Saturday, December 31, 2016

Starting from the Bottom?

So 2016 is at an end in less than five hours. What a year it’s been. Like really, I don’t have a clue how else to put it. Starting out, I was so confident that it was going to be a good year, but less than one month in it quickly went south.
Depression hit worse than it had ever been since at least high school as early as the middle of January. February was very dark due to the depression. By the middle of March, my girlfriend dumped me because I was too depressed. April and May were a serious struggle to escape the depression. June was probably the most positive month. July initiated another set of bad luck: I started talking to a girl from a very controlling church who judged me hardcore along with the rest of her church for struggles Jesus was actively taking out of my life. August saw the end of that friendship and depression settle in yet again. By the end of September the depression was stronger than ever before. October saw my ex from the beginning of the year start dating my roommate—they are engaged now too—which meant, for all practical purposes, the end of a friendship (he’d been the first one I called when she broke up with me). November was when things started to improve (see two paragraphs from here), but the depression was always much too close. December saw me move from Bolivar, MO to Springfield, MO, and the stress of the move, with the holiday season and working full time, has been tough.
As for my goals for 2016, given the incredible amount of depression this year and working full-time all year, it was not as productive as I hoped. I did move to Missouri officially, I did find a good job—much better than expected actually—and I did keep up with this blog. However, while I started the year working out, by August I wasn’t working out at all; while I wrote a short story in January, I failed most of the rest of the year. My CD is still not finished. The fourth draft of Stranded has yet to be finished. My Romans 7 paper was organized, but I haven’t written a single word more of it since December of 2014. Oh, and given the break up in March, I not only was kept from pouring into that relationship, but I was estranged from a lot of other relationships.
However, at the same time, 2016 has not been a total waste. Given the fact that I now have a great job, I have also met a lot of awesome people. Between people I serve at work, and people I work with, my days are never exempt from time with people. Immediately before the breakup, I got to fellowship with the leadership of my home church in California at the 2016 Shepherd’s Conference. Of all of 2016, that was one of the three greatest highlights. The next one was in November when I got to celebrate my childhood best friend’s wedding celebration with him as his best man. Along with that, I got to spend a few days with my family (and my cats) that week. The third highlight was Thanksgiving. And sure, it was only one day, but I got to celebrate Thanksgiving with my family for the first time in four years.
While I lost friends, I gained many more, some of whom I never would have met or invested in if my relationship with her hadn’t ended (like a guy I met tonight in Springfield at Starbucks as I wrote this). Also, I’m very excited for my best friend from SBU to return to the states in about a week. Finally, I got a cat today, so that’s fun. (I hope he’s a little more comfortable with the place by the time I get home this evening.)
With a year that has too easily been focused on the negatives, it’s much too easy to say, “There’s nowhere to go but up from here.” However, that thinking is so wrong. While the following verse got me through the depression this year, it is so much more valid than just as a “keep on going” verse: “The righteous one will live by his faith” (Habakkuk 2:4b).
The truth is, I am not righteous because I keep going. I am not righteous by anything in myself. While the popular song, “we started from the bottom but now we’re here,” could be understood as describing where I’m starting in 2017, I cannot allow myself to take that attitude. Since I don’t make myself righteous, God has already set me in the heavens with Himself (cf. Ephesians 2:4-9). This needs to be my attitude going forward. I cannot allow myself to be defeated by regret or by fear. God loves me; God chose me; God is protecting and guiding me. All I must do is follow Him.
So 2017… Here’s my goals: follow Jesus so closely I am covered with Him.
Ultimately if I accomplish that I don’t care if I fail in every other area. But here’s some other things I’d like to accomplish:
·         Love God’s people well
·         Keep up on this blog
·         Finish Stranded—completely done
·         Finish my new CD
·         Finish another book (it’s a secret)
·         Write a short story every quarter (a month is too short)
·         Work out more regularly than I did this year
·         Follow God’s leading regarding the next chapter of my life (to stay in Missouri, or move home, or to take a different, third option)
But that’s where I’m at on the eve of 2017. God is good; He’s led me this far; He will continue to lead. I just need to follow and obey.

