Paul, continuing His urgent defense of the gospel by pressing the Galatians to understand their identity as sons and heirs through Christ rather than slaves under the former order.
No Longer Slaves: Sonship, Pastoral Anguish, and Children of Promise
God sent His Son to redeem slaves into sons and sent the Spirit of His Son to assure them as heirs, so believers must not return to the slavery of flesh, law-reliance, or promise-denying religion.
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God sent His Son to redeem slaves into sons and sent the Spirit of His Son to assure them as heirs, so believers must not return to the slavery of flesh, law-reliance, or promise-denying religion.
Paul argues that the coming of Christ has ended the believer's minority under the former order. Through the Son's redemption and the Spirit's witness, believers are adopted as sons and heirs. Therefore, returning to law-centered slavery contradicts the fullness-of-time accomplishment of Christ and the promise-based identity of God's children.
The churches in Galatia, who are being tempted to submit to law-centered identity and religious observance as though Christ alone were insufficient for full covenant belonging.
After arguing from Abraham, promise, law, curse, and sonship in Galatians 3, Paul now expands the sonship theme and warns the Galatians against returning to slavery under the elemental principles of the world.
God sent His Son to redeem slaves into sons and sent the Spirit of His Son to assure them as heirs, so believers must not return to the slavery of flesh, law-reliance, or promise-denying religion.
Paul, continuing His urgent defense of the gospel by pressing the Galatians to understand their identity as sons and heirs through Christ rather than slaves under the former order.
The churches in Galatia, who are being tempted to submit to law-centered identity and religious observance as though Christ alone were insufficient for full covenant belonging.
After arguing from Abraham, promise, law, curse, and sonship in Galatians 3, Paul now expands the sonship theme and warns the Galatians against returning to slavery under the elemental principles of the world.
- The Galatians face pressure from teachers who want to win them over, likely by persuading them to adopt Torah-related observances and boundary markers as necessary signs of full covenant maturity.
Paul uses household imagery of heirs, guardians, trustees, slavery, adoption, and inheritance, along with an allegorical appeal to Hagar and Sarah, to contrast slavery under the old order with freedom in the promise fulfilled in Christ.
Galatians 4 situates believers after the fullness of time, when God sent His Son to redeem those under the law and sent the Spirit of His Son into believers' hearts, confirming their adoption as sons and heirs.
Paul moves from the temporary minority of heirs under guardians, to redemption and adoption through God's sent Son, to the Spirit's cry of sonship, then to pastoral anguish over the Galatians' regression, and finally to the contrast between slavery and promise through Hagar and Sarah.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
Galatians 4 clarifies that the gospel is the Father's fullness-of-time action through the sending of His Son to redeem those under the law and the sending of the Spirit of His Son to assure believers that they are no longer slaves but children and heirs through God.
Paul explains the pre-Christ condition as a period of minority and bondage under guardians, trustees, and elemental principles.
God's saving action occurs in the fullness of time through the sending of His Son, who redeems those under the law and secures adoption.
The Spirit of the Son confirms believers' sonship by crying 'Abba, Father' in their hearts, establishing them as children and heirs.
Paul warns that turning to law-centered observances as a basis of religious standing resembles returning to slavery rather than living as known children of God.
Paul appeals relationally and pastorally, contrasting His truth-speaking love with the manipulative zeal of the agitators and expressing His desire for Christ to be formed in the Galatians.
Paul uses Hagar and Sarah to contrast flesh and promise, slavery and freedom, present Jerusalem and the Jerusalem above, law-bondage and inheritance by promise.
- 4:1-3: Before the appointed time, the heir lived like a slave under guardians and trustees. Paul uses this to describe the pre-Christ condition under the elemental principles of the world.
- 4:4-5: At the fullness of time, God sent His Son, born of a woman and born under the law, to redeem those under the law and secure adoption to sonship.
- 4:6-7: Because believers are sons, God sent the Spirit of His Son into their hearts, crying 'Abba, Father,' confirming that they are no longer slaves but children and heirs.
- 4:8-11: Paul warns the Galatians that their turn toward weak and miserable principles and religious calendrical observances threatens regression from sonship into slavery.
- 4:12-20: Paul appeals to their former affection, exposes the manipulative zeal of the false teachers, and labors like a mother in childbirth until Christ is formed in them.
- 4:21-27: Paul contrasts Hagar and Sarah as an allegory of slavery and promise, linking Hagar to Sinai and the present Jerusalem, and Sarah to the Jerusalem above.
- 4:28-31: Believers are children of promise like Isaac, not children of the slave woman. The inheritance belongs to the free woman's children.
Theological Argument
Paul argues that the coming of Christ has ended the believer's minority under the former order. Through the Son's redemption and the Spirit's witness, believers are adopted as sons and heirs. Therefore, returning to law-centered slavery contradicts the fullness-of-time accomplishment of Christ and the promise-based identity of God's children.
From slavery under guardians, to redemption through the sent Son, to sonship confirmed by the sent Spirit, to warning against regression, to pastoral anguish, to the scriptural contrast between slave children and children of promise.
- 1.An heir under guardians is functionally like a slave until the time appointed by the father.
- 2.The pre-Christ condition was marked by slavery under the elemental principles of the world.
- 3.At the fullness of time, God sent his Son in true humanity and under the law.
- 4.The Son redeemed those under the law so that they might receive adoption to sonship.
- 5.Because believers are sons, God sent the Spirit of his Son into their hearts.
- 6.The Spirit's cry of 'Abba, Father' confirms the believer's new filial identity.
- 7.A child is also an heir through God, so the believer's inheritance rests on divine action rather than law-performance.
- 8.Returning to weak and miserable principles after being known by God is regression into slavery.
- 9.The false teachers' zeal is manipulative because they want to alienate the Galatians from Paul and secure their loyalty.
- 10.Paul's pastoral labor aims at Christ being formed in the Galatians, not at personal control over them.
- 11.The Hagar-Sarah contrast shows that flesh-produced slavery and promise-produced freedom cannot share the same inheritance.
- 12.Believers are children of promise like Isaac and therefore must live as children of the free woman.
Theological Focus
- The fullness of time
- The sending of the Son
- Incarnation and life under the law
- Redemption from slavery under the law
- Adoption to sonship
- The sending of the Spirit of the Son
- Assurance through the Spirit's cry, 'Abba, Father'
- Heirship through God
- Danger of religious regression
- Christ formed in believers
- Promise versus flesh
- Slavery versus freedom
- The Jerusalem above and the children of promise
- Adoption
- Redemption
- Trinitarian salvation
- Assurance
- Regression into slavery
- Pastoral formation
- Promise and freedom
- Incarnation
- Christ Under the Law
- Pneumatology
- Inheritance
- Doctrine of the Law
- Sanctification
- Promise and Freedom
Theological Themes
Believers are not merely acquitted sinners but adopted sons who belong to God's household and share in the inheritance.
Christ came under the law to redeem those under the law, liberating them from slavery into sonship.
God the Father sends the Son to redeem and sends the Spirit of His Son into believers' hearts, revealing salvation as the work of the triune God.
