:6: "When we
were yet without strength, in due time Christ died for the ungodly."
But the death of Christ serves for those who live now and for
those who lived before He was manifested in the flesh in Judea,
just as well as for the men who lived at that time. His death
made no more change eighteen hundred years ago than it did four
thousand years ago. It had no more effect on the men of that
generation than on the men of any other generation. It is once
for all, and, therefore, has an equal effect on every age. "The
fullness of time" was the time foretold in prophecy, when
the Messiah should be revealed; but the redemption was for all
men in all ages. He was foreordained before the foundation of
the world, but was "manifest in these last times."
1Pet.1:20. If it had been God's plan that He should have been
revealed in this century, or even not until the last year before
the close of time, it would have made no difference with the
Gospel. "He ever liveth," and He ever has lived, "the
same yesterday, and to-day, and forever." It is "through
the eternal Spirit" that He offers Himself for us (Heb.9:14),
so that the sacrifice is equally present and efficacious in every
age.
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- God sent forth His Son, born of a woman,
and, therefore, a veritable man. He lived an average lifetime
on this earth in the flesh, and suffered all the ills and troubles
that fall to the lot of "man that is born of woman."
"The Word was made flesh." Christ always designated
Himself as "the Son of man," thus forever identifying
Himself with the whole human race. The bond of union can never
be broken.
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- Being born of a woman, Christ was necessarily
born under the law, for such is the condition of all mankind,
and "in all things it behooved Him to be made like unto
His brethren, that He might be a merciful and faithful High Priest
in things pertaining to God, to make reconciliation for the sins
of the people." Heb.2:17. He takes everything on Himself.
"He hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows."
"Himself took our infirmities, and bare our disease."
Matt.8:17, R.V. "All we like sheep have gone astray; we
have turned every one to his own way; and the Lord hath laid
on Him the iniquity of us all." He redeems us by coming
into our place literally, and taking our load off our shoulders.
"Him who knew no sin He made to be sin on our behalf; that
we might become the righteousness of God in Him." 2Cor.5:21,
R.V. In the fullest sense of the word, and to a degree that is
seldom thought of when the expression is used, He became man's
substitute. That is, He permeates our being, identifying Himself
so fully with us that everything that touches or affects us touches
and affects Him. He is not our substitute in the sense that one
man is a substitute for another, in the army, for instance, the
substitute being in one place, while the one for whom he is substitute
is somewhere else, engaged in some other service. No; Christ's
substitution is far different. He is our substitute in that He
substitutes Himself for us, and we appear no more. We drop out
entirely, so that it is "not I, but Christ." Thus we
cast our cares on Him, not by picking them up and with an effort
throwing them on Him, but by humbling ourselves into the nothingness
that we are, so that we leave the burden resting on Him alone.
Thus we see already how it is that He came
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- He does it in the most practical and real
way. Whom does He redeem?--"Them that were under the law."
We can not refrain from referring for a moment to the idea that
some have that this expression, "to redeem them that were
under the law," has a mere local application. They would
have it that it means that Christ freed the Jews from the necessity
of offering sacrifices, or from any further obligation to keep
the commandments. Well, suppose we take it as referring only
to the Jews, and especially to those who lived at the time of
His first advent; what then?--Simply this, that we shut ourselves
off from any place in the plan of redemption. If it was only
the Jews that were under the law, then it was only the Jews that
Christ came to redeem. Ah, we do not like to be left out, when
it comes to the matter of redemption! Then we must acknowledge
that we are, or were before we believed, "under the law;"
for Christ came to redeem none but those who were under the law.
"Under the law," as we have already seen, means condemned
by the law as transgressors. Christ did "not come to call
the righteous, but sinners to repentance." But the law condemns
none but those who are amenable to it, and who ought to keep
it. Therefore, since Christ redeems us from the law, from its
condemnation, it follows that He redeems us to a life of obedience
to it.
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-
-
- "Beloved, now are we the sons of
God." 1Joh.3:2. "As many as received Him, to them gave
He power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe
on His name." John 1:12. This is an altogether different
state from that described in the third verse as "children."
In that state we were "a rebellious people, lying children,
children that will not hear the law of the Lord." Is.30:9.
Believing on Jesus, and receiving the adoption of sons, we are
described "as obedient children, not fashioning yourselves
according to the former lusts in your ignorance." 1Pet.1:14.