Soli Deo Gloria

Wednesday, December 28, 2016

Loyalty Requires Perseverance – 4:8-20

Since my last Galatians entry, I finished my first full television series. It was originally aired a few years ago, but I started watching it on Netflix, and I had to purchase the full series on DVD in order to finish it because it was pulled off Netflix. While I can’t recommend it as a clean, family friendly show, it definitely is not evil. It is called Chuck, and it is about a guy named Chuck Bartowski who gets a supercomputer full of government secrets downloaded into his brain. As such, agents from two government agencies are sent to keep him safe. The camaraderie and loyalty exemplified, especially from Chuck, throughout the show’s five seasons are my favorite thing about the show. He’s not perfect—nowhere close—and in no way does he claim to have any ties to a certain religion, but for the most part “loyalty,” “faithfulness,” and “perseverance when times get tough” describe him perfectly. This is important, because it ties very closely into what Paul is talking about in this section of his letter to the Galatians.
Galatians 4:8-20 says, But in the past, when you didn’t know God, you were enslaved to things that by nature are not gods.  But now, since you know God, or rather have become known by God, how can you turn back again to the weak and bankrupt elemental forces? Do you want to be enslaved to them all over again?  You observe special days, months, seasons, and years.  I am fearful for you, that perhaps my labor for you has been wasted.  I beg you, brothers: Become like me, for I also became like you. You have not wronged me;  you know that previously I preached the gospel to you because of a physical illness.  You did not despise or reject me though my physical condition was a trial for you. On the contrary, you received me as an angel of God, as Christ Jesus Himself.  What happened to this sense of being blessed you had? For I testify to you that, if possible, you would have torn out your eyes and given them to me.  Have I now become your enemy by telling you the truth?  They are enthusiastic about you, but not for any good. Instead, they want to isolate you so you will be enthusiastic about them.  Now it is always good to be enthusiastic about good—and not just when I am with you.  My children, I am again suffering labor pains for you until Christ is formed in you.  I would like to be with you right now and change my tone of voice, because I don’t know what to do about you.”
This section is closely connected to the previous. Especially at the beginning. However, the first word of verse 8 is “but” and that is very important. It draws a contrast between Paul urging the Galatians to realize their new position in Christ away from the elemental things they were enslaved to and his new argument—“you’ve deserted me, the one you trusted so highly when I came to you.” This section, especially verses 12-20, “are the strongest words of personal affection Paul uses in any of his letters.”[1]
He begins similarly to how he was speaking in the previous section. Verses 8-10 say, “But in the past, when you didn’t know God, you were enslaved to things that by nature are not gods.  But now, since you know God, or rather have become known by God, how can you turn back again to the weak and bankrupt elemental forces? Do you want to be enslaved to them all over again?  You observe special days, months, seasons, and years.” He wants to remind them that they were slaves to something before that ultimately had no power over them. Before they knew God, things enslaved them that didn’t have any right to enslave them. He then says that things are different now. He says they know God now and that should keep them from returning to their former slavery, because God really is God and He truly has power. He then explains in what way they’ve decided to return to slavery. The Jewish law is full of special days, months, seasons, and years—Leviticus 23 and 25—that those under the Law were to follow. The Judaizers must have convinced the Galatians of their need to follow these calendar events for salvation, which in turn led them to remove themselves from the grace of the gospel. The very gospel Paul had brought to them.