The Spirit's cry of 'Abba, Father' testifies to the believer's new relationship with God as child rather than slave.
Returning to law-centered religious observance as a basis of standing is not maturity but bondage.
Paul's goal is not merely that the Galatians reject error but that Christ be formed in them.
The Hagar-Sarah contrast shows that inheritance belongs to the children of promise, not the children of slavery.
Covenant Significance
Galatians 4 explains that the covenantal shift brought by Christ is not merely a change of religious administration but a movement from minority to maturity, slavery to sonship, guardianship to inheritance, and fleshly striving to promise-born freedom.
- The law's guardian-like role belongs to the period before the fullness of time.
- The sending of the Son marks the decisive redemptive-historical turning point.
- Christ's birth under the law enables Him to redeem those under the law.
- Adoption to sonship means believers now possess covenant status as mature heirs.
- The Spirit of the Son confirms that the promised age has arrived in believers' hearts.
- Returning to law-centered observance as a basis of standing is covenantal regression.
- The Hagar-Sarah contrast frames the issue as slavery versus promise, not merely differing religious styles.
- Believers in Christ are children of the free woman and therefore heirs by promise.
- Genesis 16 and 21 provide the background for Hagar, Sarah, Ishmael, and Isaac.
- Isaiah 54:1 is cited to portray the surprising fruitfulness of the barren/free woman.
- The Abrahamic promise remains central, with Isaac functioning as the child of promise rather than fleshly calculation.
- The Sinai covenant is associated with slavery when treated as the defining covenantal order after Christ has come.
- The promise line finds fulfillment not through fleshly striving but through God's supernatural promise and action.
Canonical Connections
Galatians 4:4-5 connects the incarnation, law, redemption, and adoption as the decisive fulfillment of God's redemptive plan.
Paul's teaching that believers are sons and heirs through God fits the wider New Testament witness to adoption through Christ and the Spirit.
The Spirit's witness in Galatians 4 parallels Romans 8, where the Spirit of adoption enables believers to cry 'Abba, Father.'
Paul draws from Genesis to contrast flesh-produced slavery and promise-produced inheritance.
Paul cites Isaiah 54:1 to show the surprising fruitfulness of the promise people connected with the Jerusalem above.
Galatians 4 anticipates the explicit call of Galatians 5:1 to stand firm in freedom and not submit again to a yoke of slavery.
Paul's pastoral goal of Christ formed in the Galatians aligns with the wider New Testament aim of conformity to Christ.
Cross References
Therefore concerning the eating of things sacrificed to idols, we know that no idol is anything in the world, and that there is no other God but one. For though there are things that are called “gods”, whether in the heavens or on earth;...
But we all, with unveiled face seeing the glory of the Lord as in a mirror, are transformed into the same image from glory to glory, even as from the Lord, the Spirit.
who also made us sufficient as servants of a new covenant, not of the letter, but of the Spirit. For the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life. But if the service of death, written engraved on stones, came with glory, so that the...
For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that you through his poverty might become rich.
Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and fill up on my part that which is lacking of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his body’s sake, which is the assembly, of which I was made a servant according to the stewardship of...
Let no one therefore judge you in eating, or in drinking, or with respect to a feast day or a new moon or a Sabbath day, which are a shadow of the things to come; but the body is Christ’s. Let no one rob you of your prize by self-abasement...
having predestined us for adoption as children through Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his desire, to the praise of the glory of his grace, by which he freely gave us favor in the Beloved, in whom we have our...
He gave some to be apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, shepherds and teachers; for the perfecting of the saints, to the work of serving, to the building up of the body of Christ, until we all attain to the unity...
By faith, even Sarah herself received power to conceive, and she bore a child when she was past age, since she counted him faithful who had promised. Therefore as many as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as innumerable as the sand...
Since then the children have shared in flesh and blood, he also himself in the same way partook of the same, that through death he might bring to nothing him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and might deliver all of them who...
The Word became flesh, and lived among us. We saw his glory, such glory as of the one and only Son of the Father, full of grace and truth.
I am the good shepherd. I know my own, and I’m known by my own; even as the Father knows me, and I know the Father. I lay down my life for the sheep.
If the world hates you, you know that it has hated me before it hated you. If you were of the world, the world would love its own. But because you are not of the world, since I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you....
This is eternal life, that they should know you, the only true God, and him whom you sent, Jesus Christ.
Jesus therefore said to those Jews who had believed him, “If you remain in my word, then you are truly my disciples. You will know the truth, and the truth will make you free.” They answered him, “We are Abraham’s offspring, and have never...
The angel answered her, “The Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. Therefore also the holy one who is born from you will be called the Son of God.
For the promise to Abraham and to his offspring that he should be heir of the world wasn’t through the law, but through the righteousness of faith. For if those who are of the law are heirs, faith is made void, and the promise is made of...
For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are children of God. For you didn’t receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, but you received the Spirit of adoption, by whom we cry, “Abba! Father!” The Spirit himself testifies with...
For whom he foreknew, he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers.
He who didn’t spare his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how would he not also with him freely give us all things?
But it is not as though the word of God has come to nothing. For they are not all Israel that are of Israel. Neither, because they are Abraham’s offspring, are they all children. But, “your offspring will be accounted as from Isaac.” That...
If a man has two wives, the one beloved and the other hated, and they have borne him children, both the beloved and the hated, and if the firstborn son is hers who was hated, then it shall be, in the day that he causes his sons to inherit...
Hear, Israel: Yahweh is our God. Yahweh is one. You shall love Yahweh your God with all your heart, with all your soul, and with all your might. These words, which I command you today, shall be on your heart;
God spoke all these words, saying, “I am Yahweh your God, who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage. “You shall have no other gods before me.
You shall tell Pharaoh, ‘Yahweh says, Israel is my son, my firstborn, and I have said to you, “Let my son go, that he may serve me;” and you have refused to let him go. Behold, I will kill your firstborn son.’ ”
Now Yahweh said to Abram, “Leave your country, and your relatives, and your father’s house, and go to the land that I will show you. I will make of you a great nation. I will bless you and make your name great. You will be a blessing. I...
He believed in Yahweh, who credited it to him for righteousness.
Now Sarai, Abram’s wife, bore him no children. She had a servant, an Egyptian, whose name was Hagar. Sarai said to Abram, “See now, Yahweh has restrained me from bearing. Please go in to my servant. It may be that I will obtain children by...
God said to Abraham, “As for Sarai your wife, you shall not call her name Sarai, but her name will be Sarah. I will bless her, and moreover I will give you a son by her. Yes, I will bless her, and she will be a mother of nations. Kings of...
I will establish my covenant between me and you and your offspring after you throughout their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be a God to you and to your offspring after you.
Galatians 4 clarifies that the gospel is the Father's fullness-of-time action through the sending of His Son to redeem those under the law and the sending of the Spirit of His Son to assure believers that they are no longer slaves but children and heirs through God.
- God acted at the fullness of time according to His appointed redemptive plan.
