Chapter 1:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 2 Corinthians Ephesians
Galatians 1
Complete Concise
In this chapter, after the preface or introduction (v. 1-5), the
apostle severely reproves these churches for their defection from the faith (v.
6-9), and then proves his own apostleship, which his enemies had brought them to
question, I. From his end and design in preaching the gospel (v. 10). II. From
his having received it by immediate revelation (v. 11, 12). For the proof of
which he acquaints them, 1. What his former conversation was (v. 13, 14). 2. How
he was converted, and called to the apostleship (v. 15, 16). 3. How he behaved
himself afterwards (v. 16 to the end).
Verses 1-5
In these verses we have the preface or introduction to the
epistle, where observe,
I. The person or persons from whom this epistle is sent-from
Paul
an apostle, etc.,
and all the brethren that were with him. 1.
The epistle is sent from Paul; he only was the penman of it. And, because there
were some among the Galatians who endeavoured to lessen his character and
authority, in the front of it he gives a general account both of his office and
of the manner in which he was called to it, which afterwards, in this and the
following chapter, he enlarges more upon. As to his office, he was an apostle.
He is not afraid to style himself so, though his enemies would scarcely allow
him this title: and, to let them see that he did not assume this character
without just ground, he acquaints them how he was called to this dignity and
office, and assures them that his commission to it was wholly divine, for he was
an apostle,
not of man, neither by man; he had not the common call of an
ordinary minister, but an extraordinary call from heaven to this office. He
neither received his qualification for it, nor his designation to it, by the
mediation of men, but had both the one and the other directly from above; for he
was an apostle
by Jesus Christ, he had his instructions and commission
immediately from him, and consequently from
God the Father, who was one
with him in respect of his divine nature, and who had appointed him, as
Mediator, to be the apostle and high priest of our profession, and as such to
authorize others to this office. He adds,
Who raised him from the dead,
both to acquaint us that herein God the Father gave a public testimony to Christ's
being his Son and the promised Messiah, and also that, as his call to the
apostleship was immediately from Christ, so it was after his resurrection from
the dead, and when he had entered upon his exalted state; so that he had reason
to look upon himself, not only as standing upon a level with the other apostles,
but as in some sort preferred above them; for, whereas they were called by him
when on earth, he had his call from him when in heaven. Thus does the apostle,
being constrained to it by his adversaries, magnify his office, which shows that
though men should by no means be proud of any authority they are possessed of,
yet at certain times and upon certain occasions it may become needful to assert
it. But, 2. He joins all the brethren that were with him in the inscription of
the epistle, and writes in their name as well as his own. By
the brethren
that were with him may be understood either the Christians in common of that
place where he now was, or such as were employed as ministers of the gospel.
These, notwithstanding his own superior character and attainments, he is ready
to own as his brethren; and, though he alone wrote the epistle, yet he joins
them with himself in the inscription of it. Herein, as he shows his own great
modesty and humility, and how remote he was from an assuming temper, so he might
do this to dispose these churches to a greater regard to what he wrote, since
hereby it would appear that he had their concurrence with him in the doctrine
which he had preached, and was now about to confirm, and that it was no other
than what was both published and professed by others as well as himself.
II. To whom this epistle is sent
to the churches of Galatia.
There were several churches at that time in this country, and it should seem
that all of them were more or less corrupted through the arts of those seducers
who had crept in among them; and therefore Paul, on whom
came daily the care
of all the churches, being deeply affected with their state, and concerned
for their recovery to the faith and establishment in it, writes this epistle to
them. He directs it to all of them, as being all more or less concerned in the
matter of it; and he gives them the name of
churches, though they had
done enough to forfeit it, for corrupt churches are never allowed to be
churches: no doubt there were some among them who still continued in the faith,
and he was not without hope that others might be recovered to it.
III. The apostolical benediction, v. 3. Herein the apostle, and
the brethren who were with him, wish these churches
grace and peace from God
the Father, and from the Lord Jesus Christ. This is the usual blessing
wherewith he blesses the churches in the name of the Lord
grace and peace.