Paul makes a curious statement in verse 9, that I just can’t gloss over. He says, “since you know God, or rather have become known by God.” There is a theological point to be made here, but I would argue that that is not Paul’s primary point here. The theological point is that we are not the ones who seek to know God; God is the one who actively seeks to know us, and then our seeking Him is our response to His initial seeking. Paul proved this theology through his own story in 1:15-16: “But when God, who from my birth set me apart and called me by His grace, was pleased  to reveal His Son in me, so that I could preach Him among the Gentiles…” However, I don’t believe for a minute that this was Paul’s goal in using that phraseology in this section. Paul is seeking to make a transition from the Galatians’ return to slavery to his love and concern for them. He is essentially saying in this phrase, “Galatians, God got to know you through my coming to you. He used me to get to know you. Don’t turn your back on Him!” This transition is completed in verse 11 when Paul says, “I am fearful for you, that perhaps my labor for you has been wasted.”
Verses 12-15 describe Paul’s first experience with them. “I beg you, brothers: Become like me, for I also became like you. You have not wronged me;  you know that previously I preached the gospel to you because of a physical illness.  You did not despise or reject me though my physical condition was a trial for you. On the contrary, you received me as an angel of God, as Christ Jesus Himself.  What happened to this sense of being blessed you had? For I testify to you that, if possible, you would have torn out your eyes and given them to me.”
This passage doesn’t exactly make a lot of sense. All we know for sure is that Paul is describing his time with the Galatians. It is interesting that verse 13 does not say, “physical illness,” but rather, “in weakness of the flesh.” Many have understood this as being a sickness (as the HCSB translates it), though literally “weakness of the flesh” often refers to temptation to sin. Martin Luther explains a third option, which I think is best, in the following lengthy quote:
When Paul speaks of the infirmity of his flesh he does not mean some physical defect or carnal lust, but the sufferings and afflictions which he endured in his body. What these infirmities were he himself explains in 2 Corinthians 12:9-10: “Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me. Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in necessities, in persecutions, in distresses for Christ’s sake: for when I am weak, then am I strong.” And in the eleventh chapter of the same Epistle the Apostle writes: “In labors more abundant, in stripes above measure, in prisons more frequent, in deaths oft. Of the Jews five times received I forty stripes save one. Thrice was I beaten with rods, once was I stoned, thrice I suffered shipwreck,” etc. (2 Cor 11:23-25.) By the infirmity of his flesh Paul meant these afflictions and not some chronic disease. He reminds the Galatians how he was always in peril at the hands of the Jews, Gentiles, and false brethren, how he suffered hunger and want.
Now, the afflictions of the believers always offend people. Paul knew it and therefore has high praise for the Galatians because they over looked his afflictions and received him like an angel. Christ forewarned the faithful against the offense of the Cross, saying: “Blessed is he, whosoever shall not be offended in me” (Matt 11:6). Surely it is no easy thing to confess Him Lord of all and Savior of the world who was a reproach of men, and despised of the people, and the laughing stock of the world (Ps 22:7). I say, to value this poor Christ, so spitefully scorned, spit upon, scourged, and crucified, more than the riches of the richest, the strength of the strongest, the wisdom of the wisest, is something. It is worth being called blessed.[2]
They received Paul as Jesus Himself. In a very real sense, Paul is saying also that through their heeding of his message, they literally received Christ by believing in Him. They were not offended by Paul, but rather drawn to the Savior.
Paul explains that they received him so eagerly, without being offended, that he could have asked them for anything and they would have done it. The phrase, “if possible, you would have torn out your eyes and given them to me,” has often been understood as contributing to the view that Paul had a physical illness, perhaps an optical illness, and needed their eyes to see better. With the above understanding from Luther, this cannot be the case, and it is enough to say that they trusted Paul so highly that they would have done anything he asked. This is quite a contrast with the next verses.