- God sent His Son, showing divine initiative and Christ's preexistence as Son.
- The Son was born of a woman, entering true humanity.
- The Son was born under the law, entering the condition of those He came to redeem.
- Christ redeemed those under the law.
- The purpose of redemption includes adoption to sonship.
- God sent the Spirit of His Son into believers' hearts.
- The Spirit's cry, 'Abba, Father,' confirms intimate covenant sonship.
- Believers are no longer slaves but children.
- Children are heirs through God.
- Returning to law-centered religious slavery contradicts the gospel of adoption.
- Believers are children of promise like Isaac and belong to the free woman.
- Do not reduce the gospel to forgiveness without adoption.
- Do not speak of adoption without grounding it in Christ's redemption under the law.
- Do not seek assurance in religious observance rather than the Spirit's witness grounded in the Son's work.
- Do not confuse spiritual maturity with returning to the old slavery from which Christ redeemed His people.
- Do not allow teachers to use zeal, attention, or flattery to pull believers away from gospel truth.
- Do not interpret freedom as self-rule · freedom means belonging as children and heirs through God.
- Do not treat the promise as something produced by fleshly effort. Promise is received by God's gracious action.
Therefore concerning the eating of things sacrificed to idols, we know that no idol is anything in the world, and that there is no other God but one. For though there are things that are called “gods”, whether in the heavens or on earth;...
But we all, with unveiled face seeing the glory of the Lord as in a mirror, are transformed into the same image from glory to glory, even as from the Lord, the Spirit.
who also made us sufficient as servants of a new covenant, not of the letter, but of the Spirit. For the letter kills, but the Spirit gives life. But if the service of death, written engraved on stones, came with glory, so that the...
For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that you through his poverty might become rich.
Now I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and fill up on my part that which is lacking of the afflictions of Christ in my flesh for his body’s sake, which is the assembly, of which I was made a servant according to the stewardship of...
Let no one therefore judge you in eating, or in drinking, or with respect to a feast day or a new moon or a Sabbath day, which are a shadow of the things to come; but the body is Christ’s. Let no one rob you of your prize by self-abasement...
having predestined us for adoption as children through Jesus Christ to himself, according to the good pleasure of his desire, to the praise of the glory of his grace, by which he freely gave us favor in the Beloved, in whom we have our...
He gave some to be apostles; and some, prophets; and some, evangelists; and some, shepherds and teachers; for the perfecting of the saints, to the work of serving, to the building up of the body of Christ, until we all attain to the unity...
By faith, even Sarah herself received power to conceive, and she bore a child when she was past age, since she counted him faithful who had promised. Therefore as many as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as innumerable as the sand...
Since then the children have shared in flesh and blood, he also himself in the same way partook of the same, that through death he might bring to nothing him who had the power of death, that is, the devil, and might deliver all of them who...
The Word became flesh, and lived among us. We saw his glory, such glory as of the one and only Son of the Father, full of grace and truth.
I am the good shepherd. I know my own, and I’m known by my own; even as the Father knows me, and I know the Father. I lay down my life for the sheep.
If the world hates you, you know that it has hated me before it hated you. If you were of the world, the world would love its own. But because you are not of the world, since I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you....
This is eternal life, that they should know you, the only true God, and him whom you sent, Jesus Christ.
Jesus therefore said to those Jews who had believed him, “If you remain in my word, then you are truly my disciples. You will know the truth, and the truth will make you free.” They answered him, “We are Abraham’s offspring, and have never...
The angel answered her, “The Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. Therefore also the holy one who is born from you will be called the Son of God.
For the promise to Abraham and to his offspring that he should be heir of the world wasn’t through the law, but through the righteousness of faith. For if those who are of the law are heirs, faith is made void, and the promise is made of...
For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are children of God. For you didn’t receive the spirit of bondage again to fear, but you received the Spirit of adoption, by whom we cry, “Abba! Father!” The Spirit himself testifies with...
For whom he foreknew, he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers.
He who didn’t spare his own Son, but delivered him up for us all, how would he not also with him freely give us all things?
But it is not as though the word of God has come to nothing. For they are not all Israel that are of Israel. Neither, because they are Abraham’s offspring, are they all children. But, “your offspring will be accounted as from Isaac.” That...
Primary Emphasis
Galatians 4 presents Christ as the sent Son of God, truly born of a woman, born under the law, redeeming those under the law, securing adoption, and being formed in believers. Christ is the decisive turning point from slavery to sonship and from guardianship to inheritance.
Chapter Contribution
Paul argues that the coming of Christ has ended the believer's minority under the former order. Through the Son's redemption and the Spirit's witness, believers are adopted as sons and heirs. Therefore, returning to law-centered slavery contradicts the fullness-of-time accomplishment of Christ and the promise-based identity of God's children.
Believers receive the status of sons, not merely release from guilt, and are brought into familial relationship with the Father.
Freedom in Christ is deliverance from enslaving religious systems, not permission for self-rule or fleshly living.
Religious observance becomes bondage when it is treated as the means of securing standing before God.
False worship enslaves because created or demonic powers cannot give the life, inheritance, or assurance that belong only in Christ.
The Son was sent by God, born of a woman, and entered true human life in order to redeem.
Those who are sons through Christ are heirs through God, receiving the promise not by law-status but by divine grace.
The law itself, rightly heard in Scripture's storyline, does not support law-reliance as the path to inheritance.
Faithful ministry pleads, warns, remembers, suffers, and labors for Christ to be formed in believers.
God's true heirs are identified by promise and Spirit-born life in Christ, not by fleshly descent or law-centered identity markers.
Paul's fear shows that gospel departure is not a minor preference but a spiritually dangerous retreat from grace.
Inheritance comes through God's promise, fulfilled in Christ, not through human effort or law-based covenant standing.
Christ came under the law to redeem those who were under the law, freeing them from bondage and bringing them into sonship.
The goal of gospel ministry is not external conformity to religious markers but inward formation according to Christ.
True salvation involves knowing God through the gospel, yet Paul emphasizes the deeper ground of assurance: God's gracious knowledge of His people.
Believers must distinguish godly zeal for their good from manipulative zeal that isolates them for another's influence.
Speaking truth may strain relationships, but gospel love refuses to flatter people into spiritual danger.
Paul reads the Abrahamic household as a Spirit-authorized pattern that illuminates promise, slavery, and freedom without denying the historical reality of Genesis.
Christ being formed in believers reflects the living reality of belonging to Him, not mere attachment to a teacher or movement.
The Spirit of the Son is sent into believers' hearts, bearing witness to their filial relationship with God.
Believers receive adoption to sonship through Christ's redemption and are therefore no longer slaves but children and heirs through God.
The Son was born of a woman, entering true humanity in the fullness of time.
The Son was born under the law so that He could redeem those under the law.
Christ's mission is described as redeeming those under the law, moving them from bondage into sonship.
God sends the Spirit of His Son into believers' hearts, and the Spirit cries 'Abba, Father,' confirming sonship.
The believer's assurance is rooted in God's action through the Son and Spirit, not in self-generated religious confidence.