Grace includes God's good-will towards us and his good work upon us; and peace
implies in it all that inward comfort, or outward prosperity, which is really
needful for us; and they come from God the Father as the fountain, through Jesus
Christ as the channel of conveyance. Both these the apostle wishes for these
Christians. But we may observe, First grace, and then peace, for there can be no
true peace without grace. Having mentioned the Lord Jesus Christ, he cannot pass
without enlarging upon his love; and therefore adds (v. 4),
Who gave himself
for our sins, that he might deliver, etc. Jesus Christ gave himself for our
sins, as a great sacrifice to make atonement for us; this the justice of God
required, and to this he freely submitted for our sakes. One great end hereof
was
to deliver us from this present evil world; not only to redeem us
from the wrath of God, and the curse of the law, but also to recover us from the
corruption that is in the world through lust, and to rescue us from the vicious
practices and customs of it, unto which we are naturally enslaved; and possibly
also to set us free from the Mosaic constitution, for so
aioµn
houtos is used, 1 Co. 2:6, 8. From this we may note, 1. This present
world is an evil world: it has become so by the sin of man, and it is so on
account of the sin and sorrow with which it abounds and the many snares and
temptations to which we are exposed as long as we continue in it. But, 2. Jesus
Christ has died to deliver us from this present evil world, not presently to
remove his people out of it, but to rescue them from the power of it, to keep
them from the evil of it, and in due time to possess them of another and better
world. This, the apostle informs us, he has done
according to the will of God
and our Father. In offering up himself a sacrifice for this end and purpose,
he acted by the appointment of the Father, as well as with his own free consent;
and therefore we have the greatest reason to depend upon the efficacy and
acceptableness of what he has done and suffered for us; yea, hence we have
encouragement to look upon God as our Father, for thus the apostle here
represents him: as he is the Father of our Lord Jesus, so in and through him he
is also the Father of all true believers, as our blessed Saviour himself
acquaints us (Jn. 20:17), when he tells his disciples that he was ascending to
his Father and their Father.
The apostle, having thus taken notice of the great love
wherewith Christ hath loved us, concludes this preface with a solemn ascription
of praise and glory to him (v. 5):
To whom be glory for ever and ever. Amen.
Intimating that on this account he is justly entitled to our highest esteem and
regard. Or this doxology may be considered as referring both to God the Father
and our Lord Jesus Christ, from whom he had just before been wishing grace and
peace. They are both the proper objects of our worship and adoration, and all
honour and glory are perpetually due to them, both on account of their own
infinite excellences, and also on account of the blessings we receive from them.
Verses 6-9
Here the apostle comes to the body of the epistle; and he begins
it with a more general reproof of these churches for their unsteadiness in the
faith, which he afterwards, in some following parts of it, enlarges more upon.
Here we may observe,
I. How much he was concerned at their defection:
I marvel,
etc. It filled him at once with the greatest surprise and sorrow. Their sin and
folly were that they did not hold fast the doctrine of Christianity as it had
been preached to them, but suffered themselves to be removed from the purity and
simplicity of it. And there were several things by which their defection was
greatly aggravated; as, 1. That they were
removed from him that had called
them; not only from the apostle, who had been the instrument of calling them
into the fellowship of the gospel, but from God himself, by whose order and
direction the gospel was preached to them, and they were invited to a
participation of the privileges of it: so that herein they had been guilty of a
great abuse of his kindness and mercy towards them. 2. That they had been
called
into the grace of Christ. As the gospel which had been preached to them was
the most glorious discovery of divine grace and mercy in Christ Jesus; so
thereby they had been called to partake of the greatest blessings and benefits,
such as justification, and reconciliation with God here, and eternal life and
happiness hereafter. These our Lord Jesus has purchased for us at the expense of
his precious blood, and freely bestows upon all who sincerely accept of him: and
therefore, in proportion to the greatness of the privilege they enjoyed, such
were their sin and folly in deserting it and suffering themselves to be drawn
off from the established way of obtaining these blessings. 3. That they were
so
soon removed. In a very little time they lost that relish and esteem of this
grace of Christ which they seemed to have, and too easily fell in with those who
taught justification by the works of the law, as many did, who had been bred up
in the opinions and notions of the Pharisees, which they mingled with the
doctrine of Christ, and so corrupted it; and this, as it was an instance of
their weakness, so it was a further aggravation of their guilt. 4. That they
were removed to
another gospel, which yet was not another. Thus the
apostle represents the doctrine of these judaizing teachers; he calls it another
gospel, because it opened a different way of justification and salvation from
that which was revealed in the gospel, namely, by works, and not by faith in
Christ. And yet he adds,
"Which is not anotheryou will find it to
be no gospel at all-not really another gospel, but the perverting of the gospel
of Christ, and the overturning of the foundations of that"whereby he
intimates that those who go about to establish any other way to heaven than what
the gospel of Christ has revealed are guilty of a gross perversion of it, and in
the issue will find themselves wretchedly mistaken. Thus the apostle endeavours
to impress upon these Galatians a due sense of their guilt in forsaking the
gospel way of justification; and yet at the same time he tempers his reproof
with mildness and tenderness towards them, and represents them as rather drawn
into it by the arts and industry of some that troubled them than as coming into
it of their own accord, which, though it did not excuse them, yet was some
extenuation of their fault. And hereby he teaches us that, in reproving others,
as we should be faithful, so we should also be gentle, and endeavour
to
restore them in the spirit of meekness, ch. 6:1.