Christ said, "I delight to do Thy will, O My God; yea, Thy
law is within My heart." Ps.40:8. Therefore, since He becomes
our substitute, as described in the last paragraph but one, literally
taking our place, not instead of us, but coming into us, and
living our life in us and for us, it necessarily follows that
the same law must be within our hearts when we receive the adoption
of sons.
-
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- "It is the Spirit that beareth witness,
because the Spirit is truth." 1Joh.5:6. "Because ye
are sons, God hath sent forth the Spirit of His Son into your
hearts, crying, Abba, Father," or, Father, Father. Oh, what
joy and peace come with the entering of the Spirit into the heart
as a permanent resident; not as a guest merely, but as sole proprietor!
Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord
Jesus Christ, so that we "joy in God," rejoicing even
in tribulations, having hope that never disappoints, because
"the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy
Ghost which is given unto us." Rom.5:1-5. Then we can love
even as God does; we have the same love, because we have the
Divine nature. "The Spirit itself beareth witness with our
spirit, that we are the children of God." "He that
believeth hath the witness in himself."
-
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- "Thou art no more a servant, but
a son." It will be seen that as there are two kinds of children,
so there are two classes of servants. In the first part of this
chapter we have the word "children" used to designate
those who are not "of full age," and have not their
senses exercised to discern both good and evil. Heb.5:14. The
promise is to them, even as it is "to all that are afar
off," but it remains to be seen if they will, by accepting
it, become partakers of the divine nature, and so sons of God
indeed. While thus the children of wrath, men are servants of
sin, not servants of God. The Son of God is a servant, but a
servant in a far different sense from the servant here referred
to. The character of the servant depends on the master whom he
serves. In this chapter the word "servant" invariably
applies, not to servants of God, who are really sons, but to
the bond-servants of sin. Between such a servant and a son there
is a vast difference. The slave can not possess anything; he
has no control over himself, and this is his distinguishing characteristic.
The free-born son, on the contrary, has dominion over every created
thing, as in the beginning, because he has the victory over himself;
for "he that is slow to anger is better than the mighty;
and he that ruleth his spirit than he that taketh a city."
-
-
- When the prodigal son was wandering from
the father's house, he differed nothing from a servant, because
he was a servant, doing the most menial drudgery. In that condition
he came back to the old homestead, feeling that he deserved no
better place than that of a servant. But the father saw him while
he was yet a long way off, and ran and met him, and received
him as a son, and, therefore, as an heir, although he had forfeited
all right to heirship. So we have forfeited our right to be called
sons, and have squandered away the inheritance; yet God receives
us in Christ as sons indeed, and gives us the same rights and
privileges that Christ has. Although Christ is now in heaven
at the right hand of God, "far above all principality, and
power, and might, and dominion, and every name that is named,
not only in this world, but also in that which is to come"
(Eph.1:20,21), He has nothing that He does not share with us;
for "God, who is rich in mercy, for His great love wherewith
He loved us, even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened [made
alive] us together with Christ, and hath raised us up together,
and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ" (Eph.2:4-6).
Christ is one with us in our present suffering, that we may be
one with Him in His present glory. He "hath exalted them
of low degree." Even now "He raiseth up the poor out
of the dust, and lifteth up the beggar from the dunghill, to
set them among princes, and to make them inherit the throne of
glory." 1Sam.2:8. No king on earth has so great possessions,
nor so much actual power, as the poorest peasant who knows the
Lord as his Father.
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- The apostle Paul, writing to the Corinthians,
said, "Ye know that ye were Gentiles, carried away unto
these dumb idols, even as ye were led." 1Cor.12:2. Even
so it was with the Galatians. To them he wrote, "Not knowing
God, ye were in bondage to them which by nature are no gods."
If this fact is borne in mind, it will save the reader from falling
into some very common errors in opinion concerning this Epistle.
The Galatians had been heathen, worshiping idols, and in bondage
to the most degrading superstitions. Bear in mind that this bondage
is the same as that which is spoken of in the preceding chapter,--they
were "shut up" under the law. It was the very same
bondage in which all unconverted persons are, for in the second
and third chapters of Romans we are told that "there is
no difference; for all have sinned." The Jews themselves,
who did not know the Lord by personal experience, were in the
same bondage,--the bondage of sin. "Every one that committeth
sin is the bond-servant of sin." John 8:34, R.V. And "he
that committeth sin is of the devil." 1Joh.3:8. "The
things which the Gentiles sacrifice, they sacrifice to devils,
and not to God." 1Cor.10:20. If a man is not a Christian,
he is a heathen; there is no middle ground. If the Christian
apostatizes, he immediately becomes a heathen. We ourselves once
walked "according to the course of this world, according
to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh
in the children of disobedience" (Eph.2:2), and we "were
aforetime foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving divers lusts
and pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful, hating one
another" (Titus 3:3, R.V.). So we also were "in bondage
to them which by nature are no gods." The meaner the master,
the worse the bondage. What language can depict the horror of
being in bondage to corruption itself?