The believer is an heir through God, receiving inheritance by sonship and promise rather than law-performance.
The law belongs to the former custodial order when used as a defining system of covenant standing; returning to it after Christ is regression into slavery.
Paul's pastoral aim is that Christ be formed in the Galatians, showing that gospel doctrine aims at Christ-shaped formation.
The Hagar-Sarah contrast teaches that believers are children of promise and of the free woman, not children of slavery.
Theological exposition and fulfillment
- Galatians 4 clarifies that the gospel is the Father's fullness-of-time action through the sending of His Son to redeem those under the law and the sending of the Spirit of His Son to assure believers that they are no longer slaves but children and heirs through God.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Masculine What is this?
Sense heir, one who receives inheritance
Definition One who receives the promised inheritance as a rightful recipient.
References Galatians 4:1, 4:7
Lexicon heir, one who receives inheritance
Why it matters Paul uses heirship to show that believers possess covenant inheritance through God, not through law-performance.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Masculine What is this?
Sense slave, bondservant
Definition One under bondage or ownership, lacking the status of a free son and heir.
References Galatians 4:1, 4:7, 4:22-31
Lexicon slave, bondservant
Why it matters The chapter contrasts slavery with sonship and warns the Galatians not to return to bondage.
Form in passage Accusative · Plural · Masculine What is this?
Sense guardian, steward, manager
Definition One entrusted with oversight of a minor or estate.
References Galatians 4:2
Lexicon guardian, steward, manager
Why it matters Paul uses guardians and trustees to describe the temporary pre-Christ condition before mature sonship and inheritance are manifested.
Form in passage Accusative · Plural · Neuter What is this?
Sense elemental principles, basic elements, rudimentary powers or principles
Definition Basic principles or powers associated with the former enslaving order.
References Galatians 4:3, 4:9
Lexicon elemental principles, basic elements, rudimentary powers or principles
Why it matters Paul warns that returning to these weak and miserable principles is a return to slavery after knowing God.
Form in passage Nominative · Singular · Neuter What is this?
Sense the full arrival of the appointed time
Definition The divinely appointed moment when God's redemptive plan reached its intended stage.
References Galatians 4:4
Lexicon the full arrival of the appointed time
Why it matters The phrase marks the decisive redemptive-historical shift brought by the sending of the Son.
Form in passage Aorist · Active · Indicative · 3rd Person · Singular What is this?
Sense to send forth
Definition To send out or send forth with purpose.
References Galatians 4:4, 4:6
Lexicon to send forth
Why it matters God sends both the Son for redemption and the Spirit of the Son for assurance, giving the chapter a double-sending structure.
Form in passage Aorist · Active · Subjunctive · 3rd Person · Singular What is this?
Sense to redeem, buy out, release from bondage
Definition To secure release from bondage or obligation by redemptive action.
References Galatians 4:5
Lexicon to redeem, buy out, release from bondage
Why it matters The Son was sent under the law to redeem those under the law, moving them from slavery into adoption.
Form in passage Accusative · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense adoption, placement as son
Definition The granting of sonship status and inheritance rights.
References Galatians 4:5
Lexicon adoption, placement as son
Why it matters Adoption is the stated purpose of Christ's redeeming work for those under the law.
Sense sons, children with household status
Definition Those who possess filial status and inheritance in God's household.
References Galatians 4:6-7
Lexicon sons, children with household status
Why it matters The believer's identity is sonship, not slavery, because of Christ's redemption and the Spirit's witness.
Sense Spirit; here the Spirit of God's Son
Definition The Holy Spirit sent into believers' hearts to confirm sonship.
References Galatians 4:6
Lexicon Spirit; here the Spirit of God's Son
Why it matters The Spirit's cry of 'Abba, Father' assures believers of their adoption and heirship.
Sense father
Definition God addressed as Father by those adopted through the Son and indwelt by the Spirit.
References Galatians 4:6
Lexicon father
Why it matters The believer's relationship to God is filial rather than slavish.
Form in passage Aorist · Passive · Subjunctive · 3rd Person · Singular What is this?
Sense to form, shape
Definition To shape or bring into form.
References Galatians 4:19
Lexicon to form, shape
Why it matters Paul's pastoral goal is not merely doctrinal correction but Christ being formed in the Galatians.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense promise, pledged gift
Definition God's gracious pledged word that brings inheritance by divine action.
References Galatians 4:23, 4:28
Lexicon promise, pledged gift
Why it matters The contrast between Isaac and Ishmael hinges on promise versus flesh, and believers are children of promise.
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense free, free woman
Definition One who is free rather than enslaved.
References Galatians 4:22-31
Lexicon free, free woman
Why it matters Paul identifies believers as children of the free woman, not the slave woman, grounding their identity in promise and freedom.
Sense Father
Definition Father
References Galatians 4:6
Why it matters The Spirit's cry expresses intimate filial access to God.
Cross-language bridge 1 link · View in lexicon
Form in passage Genitive · Singular · Feminine What is this?
Sense free, not enslaved
Definition free, not enslaved
References Galatians 4:22-31
Why it matters The chapter concludes that believers are children of the free woman.
Sense Father
Definition An intimate address to the Father, preserved in Aramaic and paired with the Greek term for Father.
References Galatians 4:6
Lexicon Father
Why it matters The Spirit's cry reveals the believer's filial access and relationship to God through the Son.
