Dr. Jack L. Arnold Equipping Pastors International, Inc.
Lesson 12
INTRODUCTION
One
of the hazards of verse by verse exposition of the scriptures is that some
portions of the Bible are more interesting and easier to preach on than others.
This is not the case with the whole fourth chapter of Galatians. While there is
deep truth in this chapter, it is not easy to preach.
However,
IÕm committed to preaching the whole counsel of God. If it is in GodÕs Word, it
is important and relevant even if it does not seem so at the time.
Most
children when growing up hate spinach but as good parents we feed them spinach
anyway because we know it is good for them. At first, children surely will balk
and sometimes gag but over a period of time they actually learn to like
spinach. Expositional preaching which often has some tough sections of
scripture to preach may cause many Christians to balk and to gag but if they
stick with it, they will actually gain an appreciation for the word of God
preached verse by verse.
By
way of background, the Apostle Paul in Galatians chapter three has explained
how God made a promise to Abraham to bless all the nations of the earth through
His posterity, the Jews. This covenant with Abraham contained the promises of
salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ because Christ Himself is the
One who ultimately fulfills the Abrahamic Covenant. All who have Christ as
Savior and Lord are spiritual seed of Abraham. (Gal. 3:29: ÒIf you belong to Christ, then you are AbrahamÕs seed, and heirs
according to the promise.Ó).
The
Apostle Paul has also pointed out that the Mosaic Law did not set aside GodÕs
promise to Abraham but actually enforced it and made it more necessary and
urgent. The Mosaic Law was never designed by God to give eternal life but to
show men their sinfulness (Rom. 3:19-20
ÒNow we know that whatever the
law says, it says to those who are under the law, so that every mouth may be
silenced and the whole world held accountable to God. Therefore no one will be
declared righteous in his sight by observing the law, rather, through the law
we become conscious of sin.Ó).
The law was given to show men their total bankruptcy in righteousness
before a holy God and to drive them to Jesus Christ who can give them the
forgiveness of sins and a righteousness that will make them acceptable to a
holy God (2 Cor. 5:21 ÒGod made him who
had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness
of God.Ó).
MANÕS
CONDITION UNDER THE LAW 4:1-3
ÒWhat I am saying is that as long as the
heir is a child, he is no different form a slave, although he owns the whole
estate. He is subject to guardians and trustees until the time set by his
father.Ó
Paul
uses an illustration from Roman life of that day to show that men under law are
like an heir to an inheritance who cannot have it because he is not of age.
According to Roman law, a child or one in his minor years (under seventeen)
could be an heir to a great estate. The father had made up the will and the
estate was certain to be his by promise, but the child could not have the
estate in his experience because he was not of age. Although the child was the
rightful owner of all the estate by title, yet in actuality he was no better
off than a mere slave, for not one penny of the inheritance was in his
possession.
In
his minor years the child was put under guardians and trustees who had complete
control of the childÕs person and property until he became of age to receive
the inheritance. These guardians and trustees directed the child, ordered him
about, disciplined him and for all practical purposes controlled him. The child
was under constant restraint and had no liberty. This was his position and condition
until the time appointed or fixed by his father. At the precise day (sometime
after turning seventeen), he would become the rightful heir to the inheritance.
ÒSo also, when we were children, we were
in slavery under the basic principles of the world.Ó
The
condition of the Christian before conversion is compared to a child who is heir
by right but is actually a slave until the appointed time of the Heavenly
Father to change this condition. As unsaved people, we were enslaved to sin and
in bondage to the law. Sin controlled us and the law condemned us. We were
under constant restraint from the law and had no liberty.
As
non-Christians, we lived according to the basic principles (elementary
concepts) of religion. The Òbasic principlesÓ are the physical, external
aspects of man-made religion. These principles are that man is somehow saved by
works. If we live a good enough life surely God or the gods, if there is a God,
will accept us. Salvation by good works is at the basis of all the religions of
the world, except Christianity. Before conversion to Christ, all men are
trusting themselves and their good works to get them to heaven (if there is a
heaven). This is all the natural man knows, and until he trusts Christ he will
never know what it means to be saved by grace.