-
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- "Now that ye have come to know God,
or rather to be known of God, how turn ye back again to the weak
and beggarly rudiments, whereunto ye desire to be in bondage
over again?" Is it not strange that men should be in love
with chains? Christ has proclaimed "liberty to the captives,
and the opening of the prison to them that are bound" (Is.61:1),
saying to the prisoners, "Go forth," and to them that
are in darkness, "Show yourselves" (Is.49:9); yet men
who have heard these words, and have come forth, and have seen
the light of "the Sun of Righteousness," and have tasted
the sweets of liberty, actually turn round and go back into their
prison, submit to be bound with their old chains, even fondling
them, and labor away at the hard treadmill of sin. Who has not
had something of that experience? It is no fancy picture. It
is a fact that men can come to love the most revolting things,
even death itself; for Wisdom says, "All they that hate
Me love death." Prov.8:36. In the Epistle to the Galatians
we have a vivid picture of human experience.
-
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- "Ye observe days, and months, and
times, and years." This was an evidence of their bondage.
"Ah," says some one, "they had gone back to the
old Jewish Sabbath; that was the bondage against which Paul would
warn us!" How strange it is that men have such an insane
hatred of the Sabbath, which the Lord Himself gave to the Jews,
in common with all other people on the earth, that they will
seize upon every word that they think they can turn against it,
although in order to do so they must shut their eyes to all the
words that are around it! Anybody who reads the Epistle to the
Galatians, and thinks as he reads, must know that the Galatians
were not Jews. They had been converted from heathenism. Therefore,
previous to their conversion they had never had anything to do
with any religious custom that was practiced by the Jews. They
had nothing whatever in common with the Jews. Consequently, when
they turned again to the "weak and beggarly elements"
to which they were willing again to be in bondage, it is evident
that they were not going back to any Jewish practice. They were
going back to their old heathen customs. "But were not the
men who were perverting them Jews?"--Yes, they were. But
remember this one thing, when you seek to turn a man away from
Christ to some substitute for Christ, you can not tell where
he will end. You can not make him stop just where you want him
to. If a converted drunkard loses faith in Christ, he will take
up his drinking habits as surely as he lives, even though the
Lord may have taken the appetite away from him. So when these
"false brethren"--Jewish opposers of "the truth
of the Gospel" as it is in Christ--succeeded in seducing
the Galatians from Christ, they could not get them to stop with
Jewish ceremonies. No; they inevitably drifted back to their
old heathen superstitions.
-
-
-
- Read the tenth verse again, and then read
Deut.18:10: "There shall not be found among you any one
that maketh his son or his daughter to pass through the fire,
or that useth divination, or an observer of times, or an enchanter,
or a witch." Now read what the Lord says to the heathen
who would shield themselves from just judgment that is about
to come upon them: "Thou art wearied in the multitude of
thy counsels. Let now the astrologers, the star-gazers, the monthly
prognosticators, stand up, and save thee from these things that
shall come upon thee." Is.47:13. Here we see that the very
things to which the Galatians were returning, were forbidden
by the Lord when He brought Israel out of Egypt. Now we might
as well say that when God forbade these things He was warning
the Israelites against keeping the Sabbath, as to say that Paul
was upbraiding the Galatians for keeping it, or that he had any
reference to it whatever. God forbade these things at the very
time when He gave the commandment concerning Sabbath-keeping.
So far back into their old ways had the Galatians gone that Paul
was afraid lest all his labor on them had been in vain. They
were forsaking God and returning to "the weak and beggarly
elements of the world," which no reverent person can think
of as ever having had any connection with God. They were changing
their glory for "that which doth not profit" (Jer.2:11);
for "the customs of the heathen are vain."