Verses 16-20 describe Paul’s current experience with them. “Have I now become your enemy by telling you the truth?  They are enthusiastic about you, but not for any good. Instead, they want to isolate you so you will be enthusiastic about them.  Now it is always good to be enthusiastic about good—and not just when I am with you.  My children, I am again suffering labor pains for you until Christ is formed in you.  I would like to be with you right now and change my tone of voice, because I don’t know what to do about you.”
This is where Paul’s loyalty and perseverance for those he loves comes into play explicitly. The simplest way to understand this section hinges on the word “now” in verse 16. He is anticipating their current response as they are reading the letter. “Are you now upset with me for being honest?” Loyalty and faithfulness to people involves the hard task of telling the truth. There’s no more unloving thing to do than to actively withhold the truth from those who are erring off the path of life. Paul made it clear in 1:6 that the Galatians are standing over the pit of hell in their decision to follow the Judaizers instead of Jesus: “I am amazed that you are so quickly turning away from Him who called you by the grace of Christ and are turning to a different gospel.” Paul has been telling the truth since the start of the letter, and here he asks them to be honest about their feelings: “Are you mad at me for loving you enough to tell you that you are wrong?” He then says, “Look, these Judaizers might try to tell you differently, but your eternal soul is at stake in this! Don’t listen to them!”
Are we truth tellers like Paul, or do we hope someone else is going to do the job God has given to us? I know that for me I am too often guilty of saying, “I’ll raise spiritual issues later,” when I’m not guaranteed a later time at which to raise those issues. The fact that Carrie Fisher died this week is proof that we don’t know how much time we have on this planet. This also again ties back to Chuck. As government agents, their lives were in danger every episode. As such, they had to be ready for the worst; how much more, in real life, must we be ready for the end? If we know the truth, we must spread it to those we know. Especially if we, like Paul are called to active ministry roles in a church, we need to not take the, “I’ll wait for someone more qualified to share the gospel with my peers,” attitude. We must do it ourselves.
Paul is fighting for them, and he compares his anguish for them to the pain of a woman in labor. They were his spiritual children and he wanted to see them grow up into Christ. R. Alan Cole explains,
Paul says he is in labour all over again until Christ be formed in you, or ‘until you take the shape of Christ’ (NEB). No-one doubts his meaning: it is the agony of the pastor, watching for signs of Christian growth in his flock. Paul tells us in 2 Corinthians 11:28 that this was the heaviest burden which he had to bear. It is therefore inadequate to think of Paul merely as the prince of evangelists; he was also the prince of pastors, and nowhere is this more clearly seen than in passages like this.[3]
Second Corinthians 11:28 would prove that the weakness of the flesh Paul dealt with in front of the Corinthians was the trials of ministry, and the fact that they were turning their backs on him made it even harder. Second Corinthians 11:28 says, “Not to mention other things, there is the daily pressure on me: my care for all the churches.” This is why he concludes the Galatians section today by saying, “I want to see you. I am at a loss about you.”
Chuck Bartowski from the television show Chuck is loyal to all of his friends throughout that television series. In a similar way, Paul was loyal to his Galatian friends. Are we as loyal to our friends? Do we tell them the truth even at the risk of making them our enemy, like Paul did here? We should. The truth is that Jesus died on the cross to break down all enmity for those who believe in Him. And who knows, even if my sharing the gospel with a coworker makes our friendship totally different, perhaps it will plant the seed that will eventually sprout elsewhere and destroy that enmity that I was worried about. I for one would rather risk enmity than know with certainty that a peer is headed to hell. Paul would agree with me on that. How about you?
Til next time.
Soli Deo Gloria