GODÕS ACTION
THROUGH CHRIST 3:3-5
ÒBut when the time had fully come, God
sent his SonÓ
At
a predetermined and fixed point of history, God sent forth Jesus Christ into
this world to save sinful men from the bondage of sin and the curse of the law.
The
foreordained time of ChristÕs coming not only guaranteed that sinful men could
be set free from the bondage of the law, but His death on the Cross brought an
end to the age of law. ManÕs bondage under the law continued for 1,300 years,
but God ended it at the Cross.
ÒBorn of a womanÓ
Christ
was not only GodÕs Son, possessing the very nature of deity, but He was true
humanity, being Òborn of a woman.Ó This is a beautiful picture of the God-Man.
Christ had to be God, for only God could redeem men, and He had to be human or
He could not have been a perfect sacrifice for sin.
ÒBorn under the lawÓ
Jesus
Christ was born under the Mosaic Law. He had a Jewish mother, lived in a Jewish
nation and was subject to Jewish law. Jesus Christ kept all the requirements of
the law perfectly. He did what no other person could—he perfectly
fulfilled the righteousness of the law. Because He alone kept the righteous
requirements of the law, He alone can set it aside as a way of life.
Jesus
could keep the law perfectly because He was truly God and truly man. The deity
of Christ, the humanity of Christ and the righteousness of Christ qualified Him
to be the Savior, the redeemer, the mediator between God and man.
ÒTo redeem those under lawÓ
Christ
came to redeem people who are under the curse of the law because of their sin.
Our sin brings the curse of God because the law simply shows that we are
sinners (Gal. 3:10 ÒAll who rely on
observing the law are under a curse, for it is written: ÔCursed is everyone who
does not continue to do everything written in the Book of the law.Ó).
The
first purpose for sending His Son is that He might redeem men. The word ÒredeemÓ
means, Òto purchase out of the slave market.Ó All men are under the curse of
God because they are sinners, but Christ came to purchase men out of the slave
market of sin and set them free from the curse and bondage of the law. (Gal.
3:13 ÒChrist redeemed us from the curse
of the law by becoming a curse for us.Ó).
If
we have received Christ as our Savior and Lord, we have been redeemed and set
free from the bondage of sin. We are not free from sin but from the bondage of
sin. This does not mean we do not sin any more, but we have a new position
before God as redeemed ones through Christ, and now we have a new motivation to
live for Christ.
Archeologists
not too long ago discovered some very valuable business and personal letters
written in the New Testament or Koine
Greek. These discoveries are called the Chester-Papyri writings, and one of the
letters was all about the meaning of the word Òredeem.Ó It tells about a woman
who was a slave and was put up for sale in the slave market. Apparently she was
quite attractive and would have made a fine slave for any master. A trader purchased
this woman for a very high price. And when the purchase was made, for no good
reason other than the good pleasure of his will, he told the woman, ÒI have
paid a high price for you and have bought you out of slavery, and now I set you
free forever. You never have to be my slave or any oneÕs slave again.Ó He then
turned and walked away. She stood there a free woman. A few
minutes later, the slave trader heard hard running foot steps behind him and a
weeping womanÕs voice crying, ÒSir! Sir!Ó He said, ÒWhat do you want with me,
woman, I have set you free forever.Ó The woman cried out, ÒMy Lord, for your
kindness and graciousness in setting me free, I will voluntarily be your slave
forever. You are now my master!Ó
So
it is for the Christian when he comes to understand that he was a slave to sin
and that Christ purchased him out from the slave market of sin. He voluntarily
makes himself a slave to Christ.