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- There is just as much danger for us in
this respect as there ever was for any people. Whoever trusts
in himself, having any confidence whatever in the flesh, is worshiping
the works of his own hands instead of God, just as truly as does
any one who makes and bows down to a graven image. It is so easy
for a man to trust to his own supposed shrewdness, to his ability
to "take care of himself," and to forget that the thoughts
even of the wise are vain, and that there is no power but of
God. "Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither
let the mighty man glory in his might, let not the rich man glory
in his riches; but let him that glorieth glory in this, that
he understandeth and knoweth Me, that I am the Lord which exercise
loving-kindness, judgment, and righteousness, in the earth; for
in these things I delight, saith the Lord." Jer.9:23,24.
-
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- "He whom God hath sent speaketh the
words of God." John 3:34. The apostle Paul was sent by God
and the Lord Jesus Christ, and did not speak his own words. He
was a messenger, bearing a message from God, and not from any
man. The work was not his, nor any other man's, but God's, and
he was but the humble instrument, the earthen vessel, which God
had chosen as the means of carrying His glorious Gospel of grace.
Therefore, Paul did not feel affronted when his message was unheeded
or even rejected. "Ye have not injured me at all,"
he says. He did not regret the labor that he had bestowed upon
the Galatians, on his own account, as though it were so much
of his time wasted; but he was fearful for them, lest his labor
had been in vain as far as they were concerned. The man who from
the heart can say, "Not unto us, O Lord, not unto us, but
unto Thy name give glory, for Thy mercy, and for Thy truth's
sake" (Ps.115:1), can not feel personally injured if his
message is not received. Whoever becomes irritated or angry when
his teaching is slighted or ignored or scornfully rejected, shows
either that he has forgotten that it was God's words that he
was speaking, or else that he had mingled with them or substituted
for them words of his own. This is what has led to all the persecution
that has disgraced the professed Christian church. Men have arisen
speaking perverse things to draw away disciples after themselves,
and when their sayings and customs were not heeded, they have
been offended, and have visited their vengeance on the so-called
heretics. No one in all the ages has ever suffered persecution
for failure to obey the commandments of God, but only for neglect
of human customs and traditions. It is a grand thing always to
be zealous in a good thing, but let the zeal be according to
sanctified knowledge. The zealous person should frequently ask
himself, Whose servant am I? If he is God's servant, then he
will be content with delivering the message that God has given
him, leaving vengeance to God, to whom it belongs.
-
-
- "Ye know that because of an infirmity
of the flesh I preached the Gospel unto you the first time."
From the incidental statements in this Epistle we can easily
gather the history of the experience of the Galatian brethren,
and of Paul's relation to it. Having been detained in Galatia
by physical weakness, he preached the Gospel "in demonstration
of the Spirit and of power," so that the people saw Christ
crucified among them, and, accepting Him, were filled with the
power and joy of the Holy Ghost. Their joy and blessedness in
the Lord was testified to publicly, and they suffered much persecution
in consequence; but this they counted as nothing. Paul, in spite
of his unsightly appearance (compare 1Cor.2:1-5; 2Cor.10:10),
was received as God's own messenger, because of the joyful news
that he brought. So highly did they appreciate the riches of
grace which he had opened up to them, that they would gladly
have given their own eyes to supply his deficiency. All this
is referred to in order that the Galatians may see from what
they have fallen, as they consider their present barrenness,
and that they may know that the apostle was disinterested in
his solicitude for them. He told them the truth once, and they
rejoiced in it; it is not possible that he is become their enemy
because he continues to tell them the same truth.
- But there is still more in these personal
references. We must not imagine that Paul was pleading for personal
sympathy when he referred to his afflictions, and to the great
inconvenience under which he had labored. Far from it. Not for
a moment did he lose sight of the purpose for which he was writing,
namely, to show that "the flesh profiteth nothing,"
but that everything of good is from the Holy Spirit of God. The
Galatians had "begun in the Spirit." Paul was naturally
small of stature, and weak in body, and was suffering special
affliction when he first met them; yet, in spite of his almost
absolute helplessness, he preached the Gospel with such mighty
power that none could fail to see that there was a real, although
unseen, presence with him. The Gospel
is not of man, but of God. It was not made known to them by the
flesh, and they were not indebted to the flesh for any of the
blessings that they had received. What blindness, what infatuation,
then, for them to think to perfect by their own efforts that
which nothing but the power of God could begin! Have we learned
this lesson?