[1] John MacArthur, Galatians, 114.
[2] Martin Luther, Commentary on Galatians.
[3] R. Alan Cole, Tyndale New Testament Commentaries – Galatians, (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Academic, 2008), WORDsearch CROSS e-book, 175.

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

A Christmas Miracle?

So life has changed quite a bit over the past year, though this is not the post to get into all that—wait til Saturday night. One thing I will say right now is that this was the first Christmas I have ever spent away from my family. I was dreading it with everything in me for most of the past month, even though it never really came out vocally. Christmas is my favorite holiday: the lights, the songs, the REASON, my mother’s cookies, giving gifts and seeing their reactions when they open them. For these reasons, especially the last two, I did not want to be alone. How baseless my worries were.
It all started well when I went to a Christmas Eve service in Springfield, MO at a very gospel centered church. One thing the pastor mentioned that stuck with me—that I definitely needed to hear—was that we are too often guilty of focusing on how others can bless us, but we really should think about how we can be a blessing for others. Basically, that is the true story of Christmas (see Philippians 2:5-8). That instantly helped to start pulling my eyes back to where they needed to be in this Christmas season.
After the Christmas Eve service, I drove back home—to my half-moved into/unpacked house—and decided to start a Christmas tradition of my own. This year was the prep for future years, so I wrote down all the verse references I could think of that had anything to do with the coming of Jesus. I came up with a list of about seventeen passages—some long, some a single verse. In the midst of this, I FaceTime’d with my family back in California and talked about Christmassy things. Afterwards, I opened the gifts that they had mailed me, and then I watched It’s A Wonderful Life, which if you have never seen you need to see as soon as possible. (Something I noticed this time around was the fact that the whole story is based around the fact that intercessory prayers are heard and answered, which further convinced me I need to pray more.)
After that, I went to bed and woke up Christmas morning in time to get dressed for work. Looking ahead to Christmas, this was the thing I dreaded the most, even more so than being alone. However, I went to work and prayed on the way that I would have a good attitude and be a hard worker. It was the best work day of my life. Almost every customer that came in thanked me for being there so that they could get their prescription filled despite the fact that it was Christmas. They wanted to be in there just as much as I did—meaning not at all—because who wants to be sick on Christmas and have to go to the hospital? And then, to just add to the goodness of the day, one gentleman who I helped with prescriptions had to get a jumpstart for his car afterwards, and I was the only one in the store with jumper cables. I was yet again reminded that I am right where God wants me to be.
Holding onto this positive attitude is the struggle of my life right now, but God is faithful and I can trust Him. Please pray for me.
Soli Deo Gloria

Hopefully, my next Galatians post will be published tomorrow. God bless!