II. How confident he was that the gospel he had preached to them
was the only true gospel. He was so fully persuaded of this that he pronounced
an anathema upon those who pretended to preach any other gospel (v. 8), and, to
let them see that this did not proceed from any rashness or intemperate zeal in
him, he repeated it, v. 9. This will not justify our thundering out anathemas
against those who differ from us in minor things. It is only against those who
forge a new gospel, who overturn the foundation of the covenant of grace, by
setting up the works of the law in the place of Christ's righteousness, and
corrupting Christianity with Judaism, that Paul denounces this. He puts the
case: "Suppose we should preach any other gospel; nay, suppose an angel
from heaven should:" not as if it were possible for an angel from heaven to
be the messenger of a lie; but it is expressed so the more to strengthen what he
was about to say. "If you have any other gospel preached to you by any
other person, under our name, or under colour of having it from an angel
himself, you must conclude that you are imposed upon: and whoever preaches
another gospel lays himself under a curse, and is in danger of laying you under
it too."
Verses 10-24
What Paul had said more generally, in the preface of this
epistle, he now proceeds more particularly to enlarge upon. There he had
declared himself to be an apostle of Christ; and here he comes more directly to
support his claim to that character and office. There were some in the churches
of Galatia who were prevailed with to call this in question; for those who
preached up the ceremonial law did all they could to lessen Paul's reputation,
who preached the pure gospel of Christ to the Gentiles: and therefore he here
sets himself to prove the divinity both of his mission and doctrine, that
thereby he might wipe off the aspersions which his enemies had cast upon him,
and recover these Christians into a better opinion of the gospel he had preached
to them. This he gives sufficient evidence of,
I. From the scope and design of his ministry, which was
not
to persuade men, but God, etc. The meaning of this may be either that in his
preaching the gospel he did not act in obedience to men, but God, who had called
him to this work and office; or that his aim therein was to bring persons to the
obedience, not of men, but of God. As he professed to act by a commission from
God; so that which he chiefly aimed at was to promote his glory, by recovering
sinners into a state of subjection to him. And as this was the great end he was
pursuing, so, agreeably hereunto,
he did not seek to please men. He did
not, in his doctrine, accommodate himself to the humours of persons, either to
gain their affection or to avoid their resentment; but his great care was to
approve himself to God. The judaizing teachers, by whom these churches were
corrupted, had discovered a very different temper; they mixed works with faith,
and the law with the gospel, only to please the Jews, whom they were willing to
court and keep in with, that they might escape persecution. But Paul was a man
of another spirit; he was not so solicitous to please them, nor to mitigate
their rage against him, as to alter the doctrine of Christ either to gain their
favour or to avoid their fury. And he gives this very good reason for it, that,
if
he yet pleased men, he would not be the servant of Christ. These he knew
were utterly inconsistent, and that no man could serve two such masters; and
therefore, though he would not needlessly displease any, yet he dared not allow
himself to gratify men at the expense of his faithfulness to Christ. Thus, from
the sincerity of his aims and intentions in the discharge of his office, he
proves that he was truly an apostle of Christ. And from this his temper and
behaviour we may note, 1. That the great end which ministers of the gospel
should aim at is to bring men to God. 2. That those who are faithful will not
seek to please men, but to approve themselves to God. 3. That they must not be
solicitous to please men, if they would approve themselves faithful servants to
Christ. But, if this argument should not be thought sufficient, he goes on to
prove his apostleship,
II. From the manner wherein he received the gospel which he
preached to them, concerning which he assures them (v. 11, 12) that he had it
not by information from others, but by revelation from heaven. One thing
peculiar in the character of an apostle was that he had been called to, and
instructed for, this office immediately by Christ himself. And in this he here
shows that he was by no means defective, whatever his enemies might suggest to
the contrary. Ordinary ministers, as they receive their call to preach the
gospel by the mediation of others, so it is by means of the instruction and
assistance of others that they are brought to the knowledge of it. But Paul
acquaints them that he had his knowledge of the gospel, as well as his authority
to preach it, directly from the Lord Jesus: the gospel which he preached was not
after man; he neither received it of man, nor was he taught it by man,
but by immediate inspiration, or revelation from Christ himself. This he was
concerned to make out, to prove himself an apostle: and to this purpose,
1. He tells them what his education was, and what, accordingly,
his conversation in time past had been, v. 13, 14. Particularly, he acquaints
them that he had been brought up in the Jewish religion, and
that he had
profited in it above many his equals of his own nationthat
he had been
exceedingly zealous of the traditions of the elders, such doctrines and
customs as had been invented by their fathers, and conveyed down from one
generation to another; yea, to such a degree that, in his zeal for them,
he
had beyond measure persecuted the church of God, and wasted it. He had not
only been a rejecter of the Christian religion, notwithstanding the many evident
proofs that were given of its divine origin; but he had been a persecutor of it
too, and had applied himself with the utmost violence and rage to destroy the
professors of it. This Paul often takes notice of, for the magnifying of that
free and rich grace which had wrought so wonderful a change in him, whereby of
so great a sinner he was made a sincere penitent, and from a persecutor had
become an apostle. And it was very fit to mention it here; for it would hence
appear that he was not led to Christianity, as many others are, purely by
education, since he had been bred up in an enmity and opposition to it; and they
might reasonably suppose that it must be something very extraordinary which had
made so great a change in him, which had conquered the prejudices of his
education, and brought him not only to profess, but to preach, that doctrine,
which he had before so vehemently opposed.