-
-
-
- Everybody who has ever had any acquaintance
with the Lord, knows that in accepting Him there is joy. It is
always expected that a new convert will have a beaming countenance,
and a joyful testimony. So it had been with the Galatians. But
now their expressions of thanksgiving had given place to bickering
and strife. See Gal.5:15. Is it not strange that people do not
expect that old Christians will have as much enthusiasm as young
converts? that it is taken for granted that the first joy, and
the warmth of the first love, will gradually die away? So it
is, but so it should not be. That which God has against His people
is this, that they have left their first love. Rev.2:4. "The
path of the just is as the shining light, that shineth more and
more unto the perfect day." Prov.4:18. Note that this is
the path of the just, and the just are they who live by faith.
When men turn from the faith, or attempt to substitute works
for it, the light goes out. Jesus said, "These things have
I spoken unto you, that My joy might remain in you, and that
your joy might be full." John 15:11. He gives the oil of
joy--the Holy Spirit--for mourning, and that is abiding. The
life is manifested that we might have fullness of joy. 1Joh.1:1-4.
The fountain of life is never exhausted; the supply is never
diminished. If, therefore, our light grows dim, and our joy gives
place to a dull, monotonous grind, we may know that we have turned
aside out of the way of life.
-
-
- "Tell me, ye that desire to be under
the law, do ye not hear the law?" After what we have already
had, there will be no one to come with the objection that to
be under the law can not be a very deplorable condition, else
the Galatians would not have desired to be under it. "There
is a way that seemeth right unto a man; but the end thereof are
the ways of death." Prov.16:25. How many there are who love
ways that everybody except themselves can see are leading them
direct to death; yes, there are many who, with their eyes wide
open to the consequences of their course, will persist in it,
deliberately choosing "the pleasures of sin for a season,"
rather than righteousness and length of days. To be "under
the law" of God is to be condemned by it as a sinner chained
and doomed to death, yet many millions besides the Galatians
have loved the condition, and still love it. Ah, if they would
only hear what it says! There is no reason why they should not
hear it, for it speaks in thunder tones. "He that hath ears
to hear, let him hear."
-
-
- It saith, "Cast out the bondwoman
and her son; for the son of the bondwoman shall not be heir with
the son of the freewoman." It speaks death to all who take
pleasure in the beggarly elements of the world. "Cursed
is every one that continueth not in all things which are written
in the book of the law to do them." To what place shall
the wicked bond-servant be cast out?--"Into outer darkness;
there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth." "For,
behold, the day cometh, that shall burn as an oven; and all the
proud, yea, and all that do wickedly, shall be stubble; and the
day that cometh shall burn them up, saith the Lord of hosts,
that it shall leave them neither root nor branch." Therefore,
"Remember ye the law of Moses My servant, which I commanded
unto him in Horeb for all Israel, with the statutes and judgments."
Mal.4:1,4. All who are under the law, whether they be called
Jews or Gentiles, Christians or Mohammedans, are in bondage to
Satan,--in the bondage of transgression and sin,--and are to
be cast out. "Every one that committeth sin is the bond-servant
of sin. And the bond-servant abideth not in the house forever;
the son abideth forever." Thank God, then, for "the
adoption of sons."
-
-
- Those false teachers would persuade the
brethren that in turning from whole-hearted faith in Christ and
trusting to works which they themselves could do, they would
become children of Abraham, and so heirs of the promises. They
forgot that Abraham had two sons. I myself have talked with a
Jew according to the flesh, who did not know that Abraham had
more than one son; and there are many Christians who seem to
think that to be descended from Abraham, after the flesh, is
all-sufficient to insure one a share in the promised inheritance.
"They which are the children of the flesh, these are not
the children of God; but the children of the promise are counted
for the seed." Rom.9:8. Now of the two sons of Abraham,
one was born after the flesh, and the other was by promise, born
of the Spirit. "By faith even Sarah herself received power
to conceive seed when she was past age, since she counted Him
faithful who had promised." Heb.11:11, R.V. Hagar was an
Egyptian slave. The children of a slave woman are always slaves,
even though their father be a freeman; and so Hagar could bring
forth children only to bondage. But long before Ishmael was born,
the Lord had plainly signified to Abraham, who wished that his
servant Eliezer might be his heir, that it was not a bond-servant,
even though born in his house, that He had promised him, but
a free-born son,--a son born of a freewoman. God has no slaves
in His kingdom.
-
-
-
- What are the two covenants?--The two women,
Hagar and Sarah; for we read that Hagar is Mount Sinai, "which
gendereth to bondage." That is, just as Hagar could not
bring forth any other kind of children than slaves, so the law,
even the law that God spoke from Sinai, can not beget freemen.
It can do nothing but hold them in bondage. "The law worketh
wrath:" "for by the law is the knowledge of sin."