ÒThat we might receive the full rights of
sons.Ó
The
second purpose God sent forth His Son was to give each one of us an adult
standing before God as sons and daughters. Literally this says, ÒThat we might
receive the adoption of sons.Ó This again refers to a Roman custom. The Romans
had a special way of adopting their own sons. Adoption had nothing to do with
taking an orphan child and making him a member of a family.
The
Romans acknowledged all children as part of the family but only those who went
through the ritual of son-placing were officially recognized as sons. A Roman
father never referred to male children as sons until they were of age. They
were his children but not his sons. But when the child became of age (which was
seventeen in the Roman system) the father took his son through a ritual. The
family had a festival (party) called the liberalia
(the liberation). At this time the son took off his robe or toga of youth
called the toga proetexta and put on
the toga vitilis, which was the robe
of an adult son, being recognized as man, an adult son in the fatherÕs family.
The father then took his son to the public forum and there announced his child
to be an adult son, heir of the father, and sharing the privileges as well as
the responsibilities of a son.
When
we receive Christ, we are made an adult son in GodÕs family with all the
rights, privileges and responsibilities of a son. We are set free from being a
minor under the law and made a son or daughter with an adult standing in the
family of God.
The
Bible does not teach that God is Father to all people. It does teach He is the
Father of Christ and all those who believe in Christ, making up the family of
God. The Bible does not teach the Fatherhood of God for all men but only for
those who have accepted Christ.
THE CHRISTIANÕS
NEW RELATIONSHIP TO THE FATHER 4:6-7
ÒBecause you are sons, God sent the
Spirit of his Son into our hearts, the Spirit who calls out ÔAbba, Father.ÕÓ
To
give positive demonstration that Christians are true sons and daughters of God,
God the Father sends forth the Holy Spirit into their hearts. As soon as the
Holy Spirit takes up residence in us, the Christian begins to cry out ÒAbba,
Father.Ó The word ÒAbbaÓ means papa
in the Aramaic and the word ÒfatherÓ is the Greek word pater. These are words of respect and endearment. As soon as we are
saved, the Holy Spirit begins to cry out in us ÒFather, Father!Ó, telling us
through experience that we are truly members of GodÕs family.
We
have a new relationship with the Heavenly Father because of redemption through
Christ and the witness of the Holy Spirit, telling us that we are truly sons
and daughters of God (Rom. 8:15-16 ÒFor you did not receive a spirit that
makes you a slave again to fear, but you received the Spirit of sonship. And by
him we cry, ÔAbba, Father.Õ The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that
we are GodÕs children.Ó).
The
FatherÕs purpose was not only to secure us as sons and daughters through Jesus
Christ but also to assure us through the Holy Spirit. He sent His Son that we
might have the status of sonship, and sent His Holy Spirit that we might have
an experience of this. Through this new formula, we find a vital and intimate
relationship exists between adult sons and the Heavenly Father.
The
fact that the Spirit of Christ in our hearts cries unto God and makes
intercession for us with groanings should reassure us greatly. However, there
are many factors that prevent such full reassurance on our part. We are born in
sin. To doubt the good will of God is an inborn suspicion of God with all of
us. Besides, the devil, our adversary goeth about seeking to devour us by
roaring: ÒGod is angry at you and it is going to destroy you forever.Ó In all
these difficulties we have only one support, the Gospel of Christ. To hold on
to it, that is the trick.
Christ
cannot be perceived with the senses. We cannot see Him. The heart does not feel
His helpful presence. Especially in times of trials a Christian feels the power
of sin, the infirmity of his flesh, the goading darts of the devil, the agues
of death, the scowl and judgment of God. All these things cry out against us.
The law scolds us, sin screams at us, death thunders at us, the devil roars at
us. In the midst of the clamor the Spirit of Christ cries in our hearts: ÒAbba,
Father.Ó And this little cry of the Spirit transcends the hullabaloo of the law,
sin, death and the devil, and finds a hearing with God.Ó (Martin Luther, Commentary on Galatians).