Lexicon data: MorphGNT Strong's Dictionary XML (CC0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Bible (CC BY 4.0) · Open Scriptures Hebrew Lexicon (CC BY 4.0) · STEPBible Data (CC BY 4.0) · Full details
Discourse Connectives (49)
| v.1 | δέ,now,continuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.2 | ἀλλ᾽Insteadstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead? |
| v.4 | δὲhowevercontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.5 | ἵναthatpurpose clauseἵνα clauses often contain the theological payoff: 'so that God might...'ἵναso thatpurpose clauseἵνα clauses often contain the theological payoff: 'so that God might...' |
| v.6 | ὅτιBecausecontent marker or causalIf ὅτι follows a verb of speaking/knowing/believing, it introduces content. If it follows a statement, it introduces a reason.δέnowcontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.7 | ὥστεSoresult clauseὥστε states what happens as a consequence. ἵνα states what is intended.ἀλλ᾽butstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead?εἰifconditional clauseAsk whether Paul treats the 'if' as assumed true (1st class) or merely hypothetical.δὲnowcontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.8 | ἈλλὰButstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead?μὲνindeedcontrast setup (μέν...δέ)The μέν...δέ pair is a rhetorical hinge. Both sides matter equally. |
| v.9 | δὲhowevercontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast.δὲhowevercontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.12 | ὅτιbecausecontent marker or causalIf ὅτι follows a verb of speaking/knowing/believing, it introduces content. If it follows a statement, it introduces a reason. |
| v.13 | δὲnowcontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast.ὅτιthatcontent marker or causalIf ὅτι follows a verb of speaking/knowing/believing, it introduces content. If it follows a statement, it introduces a reason. |
| v.14 | καὶandadditive / emphaticClause-initial καί in Paul often links equal-weight clauses that should be read together.οὐδὲnornegative additiveοὐδέ in a list builds rhetorical force — each addition strengthens the overall negation.ἀλλ᾽butstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead? |
| v.15 | οὖνtheninference / conclusionAsk: what has Paul argued up to this point? 'Therefore' is the payoff.γὰρforgrounds / explanationAsk: what claim is this 'for' grounding? That claim is the main point.ὅτι,that,content marker or causalIf ὅτι follows a verb of speaking/knowing/believing, it introduces content. If it follows a statement, it introduces a reason.εἰifconditional clauseAsk whether Paul treats the 'if' as assumed true (1st class) or merely hypothetical. |
| v.16 | ὥστεSoresult clauseὥστε states what happens as a consequence. ἵνα states what is intended. |
| v.17 | ἀλλ᾽butstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead?ἵναso thatpurpose clauseἵνα clauses often contain the theological payoff: 'so that God might...' |
| v.18 | δὲnowcontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.20 | δὲindeedcontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast.ὅτιbecausecontent marker or causalIf ὅτι follows a verb of speaking/knowing/believing, it introduces content. If it follows a statement, it introduces a reason. |
| v.22 | γὰρforgrounds / explanationAsk: what claim is this 'for' grounding? That claim is the main point.ὅτιthatcontent marker or causalIf ὅτι follows a verb of speaking/knowing/believing, it introduces content. If it follows a statement, it introduces a reason. |
| v.23 | ἀλλ᾽Butstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead?μὲνindeedcontrast setup (μέν...δέ)The μέν...δέ pair is a rhetorical hinge. Both sides matter equally.δὲhowevercontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.24 | γάρforgrounds / explanationAsk: what claim is this 'for' grounding? That claim is the main point.μὲνindeedcontrast setup (μέν...δέ)The μέν...δέ pair is a rhetorical hinge. Both sides matter equally. |
| v.25 | δὲNowcontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast.δὲnowcontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast.γὰρforgrounds / explanationAsk: what claim is this 'for' grounding? That claim is the main point. |
| v.26 | δὲButcontinuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.27 | γάρ·for:grounds / explanationAsk: what claim is this 'for' grounding? That claim is the main point.ὅτιbecausecontent marker or causalIf ὅτι follows a verb of speaking/knowing/believing, it introduces content. If it follows a statement, it introduces a reason. |
| v.28 | δέ,now,continuation or mild contrastNote where δέ appears in a μέν...δέ pair — that structure is a deliberate contrast. |
| v.29 | ἀλλ᾽Butstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead? |
| v.30 | ἀλλὰButstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead?γὰρforgrounds / explanationAsk: what claim is this 'for' grounding? That claim is the main point. |
| v.31 | ἀλλὰbutstrong contrast / correctionAsk: what is being set aside? What is being asserted instead? |
Discourse data: STEPBible TAGNT (CC BY 4.0)
Verb Aspect (64 main verbs)
| v.1 | Λέγωlégōsaypresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthδιαφέρειdiaphérōdiffer ~ frompresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.4 | ἦλθενérchomaicomeaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionἐξαπέστειλενexapostéllōsent forthaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionγενόμενονgínomaibornaorist middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionγενόμενονgínomaibornaorist middle participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.5 | ἐξαγοράσῃexagorázōredeemaorist active subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingentἀπολάβωμενreceiveaorist active subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.6 | ἐξαπέστειλενexapostéllōsentaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed actionκρᾶζονkrázōcryingpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.8 | εἰδότεςeídōknowperfect active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἐδουλεύσατεdouleúōenslavedaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.9 | γνόντεςginṓskōcome to knowaorist active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionγνωσθέντεςginṓskōknownaorist passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἐπιστρέφετεepistréphōturn backpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthδουλεύεινdouleúōenslavedpresent active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbθέλετεthélōwantpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.10 | παρατηρεῖσθεparatēréōobservepresent middle indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.11 | φοβοῦμαιphobéōafraidpresent middle indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthκεκοπίακαkopiáōlaboredperfect active indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present result |
| v.12 | Γίνεσθεgínomaibecomepresent middle imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortationδέομαιdéomaibegpresent middle indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἠδικήσατεdone ~ wrongaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.13 | οἴδατεeídōknowperfect active indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present resultεὐηγγελισάμηνeuangelízōpreached the gospelaorist middle indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.14 | ἐδέξασθέdéchomaireceivedaorist middle indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.15 | μαρτυρῶmartyréōtestifypresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἐξορύξαντεςexorýssōtorn outaorist active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἐδώκατέdídōmigivenaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.16 | ἀληθεύωνtelling ~ thetruthpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.17 | ζηλοῦσινzēlóōmake much ofpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἐκκλεῖσαιekkleíōexcludeaorist active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbθέλουσινthélōwantpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthζηλοῦτεzēlóōzealouspresent active subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.18 | ζηλοῦσθαιzēlóōzealouspresent middle infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbπαρεῖναίpáreimipresentpresent active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verb |
| v.19 | ὠδίνωōdínōam ~ inthe pain of childbirthpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthμορφωθῇmorphóōformedaorist passive subjunctivesubjunctiveSubjunctive mood — conditional, purpose, or contingent |
| v.20 | ἤθελονthélōwishimperfect active indicativebackgroundImperfect indicative — continuous or repeated past actionπαρεῖναιpáreimipresentpresent active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbἀλλάξαιchangeaorist active infinitiveinfinitiveInfinitive — verbal noun or complementary verbἀποροῦμαιperplexedpresent middle indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.21 | Λέγετέlégōtellpresent active imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortationθέλοντεςthélōdesirepresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἀκούετεhearpresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.22 | γέγραπταιgráphōwrittenperfect passive indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present resultἔσχενéchōhadaorist active indicativecompletedAorist indicative — punctiliar or completed action |
| v.23 | γεγέννηταιgennáōbornperfect passive indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present result |
| v.24 | ἀλληγορούμεναtaken figurativelypresent passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionγεννῶσαgennáōbearingpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.25 | συστοιχεῖsystoichéōcorrespondspresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthδουλεύειdouleúōin slaverypresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truth |
| v.27 | γέγραπταιgráphōwrittenperfect passive indicativeresultantPerfect indicative — completed action with present resultΕὐφράνθητιeuphraínōrejoiceaorist passive imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortationτίκτουσαtíktōbearpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionῥῆξονrhḗgnymibreak forthaorist active imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortationβόησονshoutaorist active imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortationὠδίνουσαōdínōin laborpresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἐχούσηςéchōhaspresent active participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting action |
| v.29 | γεννηθεὶςgennáōbornaorist passive participleparticipleParticiple — verbal adjective, supporting actionἐδίωκεdiṓkōpersecutedimperfect active indicativebackgroundImperfect indicative — continuous or repeated past action |
| v.30 | λέγειlégōsaypresent active indicativeongoingPresent indicative — ongoing, habitual, or general truthἜκβαλεekbállōdrive outaorist active imperativeimperativeImperative mood — command or exhortationκληρονομήσειklēronoméōinheritfuture active indicativeprospectiveFuture indicative — anticipated or promised action |
Verb forms indicate aspect — not interpretive weight. Consult context before drawing conclusions about emphasis.