The same is true of the covenant from Sinai, for it consisted
merely of the promise of the people to keep that law, and had,
therefore, no more power to make them free than the law itself
had,--no more power than they already had in their bondage. Nay,
rather, it "gendered to bondage," since their making
it was simply a promise to make themselves righteous by their
own works, and man in himself is "without strength."
- Consider the situation: The people were
in the bondage of sin; they had no power to break their chains;
but the speaking of the law made no change in their condition;
it introduced no new feature. If a man is in prison for crime,
you can not release him by reading the statutes to him. It was
the law that put him there, and the reading of it to him only
makes his captivity more painful.
-
-
- "Then did not God Himself lead them
into bondage?"--Not by any means; since He did not induce
them to make that covenant at Sinai. Four hundred and thirty
years before that time He had made a covenant with Abraham, which
was sufficient for all purposes. That covenant was confirmed
in Christ, and, therefore, was a covenant from above. See John
8:23. It promised righteousness as a free gift of God through
faith, and it included all nations. All the miracles that God
had wrought in delivering the children of Israel from Egyptian
bondage were but demonstrations of His power to deliver them
and us from the bondage of sin. Yes, the deliverance from Egypt
was itself a demonstration not only of God's power, but also
of His desire to lead them from the bondage of sin, that bondage
in which the covenant from Sinai holds men, because Hagar, who
is the covenant from Sinai, was an Egyptian. So when the people
came to Sinai, God simply referred them to what He had already
done, and then said, "Now therefore, if ye will obey My
voice indeed, and keep My covenant, then ye shall be a peculiar
treasure unto Me above all people; for all the earth is Mine."
Ex.19:5. To what covenant did He refer?--Evidently to the one
already in existence, His covenant with Abraham. If they would
simply keep God's covenant, that is, God's promise,--keep the
faith,--they would be a peculiar treasure unto God, for God,
as the possessor of all the earth, was able to do with them all
that He had promised. The fact that they in their self-sufficiency
rashly took the whole responsibility upon themselves, does not
prove that God led them into making that covenant, but the contrary.
He was leading them out of bondage, not into it, and the apostle
plainly tells us that covenant from Sinai was nothing but bondage.
-
-
- Further, if the children of Israel who
came out of Egypt had but walked "in the steps of that faith
of our father Abraham, which he had being yet uncircumcised"
(Rom.4:12), the law would never have been spoken from Sinai;
"for the promise, that he should be the heir of the world,
was not to Abraham, or to his seed, through the law, but through
the righteousness of faith" (Rom.4:13). Faith justifies,
makes righteous; if the people had had Abraham's faith, they
would have had the righteousness that he had; and then there
would have been no occasion for the entering of the law, which
was "spoken because of transgression." The law would
have been in their hearts, and they would not have needed to
be awakened by its thunders to a sense of their condition. God
never expected, and does not now expect, that any person can
get righteousness by the law proclaimed from Sinai; and everything
connected with Sinai shows it. Yet the law is truth, and must
be kept. God delivered the people from Egypt, "that they
might observe His statutes, and keep His laws." Ps.105:45.
We do not get life by keeping the commandments, but God gives
us life in order that we may keep them.
-
-
- Note the statement which the apostle makes
when speaking of the two women, Hagar and Sarah: "These
are the two covenants." So then the two covenants existed
in every essential particular in the days of Abraham. Even so
they do to-day; for the Scripture says now as well as then, "Cast
out the bondwoman and her son." We see then that the two
covenants are not matters of time, but of condition. Let no one
flatter himself that he can not be under the old covenant, because
the time for that is passed. The time for that is passed only
in the sense that "the time past of our life may suffice
us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles, when we walked in
lasciviousness, lusts, excess of wine, revelings, banquetings,
and abominable idolatries." 1Pet.4:3.
-
-
-
- The difference is just the difference
between a freewoman and a slave. Hagar's children, no matter
how many she might have had, would have been slaves, while those
of Sarah would necessarily be free.
-
-
- So the covenant from Sinai holds all who
adhere to it in bondage "under the law;" while the
covenant from above gives freedom, not freedom from obedience
to the law, but freedom from disobedience to it. The freedom
is not found away from the law, but in the law. Christ redeems
from the curse, which is the transgression of the law. He redeems
us from the curse, that the blessing may come on us; and the
blessing is obedience to the law. "Blessed are the undefiled
in the way, who walk in the law of the Lord." Ps.119:1.