One
of the first evidences that a person is a child of God is that he cries out
through the Spirit, ÒFather, Father.Ó The way God assures us of our sonship is
not by some spectacular gift, sign or super-emotional experience but by the
quiet inward witness of the Holy Spirit.
There
was a Christian woman who had received word that her fiancee had been suddenly
killed in an accident. She was a relatively new Christian, and when she
received this word she was tremendously disturbed. She went into her bedroom
and shut the door.
Her
mother heard her sobbing and after awhile the mother said to the womanÕs
father, ÒI think you had better go up and see her; she needs a father right
now.Ó So the father went upstairs and was about to open the door when he heard
his daughter sobbing. Quietly he opened the door a crack and saw that she was
kneeling beside the bed with her head buried in her hands crying out, ÒOh,
Father, Oh, Father, Father.Ó Her dad just quietly shut the door, came back
downstairs and said to his wife, ÒShe is in better hands than mine for she is
with her Heavenly Father.Ó
As
sons and daughters of our Heavenly Father, we not only have privileges but
responsibilities to walk a godly life so as to make our Heavenly Father proud
of us. It is impossible to lose our position as sons and daughters in GodÕs
family. However, we may fail to please God in our daily experience. We may be
obedient or disobedient, faithful or unfaithful, committed or not committed as
children of God. If we are not pleasing God in our experience, then our Father,
in great love, has to bring discipline to us to teach us the folly of going our
own way, living for self and depending on the flesh. God disciplines us as our
Heavenly Father because He loves us and desires that we should walk godly lives
(Heb. 12:10 ÒOur fathers disciplined us
for a little while as they thought best; but God disciplines us for our good,
that we may share in his holiness.Ó).
ÒSo you are no longer a slave, but a son;
and since you are a son, God has made you also an heir.Ó
A
Christian is no longer a slave to sin and under the bondage of the law. He is
an adult son of God and set free in Christ. The Christian life is not being
slaves to sin and law, but sons and daughters. It is not bondage but liberty.
We are no longer slaves of sin and self but slaves of God through Christ.
As
Christians, we are slaves to God, to Christ and to others, but this kind of
slavery brings freedom to the soul. Christianity is a religion of sons and
daughters not slaves to sin and law, and one becomes a son or daughter by grace
through faith in Jesus Christ, apart from any law-works. Christians trust only
in the finished work of Christ to save them, and this act makes them sons and
daughters.
It
is so very easy to confuse Christianity and good works, for there are many
religious people who know nothing of a personal relationship with Christ. John
Wesley, the great Methodist preacher, was raised in a Christian family, a
member of the Church of England, a clergyman and a member of a devoted group of
men called the Holy Club. Yet, he was not converted to Christ. He was orthodox
in belief and full of good works. He went to church regularly when he was not
preaching; he partook of the Holy Communion; he gave sacrificially to the LordÕs
work, searched the scriptures, fasted, prayed and even went to the mission
field in America. But he was bound in the chains of salvation by works, for he
was trusting in himself for righteousness instead of trusting in Jesus Christ
and Him crucified.
A
few years later John Wesley actually was born of the Spirit and trusted Christ
as his personal Lord and Savior. Later, looking back over his pre-conversion
days, he wrote, ÒI had even then the faith of a servant, though not that of a
son.Ó
Christianity
is a religion of sons and daughters and not slaves to sin, law, death and
Satan. Christianity is for those who
know what it means to be born of the Spirit by grace through faith in Jesus
Christ.
CONCLUSION
Every
person is a creature of God but not every person is a son or daughter of God.
GodÕs children are those who are related to Jesus Christ, the only begotten son
of the Father.
I
want to assure you that you may become a son or daughter of God if you will
acknowledge that sin has separated you from God and then turn to Christ,
believing that He died as a substitute for your sin. At the very moment of
decision for Christ, you will become a son or daughter of God, and God will
become your Father. Then for the first time you will experience the Holy Spirit
working in you and quietly crying through you, ÒFather, Father.Ó