Clause data: MACULA Greek (Clear Bible, CC BY 4.0) · SBLGNT (Logos/SBL, CC BY 4.0)
A.T. Robertson, Word Pictures in the New Testament (1930–31) — public domain
The church must understand that Christ has brought believers out of slavery into adopted sonship, and the Spirit confirms this new identity so that believers live as heirs of promise rather than slaves under law-centered bondage.
Believers must be freed from religious regression, manipulative teaching, and slave-like insecurity, and formed into mature children who rest in the Son's redemption and the Spirit's witness.
Confident, humble, Spirit-assured sonship that resists bondage, receives correction, treasures Christ's formation, and lives from promise rather than fleshly striving.
- Regularly rehearse the gospel sequence of Galatians 4: God sent the Son, Christ redeemed, believers received adoption, God sent the Spirit, and children are heirs.
- Examine whether spiritual disciplines are being practiced as communion with the Father or as attempts to earn household standing.
- Identify voices that use zeal to isolate, flatter, or control rather than form Christlike maturity.
- Use the language of sonship and heirship in counseling burdened believers who live under fear and performance.
- Teach the congregation to recognize when religious seriousness has become regression into slavery.
- Let pastoral correction aim at Christ being formed in people, not winning arguments or securing loyalty.
- Read Old Testament promise narratives with attention to the contrast between fleshly striving and divine promise.
- Galatians 4 warns that returning to law-centered religious observance as a basis of standing is a return to slavery. It is not spiritual maturity, not deeper holiness, and not fuller covenant belonging. It contradicts the Father's appointed time, the Son's redemptive mission, the Spirit's witness of sonship, and the believer's identity as an heir.
- Paul is against all religious calendars, rhythms, or observances in every sense. - Paul's concern is not the mere existence of days or seasons but the Galatians' adoption of observances as part of a law-centered system that threatens gospel freedom and covenant identity in Christ.
- Adoption is only a metaphor for personal comfort. - Adoption is deeply comforting, but in Galatians 4 it is also covenantal, redemptive-historical, and legal-household language. It means believers have moved from slavery into heirship through Christ.
- The Spirit's cry means assurance is based primarily on emotional intensity. - The Spirit's cry is grounded in God's act of making believers sons through the Son's redemption. Assurance rests on God's action, not on the strength of human feeling.
- The elemental principles refer only to paganism and have no connection to the law controversy. - Paul applies the slavery language to the Galatians' pre-Christian bondage and to their threatened return through law-centered observance. The point is that any system displacing Christ's completed work becomes bondage.
- Paul's pastoral affection means doctrine should be softened to preserve relationship. - Paul's affection drives His doctrinal clarity. He tells the truth because Christ must be formed in them.
- The Hagar-Sarah allegory means the Old Testament can be interpreted without attention to its historical meaning. - Paul's allegory depends on the historical contrast between Ishmael and Isaac, flesh and promise, slavery and freedom. He is not denying history but drawing theological significance from the canonical pattern.
- The Jerusalem above is detached from concrete covenant fulfillment. - The Jerusalem above represents the free, promise-based people of God brought into being by God's action, in contrast to slavery under the present order.
- Children of promise are free from any obligation to obey God. - Paul is not teaching lawlessness. He is opposing law-reliance as the basis of covenant standing. The ethical life of freedom will be developed in Galatians 5-6 through the Spirit and love.
- Where do I still think and live like a slave when God has made me His child through Christ?
- Am I seeking assurance from my performance, observance, reputation, or Christ's redeeming work?
- How does the truth that God sent His Son at the fullness of time strengthen my confidence in God's wisdom and timing?
- Do I understand the Spirit's work as confirming sonship and drawing me to the Father?
- What religious practices are good servants in my life but dangerous masters when treated as grounds of standing?
- Who or what is trying to win me over in a way that pulls me away from gospel truth?
- Would I rather have teachers who flatter me or shepherds who tell me the truth?
- What would it look like for Christ to be more fully formed in me?
- Where am I tempted to produce by the flesh what only God can bring by promise?
- Do I live as an heir according to promise or as someone still trying to earn the inheritance?
- Believers need to see that adoption means a decisive change of status. In Christ, they are no longer slaves trying to secure a place but sons and heirs through God's action.
- The Father sends the Son to redeem and sends the Spirit of the Son into believers' hearts. Assurance is not self-generated confidence but Spirit-wrought confidence grounded in redemption.
- Churches must learn that not every form of strict religious practice is maturity. If observance becomes the basis of standing with God, it is slavery dressed in religious clothing.
- False teachers may show intense interest in people, but their aim is control. True pastoral labor seeks Christ formed in people, not personal ownership of them.
- Paul's anguish shows that faithful ministry may involve painful labor, but the goal is always formation in Christ.
- The Hagar-Sarah contrast teaches believers to see Scripture's promise-versus-flesh pattern without flattening the Old Testament into moral examples only.
- Freedom in Galatians is freedom from slavery into sonship, not freedom from God. This sets up the Spirit-shaped ethic of chapters 5 and 6.
Paul shows that the era of guardianship has passed because the fullness of time has come in Christ.
Christ redeems those under the law so they receive adoption, and the Spirit confirms their filial identity.
The Spirit of the Son cries 'Abba, Father,' teaching believers to approach God as children rather than slaves.
The Galatians must not return to weak and miserable principles after being known by God.
Paul contrasts the false teachers' self-serving zeal with His own labor for Christ to be formed in the Galatians.
The Hagar-Sarah contrast presses believers to identify as children of promise rather than children of slavery.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
Paul moves from the temporary minority of heirs under guardians, to redemption and adoption through God's sent Son, to the Spirit's cry of sonship, then to pastoral anguish over the Galatians' regression, and finally to the contrast between slavery and promise through Hagar and Sarah.
Galatians 4 explains that the covenantal shift brought by Christ is not merely a change of religious administration but a movement from minority to maturity, slavery to sonship, guardianship to inheritance, and fleshly striving to promise-born freedom.
Galatians 4 clarifies that the gospel is the Father's fullness-of-time action through the sending of His Son to redeem those under the law and the sending of the Spirit of His Son to assure believers that they are no longer slaves but children and heirs through God.
Confident, humble, Spirit-assured sonship that resists bondage, receives correction, treasures Christ's formation, and lives from promise rather than fleshly striving.