This blessedness is freedom. "I will walk at liberty; for
I seek Thy precepts." Ps.119:45.
-
-
- The difference between the two covenants
may be put briefly thus: In the covenant from Sinai we ourselves
have to do with the law alone, while in the covenant from above,
we have the law in Christ. In the first instance it is death
to us, since the law is sharper than any two-edged sword, and
we are not able to handle it without fatal results; but in the
second instance we have the law "in the hand of a Mediator."
In the one case it is what we can do; in the other case it is
what the Spirit of God can do. Bear in mind that there is not
the slightest question in the whole Epistle to the Galatians
as to whether or not the law should be kept. The only question
is, How shall it be done? Is it to be our own doing, so that
the reward shall not be of grace but of debt? or is it to be
God working in us both to will and to do of His good pleasure?
-
-
- "This Agar is Mount Sinai in Arabia,
and answereth to Jerusalem which now is, and is in bondage with
her children. But Jerusalem which is above is free, which is
the mother of us all." As there are the two covenants, so
there are two cities to which they pertain. Jerusalem which now
is pertains to the old covenant--to Mount Sinai. It will never
be free, but will be replaced by the city of God, the heavenly
Jerusalem, "which cometh down out of heaven." Rev.3:12;
21:1-5. It is the city for which Abraham looked, the "city
which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God."
Heb.11:10; Rev.21:14. There are many who build great hopes--all
their hope--on Jerusalem which now is. For such the veil remaineth
"untaken away in the reading of the old testament."
2Cor.3:14. They are in reality looking to Mount Sinai and the
old covenant for salvation, and it is not to be found there.
"For ye are not come unto the mount that might be touched,
and that burned with fire, nor unto blackness, and darkness,
and tempest, and the sound of a trumpet, and the voice of words;
which voice they that heard entreated that the word should not
be spoken to them any more (for they could not endure that which
was commanded, And if so much as a beast touch the mountain,
it shall be stoned, or thrust through with a dart; and so terrible
was the sight, that Moses said, I exceedingly fear and quake);
but ye are come unto Mount Sion, and unto the city of the living
God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of
angels, to the general assembly and church of the first-born,
which are written in heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and
to the spirits of just men made perfect, and to Jesus the Mediator
of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh
better things than that of Abel." Heb.12:18-24.
-
-
- Whoever looks to the present Jerusalem
for blessings, is looking to the old covenant, to Mount Sinai,
to bondage; whoever worships with his face toward the New Jerusalem,
and who expects blessings only from it, is looking to the new
covenant, to Mount Zion, to freedom; for "Jerusalem which
is above is free." From what is it free?--Free from sin;
and since it is our mother, it begets us anew, so that we also
become free from sin. Free from the law?--Yes, certainly, for
the law has no condemnation for them who are in Christ Jesus.
-
-
- But do not let anybody deceive you with
vain words, telling you that you may now trample God's law underfoot,--that
law which He Himself proclaimed in such awful majesty from Sinai.
Coming to Mount Sion,--to Jesus, the Mediator of the new covenant,
and to the blood of sprinkling,--we become free from sin,--from
transgression of the law. The basis of God's throne in Zion is
His law. From the throne proceed the same "lightnings and
thunderings and voices" (Rev.4:5; 11:19) as from Sinai,
because the selfsame law is there. But it is "the throne
of grace," and, therefore, in spite of the thunders, we
come to it boldly, assured that from God, the Judge of all, who
sits upon the mercy-seat, we shall obtain mercy. Nay, more, we
shall also find grace to help in time of need,--grace to help
us in the hour of temptation to sin,--for out of the midst of
the throne, from the slain Lamb (Rev.5:6), flows the river of
water of life, bringing to us from the heart of Christ "the
law of the Spirit of life." We drink of it, we bathe in
it, and we find cleansing from all sin.
-
-
-
- "Why didn't the Lord bring the people
directly to Mount Zion then, where they could find the law as
life, and not to Mount Sinai, where it was only death?"
-
-
- That is a very natural question, and one
that is easily answered. It was because of their unbelief. When
God brought Israel out of Egypt, it was His purpose to bring
them to Mount Zion as directly as they could go. When they had
crossed the Red Sea, they sang an inspired song, of which this
was a part: "Thou in Thy mercy hast led forth the people
which Thou hast redeemed; Thou hast guided them in Thy strength
unto Thy holy habitation." "Thou shalt bring them in,
and plant them in the mountain of Thine inheritance, in the place,
O Lord, which Thou hast made for Thee to dwell in, in the sanctuary,
O Lord, which Thy hands have established." Ex.15:13,17.