Saturday, December 10, 2016

Reigning, not Ruled – 4:1-7

I remember a book I read as a child by Mark Twain. Sure, it was the condensed version, but it was called The Prince and the Pauper. It is about two children who realize they look almost identical and that they could switch places and learn about life through each others’ eyes. One grew up in riches; the other grew up in poverty. The one who begins to experience life in more poverty than he is used to begins to understand what the poor have to go through daily; the one who moves up the social ladder is scared that he will be found out as a fraud. Paul sort of speaks to this in our passage today. However, he flips it. Believers are all royalty in God’s eyes. We’ve already lived our lives of poverty in sin, and we don’t need to go look back on those things with longing; at the same time, we don’t need to fear being found out as frauds, because we truly are heirs of God and we can know it experientially through the Spirit.
Galatians 4:1-7 says, “Now I say that as long as the heir is a child, he differs in no way from a slave, though he is the owner of everything.  Instead, he is under guardians and stewards until the time set by his father.  In the same way we also, when we were children, were in slavery under the elemental forces of the world.  When the time came to completion, God sent His Son, born of a woman, born under the law,  to redeem those under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons.  And because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying, Abba, Father!  So you are no longer a slave but a son, and if a son, then an heir through God.
So far in our study of this book, we have seen several things: Paul started by composing a letter to the Galatians in which the introduction holds up Jesus as the answer to our sin problem (1:1-5). From there, he showed shock at their current straying from that foundation (1:6-10). He continues by anticipating the objection, “Who are you to say this?” and answers by telling them, “Jesus revealed this to me” (1:11-24); and then he says, “the Apostles at Jerusalem confirmed my message” (2:1-10). He continues to show that he was not influenced by men in the proclamation of the gospel by explaining his confrontation with Peter, and arguing that the gospel promotes freedom, not rules and regulations (2:11-21). Then he interrogates the Galatians about their straying from the truth (3:1-5). He explains that we need faith, which gives life, and not law, which breeds death (3:6-14). He explains the source of that faith—promised 430 years before the Law to  Abraham—which was Jesus, the seed of Abraham (3:15-18). And finally, lest people accuse Paul of being a blaspheming Jew who’s turned his back on the Law, he explained that the Law does serve a purpose (3:19-29).
And it is there that we pick up today. Galatians 3:24 said, “The law, then, was our guardian until Christ, so that we could be justified by faith,” and it is with that metaphor that Paul continues in 4:1-7. He seeks to show that while the Law is holy, and from God, it is not ultimate; it serves a purpose. He seeks to prove that we should not submit ourselves to the law as ultimate if we have been freed from it by Him Who is Ultimate. (Again, Paul is not teaching do-whatever-you-want theology; chapter five, which follows chapter four, is very ethically oriented; but we’ll get there soon.)
Paul starts by relaying the guardian image again. However, this time the focus is on the person under the guardian, not the guardian itself. Verses 1-2 say, “As long as the heir is a child, he differs in no way from a slave, though he is the owner of everything.  Instead, he is under guardians and stewards until the time set by his father.” This is relatively simple to understand. Until a certain age, a child in ancient Greece had no privileges. He might have been from a rich family, and been the heir of a large inheritance, but he couldn’t take advantage of any of it. There were family slaves that watched, protected, and aided the child until he reached the appropriate age. He was treated as a slave by these slaves, until the time would come when he reached the age where he could inherit his rank of sonship from his father. Basically, the slaves prepared him for this day, treating him like he was a slave until he was old enough/mature enough to become an adult with responsibilities and privileges.
Paul continues by relating this analogy to our spiritual situation. Verses 3-5 say, “We also, when we were children, were in slavery under the elemental forces of the world.  When the time came to completion, God sent His Son, born of a woman, born under the law,  to redeem those under the law, so that we might receive adoption as sons.
He starts by saying we were in slavery. However, it is very key to note that he doesn’t say, “You were enslaved to the Law.” This is important, because the people he is writing to were Gentiles who had never had the Law of Moses. Acts 13-14 describes this missionary journey of Paul to the Gentiles, and it was in a state of checking up on them that this letter was written. Instead of accusing them of being enslaved to the Law, he says, “we were in slavery under the elemental things of the world.” The fact that he includes himself would argue that the law of Moses is part of the elemental things of the world. So what exactly were we enslaved to?
The Greek word translated “elemental things” is somewhat tricky to nail down its precise meaning. And while many scholars have debated, argued, and spilled much ink over the meaning of the phrase “elemental things of the world,” one explanation screams for recognition. “It denotes that whereon the existence of this world rests, that which constitutes man’s being. Paul uses it in a transferred sense for that whereon man’s existence rested before Christ even and precisely in pre-Christian religion, that which is weak and impotent, that which enslaves man instead of freeing him.”[1] The elemental things of this world are whatever building blocks a person has built his identity out of. These things do nothing for us, except beat us up and show us our need of deliverance. For a Jew, it is clear that the Law of Moses functioned in this way. Paul’s point to the Galatians is, “Don’t put yourself back in slavery. You never experienced that kind. Don’t go there now!”