Focus Points
- The fullness of time
- The sending of the Son
- Incarnation and life under the law
- Redemption from slavery under the law
- Adoption to sonship
- The sending of the Spirit of the Son
- Assurance through the Spirit's cry, 'Abba, Father'
- Heirship through God
- Danger of religious regression
- Christ formed in believers
- Promise versus flesh
- Slavery versus freedom
- The Jerusalem above and the children of promise
- Adoption
- Redemption
- Trinitarian salvation
- Assurance
- Regression into slavery
- Pastoral formation
- Promise and freedom
- Incarnation
- Christ Under the Law
- Pneumatology
- Inheritance
- Doctrine of the Law
- Sanctification
Cross References
Passages
Chapter opening: Galatians 4:1-7
So long as (εφ' οσον χρονον). "For how long a time," incorporation of the antecedent (χρονον) into the relative clause. The heir (ο κληρονομος). Old word (κληρος, lot, νεμομα, to possess). Illustration from the law of inheritance carrying on the last thought in 3:29 . A child (νηπιος). One that does not talk (νη, επος, word). That is a minor, an infant, immature intellectually and morally in contrast with τελειο, full grown ( 1Co 3:1 ; 14:20 ; Php 3:15 ; Eph 4:13 ).
From a bondservant (δουλου). Slave. Ablative case of comparison after διαφερε for which verb see on Mt 6:26 . Though he is lord of all (Κυριος παντων ων). Concessive participle ων, "being legally owner of all" (one who has the power, ο εχων κυρος).
Under guardians (υπο επιτροπους). Old word from επιτρεπω, to commit, to intrust. So either an overseer ( Mt 20:8 ) or one in charge of children as here. It is common as the guardian of an orphan minor. Frequent in the papyri as guardian of minors. Stewards (οικονομους). Old word for manager of a household whether freeborn or slave. See Lu 12:42 ; 1Co 4:2 . Papyri show it as manager of an estate and also as treasurer like Ro 16:23 .
No example is known where this word is used of one in charge of a minor and no other where both occur together. Until the time appointed of the father (αχρ της προθεσμιας του πατρος). Supply ημερας (day), for προθεσμιος is an old adjective "appointed beforehand" (προ, θεσμος, from τιθημ). Under Roman law the tutor had charge of the child till he was fourteen when the curator took charge of him till he was twenty-five.
Ramsay notes that in Graeco-Phrygia cities the same law existed except that the father in Syria appointed both tutor and curator whereas the Roman father appointed only the tutor. Burton argues plausibly that no such legal distinction is meant by Paul, but that the terms here designate two functions of one person. The point does not disturb Paul's illustration at all.
When we were children (οτε ημεν νηπιο). Before the epoch of faith came and we (Jews and Gentiles) were under the law as paedagogue, guardian, steward, to use all of Paul's metaphors. We were held in bondage (ημεις ημεθα δεδουλωμενο). Periphrastic past perfect of δουλοω, to enslave, in a permanent state of bondage. Under the rudiments of the world (υπο τα στοιχεια του κοσμου).
Στοιχος is row or rank, a series. So στοιχειον is any first thing in a στοιχος like the letters of the alphabet, the material elements in the universe ( 2 Peter 3:10 ), the heavenly bodies (some argue for that here), the rudiments of any act ( Heb 5:12 ; Ac 15:10 ; Ga 5:1 ; 4:3 , 9 ; Col 2:8 , 20 ). The papyri illustrate all the varieties in meaning of this word.
Burton has a valuable excursus on the word in his commentary. Probably here (Lightfoot) Paul has in mind the rudimentary character of the law as it applies to both Jews and Gentiles, to all the knowledge of the world (κοσμος as the orderly material universe as in Col 2:8 , 20 ). See on Mt 13:38 ; Ac 17:24 ; 1Co 3:22 . All were in the elementary stage before Christ came.
The fulness of the time (το πληρωμα του χρονου). Old word from πληροω, to fill. Here the complement of the preceding time as in Eph 1:10 . Some examples in the papyri in the sense of complement, to accompany. God sent forth his preexisting Son ( Php 2:6 ) when the time for his purpose had come like the προθεσμια of verse 2 . Born of a woman (γενομενον εκ γυναικος).
As all men are and so true humanity, "coming from a woman." There is, of course, no direct reference here to the Virgin Birth of Jesus, but his deity had just been affirmed by the words "his Son" (τον υιον αυτου), so that both his deity and humanity are here stated as in Ro 1:3 . Whatever view one holds about Paul's knowledge of the Virgin Birth of Christ one must admit that Paul believed in his actual personal preexistence with God ( 2Co 8:9 ; Php 2:5-11 ), not a mere existence in idea.
The fact of the Virgin Birth agrees perfectly with the language here. Born under the law (γενομενον υπο νομον). He not only became a man, but a Jew. The purpose (ινα) of God thus was plainly to redeem (εξαγοραση, as in 3:13 ) those under the law, and so under the curse. The further purpose (ινα) was that we (Jew and Gentile) might receive (απολαβωμεν, second aorist active subjunctive of απολαμβανω), not get back ( Lu 15:27 ), but get from (απο) God the adoption (την υιοθεσιαν).
Late word common in the inscriptions (Deissmann, Bible Studies , p. 239) and occurs in the papyri also and in Diogenes Laertes, though not in LXX. Paul adopts this current term to express his idea (he alone in the N. T.) as to how God takes into his spiritual family both Jews and Gentiles who believe. See also Ro 8:15 , 23 ; 9:4 ; Eph 1:5 . The Vulgate uses adoptio filiorum .
It is a metaphor like the others above, but a very expressive one.
Because ye are sons (οτ εστε υιο). This is the reason for sending forth the Son ( 4:4 and here). We were "sons" in God's elective purpose and love. Hοτ is causal ( 1Co 12:15 ; Ro 9:7 ). The Spirit of his Son (το πνευμα του υιο αυτου). The Holy Spirit, called the Spirit of Christ ( Ro 8:9 f. ), the Spirit of Jesus Christ ( Php 1:19 ). The Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and from the Son ( Joh 15:26 ).
Crying, Abba, Father (κραζον Αββα ο πατηρ). The participle agrees with πνευμα neuter (grammatical gender), not neuter in fact. An old, though rare in present as here, onomatopoetic word to croak as a raven (Theophrastus, like Poe's The Raven ), any inarticulate cry like "the unuttered groanings" of Ro 8:26 which God understands. This cry comes from the Spirit of Christ in our hearts.
Αββα is the Aramaic word for father with the article and ο πατηρ translates it. The articular form occurs in the vocative as in Joh 20:28 . It is possible that the repetition here and in Ro 8:15 may be "a sort of affectionate fondness for the very term that Jesus himself used" (Burton) in the Garden of Gethsemane ( Mr 14:36 ). The rabbis preserve similar parallels.
Most of the Jews knew both Greek and Aramaic. But there remains the question why Jesus used both in his prayer. Was it not natural for both words to come to him in his hour of agony as in his childhood? The same thing may be true here in Paul's case.
No longer a bondservant (ουκετ δουλος). Slave. He changes to the singular to drive the point home to each one. The spiritual experience ( 3:2 ) has set each one free. Each is now a son and heir.