If they had continued singing, they would very soon have come
to Zion; for the redeemed of the Lord "come with singing
unto Zion," and everlasting joy is upon their heads. Is.35:10;
51:11. The dividing of the Red Sea was the proof of this. See
verse 10. But they soon forgot the Lord, and murmured in unbelief.
Therefore "the law was added because of transgressions."
It was their own fault--the result of their sinful unbelief--that
they came to Mount Sinai instead of to Mount Zion.
- Nevertheless, God did not leave Himself
without witness of His faithfulness. At Mount Sinai the law was
in the hand of the same Mediator, Jesus, to whom we come when
we come to Zion; and from the Rock in Horeb, which is Sinai,
flowed the living stream, the water of life from the heart of
Christ. Ex.17:6; 1Cor.10:4. There they had not merely the picture,
but the reality, of Mount Zion. Every soul whose heart there
turned to the Lord, would have beheld His unveiled glory, even
as Moses did, and, being transformed by it, would have found
the ministration of righteousness, instead of the ministration
of condemnation. "His mercy endureth forever;" and
even upon the clouds of wrath from which proceed the thunders
and lightnings of the law, shines the glorious face of the Sun
of Righteousness, and forms the bow of promise.
-
-
- "Cast out the bondwoman and her son;
for the son of the bondwoman shall not be heir with the son of
the freewoman." "The bond-servant abideth not in the
house forever; the son abideth forever." John 8:35, R.V.
Here is comfort for every soul. You are a sinner, or, at best,
"trying to be a Christian," and you tremble with terror
at these words, as you realize that you are in bondage,--that
sin has a hold upon you, and you are bound by the cords of evil
habits. Ah, you must learn not to be afraid when the Lord speaks,
for He speaks peace, even though it be with a voice of thunder!
The more majestic the voice, the greater the peace that He gives.
Take courage! The son of the bondwoman is the flesh and its works.
"Flesh and blood can not inherit the kingdom of God; neither
doth corruption inherit incorruption." But God says, "Cast
out the bondwoman and her son," and if you are willing that
His will shall be done in you as it is done in heaven, He will
see that the flesh and its works are cast out from you, and you
will be "delivered from the bondage of corruption into the
glorious liberty of the children of God." That command which
so frightened you is simply the voice commanding the evil spirit
to depart, and to come no more into you. It speaks to you victory
over every sin. Receive Christ by faith, and you have the power
to become the son of God, heir of a kingdom which can not be
moved, but which, with all its people, abideth forever.
-
-
-
- Where shall we stand?--"In the liberty
wherewith Christ hath made us free." And what freedom is
that?--It is the freedom of Christ Himself, whose delight was
in the law of the Lord, because it was in His heart. Ps.40:8.
"The law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made
me free from the law of sin and death." Rom.8:2. We stand
only by faith.
-
-
- In this freedom there is no trace of bondage.
It is perfect liberty. It is liberty of soul, liberty of thought,
as well as liberty of action. It is not that we are simply given
the ability to keep the law, but we are given the mind that finds
delight in doing it. It is not that we comply with the law because
we see no other way of escape from punishment; that would be
galling bondage. It is from such bondage that God's covenant
releases us. No; the promise of God, when accepted, puts the
mind of the Spirit into us, so that we find the highest pleasure
in obedience to all the precepts of God's Word. The soul is as
free as a bird soaring above the mountain-tops. It is the glorious
liberty of the children of God, who have the full range of "the
breadth, and length, and depth, and height" of God's universe.
It is the liberty of those who do not have to be watched, but
who can be trusted anywhere, since their every step is but the
movement of God's own holy law. Why be content with bondage,
when such limitless freedom is yours? The prison doors are open;
walk out into God's freedom.
-
-
- "Out of my shameful
failure and loss,
Jesus, I come. Jesus, I come.
Into the glorious gain of Thy cross,
Jesus, I come to Thee.
Out of earth's sorrows, into Thy balm,
Out of life's storm, and into Thy calm,
Out of distress to jubilant psalm,
Jesus, I come to Thee.
"Out of unrest and
arrogant pride,
Jesus, I come. Jesus, I come.
Into Thy blessed will to abide,
Jesus, I come to Thee.
Out of myself to dwell in Thy love,
Out of despair into raptures above,
Upward for aye on wings like a dove,
Jesus, I come to Thee."
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