However, some of us reading this are already returning to, or maybe have never even left the elemental things of this world. Perhaps you find your identity in being able to drink more alcohol than the next guy; give it up, because it’s enslaved you. Perhaps you find your identity in a relationship with the opposite gender; you will never find true purpose or meaning there, so don’t let it enslave you more. Perhaps you find your identity in a homosexual relationship; again, it is enslaving, so turn away from it. Perhaps your slavery of choice isn’t so obvious to the world: do you find your identity in being a good person, or in always being happy, or in helping other people? What’s your motivation for these good things? If it is so people will think highly of you, you are in a heap of trouble. Our motivation for goodness should never be our reputation, but rather God’s. The second half of this list of six forms of slavery is the more dangerous side: Jesus said in Matthew 9:12, “Those who are well don’t need a doctor, but the sick do.” Until a person is able to admit their need for a doctor, they will remain sick. Those who are enslaved to active sins—drunkenness, sexual deviance, murder, etc.—are more likely to see their need for help than those enslaved to passive sins—pride, self-idolatry, self-righteousness. Don’t stay in slavery, regardless of which side you fall on.
He continues by explaining how we can be released from slavery: it’s through Jesus, the Son of God. I said in the previous paragraph to turn from your slavery, but I didn’t say where to turn. This is where you need to turn. Do it now! Admit your need for saving, your refusal to remain a slave any longer, and choose to believe that Jesus bore the curse meant for you on the cross and choose to follow Him for the rest of your life.
Paul highlights two aspects of Jesus that are key to understanding our freedom from slavery: Jesus was born of a woman, and He was born under the law. The fact that Jesus was born of a woman means that He was fully human. This means simply that He can relate to us. He understands our fears and our desires. He knows what it is like to be tempted and tried. He even knows what it’s like to live under the Law: He was born under the Law, and the beginning of His life was marked by strict adherence to the Law (see Luke 2 after the Christmas story). In fact, this is what Paul means by the second phrase: born under the Law. However, the key here is how Paul words this section: “God sent His Son.” God didn’t just send Jesus as a man. He sent Jesus as His own personal heir. Jesus is the one who gave the Law, so the Law cannot hold Him down. In fact, He’s above us and able to pull us out from under the Law and set us firmly on grace. He is amazing.
The purpose of Jesus’ coming was so that we would receive adoption as sons. Just as Jesus was God’s heir, so God wants us as His heirs also. Jesus’ death on the cross redeemed us from slaves to all sorts of various things to sons and daughters of God. That is the gospel. Believe it!
Paul concludes this section by explaining what is the significance of us as sons of God. Verses 6-7 say, “And because you are sons, God has sent the Spirit of His Son into our hearts, crying, Abba, Father!  So you are no longer a slave but a son, and if a son, then an heir through God.” Paul says here that the proof of our sonship is the Spirit. And it is very interesting here that Paul doesn’t say, “You cry out, ‘Abba, Father,’” but rather, “the Spirit is crying out, ‘Abba, Father!’” The way it is worded, it is clear that the Spirit is actively crying out for God, and when we find ourselves crying out for God it is a sign that we truly do belong to God.
The Spirit’s crying out for God, and especially when the Spirit speaks as much through our mouth in prayers or even cries for help, is proof that we are no longer slaves. In fact, it should be a very strong deterrent from anything in this world that would seek to reenslave us. This is Paul’s point here: “Galatians, you claim to have been redeemed by Christ, so why would you enslave yourselves to a new elemental thing when you have Jesus as your Savior, as the Ultimate Person?” Paul is saying, if you are children of God, redeemed from a childhood of slavery, then don’t return to childhood. You did away with those things. John MacArthur relates how an ancient tradition in Rome at this time was burning one’s toys to show that a person was no longer a child.[2] Galatians 2:18 says, “If I rebuild the system I tore down, I show myself to be a lawbreaker.” Paul doesn’t want this to be the case. He wants them to see that they have been remade anew, and the old no longer exists or exercises any authority, just like the slaves in a Roman household after the child comes to adulthood.
Paul takes a final jab at the Judaizers (those trying to turn the Galatians to Jewish practices for salvation) by saying, “if you’re a son, then you are an heir through God.” The clearest way to understand this would be to see Paul as saying, “you are an heir through the agency of God.”[3] It is not because the Law exercised power that someone becomes an heir of God; it is not because some other enslaving system of the world exercises power that someone becomes an heir of God; it is not even because a person does something that they become an heir of God. Rather, it is simply due to God’s working that anyone becomes an heir of God. God is in control. Nothing else ultimately is. For this reason we can trust God, and we should run to Jesus. He is our hope.
Let’s live as the princes and princesses we are, and never return to the pauper life of sin.
Til next time.
Soli Deo Gloria


[1] Gerhard Delling, “stoicevw, sustoicevw, stoicei`on, in Theological Dictionary of the New Testament, 7:685.
[2] John MacArthur, Galatians, 104.
[3] Cf. James A. Brooks and Carlton L. Winberry, Syntax of New Testament Greek, 24-25.