2. In how wonderful a manner he was turned from the error of his
ways, brought to the knowledge and faith of Christ, and appointed to the office
of an apostle, v. 15, 16. This was not done in an ordinary way, nor by ordinary
means, but in an extraordinary manner; for, (1.) God had
separated him
hereunto from his mother's womb: the change that was wrought in him was in
pursuance of a divine purpose concerning him, whereby he was appointed to be a
Christian and an apostle, before he came into the world, or had done either good
or evil. (2.) he was
called by his grace. All who are savingly converted
are called by the grace of God; their conversion is the effect of his good
pleasure concerning them, and is effected by his power and grace in them. But
there was something peculiar in the case of Paul, both in the suddenness and in
the greatness of the change wrought in him, and also in the manner wherein it
was effected, which was not by the mediation of others, as the instruments of
it, but by Christ's personal appearance to him, and immediate operation upon
him, whereby it was rendered a more special and extraordinary instance of divine
power and favour. (3.) He had Christ
revealed in him. He was not only
revealed to him, but in him. It will but little avail us to have Christ revealed
to us if he is not also revealed in us; but this was not the case of Paul. It
pleased God
to reveal his Son in him, to bring him to the knowledge of
Christ and his gospel by special and immediate revelation. And, (4.) It was with
this design, that he should preach him among the heathen; not only that he
should embrace him himself, but preach him to others; so that he was both a
Christian and an apostle by revelation.
3. He acquaints them how he behaved himself hereupon, from v. 16, to the end.
Being thus called to his work and office,
he conferred not with flesh and
blood. This may be taken more generally, and so we may learn from it that,
when God calls us by his grace, we must not consult flesh and blood. But the
meaning of it here is that he did not consult men; he did not apply to any
others for their advice and direction;
neither did he go up to Jerusalem, to
those that were apostles before him, as though he needed to be approved by
them, or to receive any further instructions or authority from them: but,
instead of that, he steered another course, and
went into Arabia, either
as a place of retirement proper for receiving further divine revelations, or in
order to preach the gospel there among the Gentiles, being appointed to be the
apostle of the Gentiles; and thence
he returned again to Damascus, where
he had first begun his ministry, and whence he had with difficulty escaped the
rage of his enemies, Acts 9. It was not till
three years after his
conversion that
he went up to Jerusalem, to see Peter; and when he did so
he made but a very short stay with him, no more than
fifteen days; nor,
while he was there, did he go much into conversation; for
others of the
apostles he saw none, but James, the Lord's brother. So that it could not
well be pretended that he was indebted to any other either for his knowledge of
the gospel or his authority to preach it; but it appeared that both his
qualifications for, and his call to, the apostolic office were extraordinary and
divine. This account being of importance, to establish his claim to this office,
to remove the unjust censures of his adversaries, and to recover the Galatians
from the impressions they had received to his prejudice, he confirms it by a
solemn oath (v. 20), declaring, as in the presence of God, that what he had said
was strictly true, and that he had not in the least falsified in what he had
related, which, though it will not justify us in solemn appeals to God upon
every occasion, yet shows that, in matters of weight and moment, this may
sometimes not only be lawful, but duty. After this he acquaints them that
he
came into the regions of Syria and Cilicia: having made this short visit to
Peter, he returns to his work again. He had no communication at that time with
the
churches of Christ in Judea, they had not so much as
seen his
face; but, having heard that he who persecuted them in times past now preached
the faith which he once destroyed, they glorified God because of him;
thanksgivings were rendered by many unto God on that behalf; the very report of
this mighty change in him, as it filled them with joy, so it excited them to
give glory to God on the account of it.
Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Johnson
| Luther
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 2 Corinthians Ephesians
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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