To them which by nature are not gods (τοις φυσε μη ουσ θεοις). In 1Co 10:20 he terms them "demons," the "so-called gods" ( 1Co 8:5 ), worshipping images made by hands ( Ac 17:29 ).
Now that ye have come to know God (νυν δε γνοντες). Fine example of the ingressive second aorist active participle of γινωσκω, come to know by experience through faith in Christ. Rather to be known of God (μαλλον δε γνωσθεντες υπο θεου). First aorist passive participle of the same verb. He quickly turns it round to the standpoint of God's elective grace reaching them (verse 6 ).
How (πως). "A question full of wonder" (Bengel). See 1:6 . Turn ye back again? (επιστρεφετε παλιν?) Present active indicative, "Are ye turning again?" See μετατιθεσθε in 1:6 . The weak and beggarly rudiments (τα ασθενη κα πτωχα στοιχεια). The same στοιχεια in verse 3 from which they had been delivered, "weak and beggarly," still in their utter impotence from the Pharisaic legalism and the philosophical and religious legalism and the philosophical and religious quests of the heathen as shown by Angus's The Religious Quests of the Graeco-Roman World .
These were eagerly pursued by many, but they were shadows when caught. It is pitiful today to see some men and women leave Christ for will o' the wisps of false philosophy. Over again (παλιν ανωθεν). Old word, from above (ανω) as in Mt 27:51 , from the first ( Lu 1:3 ), then "over again" as here, back to where they were before (in slavery to rites and rules).
Ye observe (παρατηρεισθε). Present middle indicative of old verb to stand beside and watch carefully, sometimes with evil intent as in Lu 6:7 , but often with scrupulous care as here (so in Dio Cassius and Josephus). The meticulous observance of the Pharisees Paul knew to a nicety. It hurt him to the quick after his own merciful deliverance to see these Gentile Christians drawn into this spider-web of Judaizing Christians, once set free, now enslaved again.
Paul does not itemize the "days" (Sabbaths, fast-days, feast-days, new moons) nor the "months" ( Isa 66:23 ) which were particularly observed in the exile nor the "seasons" (passover, pentecost, tabernacles, etc.) nor the "years" (sabbatical years every seventh year and the Year of Jubilee). Paul does not object to these observances for he kept them himself as a Jew.
He objected to Gentiles taking to them as a means of salvation.
I am afraid of you (φοβουμα υμας). He shudders to think of it. Lest by any means I have bestowed labour upon you in vain (μη πως εικη κεκοπιακα εις υμας). Usual construction after a verb of fearing about what has actually happened (μη πως and the perfect active indicative of κοπιαω, to toil wearily). A fear about the future would be expressed by the subjunctive. Paul fears that the worst has happened.
Be as I am (γινεσθε ως εγω). Present middle imperative, "Keep on becoming as I am." He will not give them over, afraid though he is.
Because of an infirmity of the flesh (δι' ασθενειαν της σαρκος). All that we can get from this statement is the fact that Paul's preaching to the Galatians "the first time" or "the former time" (το προτερον, adverbial accusative) was due to sickness of some kind whether it was eye trouble ( 4:15 ) which was a trial to them or to the thorn in the flesh ( 2Co 12:7 ) we do not know.
It can be interpreted as applying to North Galatia or to South Galatia if he had an attack of malaria on coming up from Perga. But the narrative in Ac 13 ; 14 does not read as if Paul had planned to pass by Pisidia and by Lycaonia but for the attack of illness. The Galatians understood the allusion for Paul says "Ye know" (οιδατε).
A temptation to you in my flesh (τον πειρασμον υμων εν τη σαρκ μου). "Your temptation (or trial) in my flesh." Peirasmon can be either as we see in Jas 1:2 , 12 f. . If trial here, it was a severe one. Nor rejected (ουδε εξεπτυσατε). First aorist active indicative of εκπτυω, old word to spit out (Homer), to spurn, to loathe. Here only in N. T. Clemen ( Primitive Christianity , p.
342) thinks it should be taken literally here since people spat out as a prophylactic custom at the sight of invalids especially epileptics. But Plutarch uses it of mere rejection. As an angel of God (ως αγγελον θεου), as Christ Jesus (ως Χριστον Ιησουν). In spite of his illness and repulsive appearance, whatever it was. Not a mere "messenger" of God, but a very angel, even as Christ Jesus.
We know that at Lystra Paul was at first welcomed as Hermes the god of oratory ( Ac 14:12 f. ). But that narrative hardly applies to these words, for they turned against Paul and Barnabas then and there at the instigation of Jews from Antioch in Pisidia and Iconium.
That gratulation of yourselves (ο μακαρισμος υμων). "Your felicitation." Rare word from μακαριζω, to pronounce happy, in Plato, Aristotle, Plutarch. See also Ro 4:6 , 9 . You no longer felicitate yourselves on my presence with you. Ye would have plucked out your eves and given them to me (τους οφθαλμους υμων εξορυξαντες εδωκατε μο). This is the conclusion of a condition of the second class without αν expressed which would have made it clearer.
But see Joh 16:22 , 24 ; Ro 7:7 for similar examples where the context makes it plain without αν. It is strong language and is saved from hyperbole by "if possible" (ε δυνατον). Did Paul not have at this time serious eye trouble?
Your enemy (εχθρος υμων). Active sense of εχθρος, hater with objective genitive. They looked on Paul now as an enemy to them. So the Pharisees and Judaizers generally now regarded him. Because I tell you the truth (αληθευων υμιν). Present active participle of αληθευω, old verb from αληθης, true. In N.T. only here and Eph 4:15 . "Speaking the truth." It is always a risky business to speak the truth, the whole truth. It may hit and hurt.
They zealously seek you (ζηλουσιν υμας). Ζηλοω is an old and a good word from ζηλος (zeal, jealousy), but one can pay court with good motives or evil. So here in contrast with Paul's plain speech the Judaizers bring their fawning flattery. To shut you out (εκκλεισα υμας). From Christ as he will show ( 5:4 ). That ye may seek them (ινα αυτους ζηλουτε). Probably present active indicative with ινα as in φυσιουσθε ( 1Co 4:6 ) and γινωσκομεν ( 1Jo 5:20 ).
The contraction -οητε would be -ωτε, not -ουτε (Robertson, Grammar , p. 325).
To be zealously sought in a good matter (ζηλουσθα εν καλω). Present passive infinitive. It is only in an evil matter that it is bad as here (ου καλος). When I am present (εν τω παρεινα με). "In the being present as to me."
I am in travail (ωδινω). I am in birth pangs. Old word for this powerful picture of pain. In N. T. only here, verse 27 ; Re 12:2 . Until Christ be formed in you (μεχρις ου μορφωθη Χριστος εν υμιν). Future temporal clause with μεχρις ου (until which time) and the first aorist passive subjunctive of μορφοω, late and rare verb, in Plutarch, not in LXX, not in papyri, only here in N.
T. This figure is the embryo developing into the child. Paul boldly represents himself as again the mother with birth pangs over them. This is better than to suppose that the Galatians are pregnant mothers (Burton) by a reversal of the picture as in 1Th 2:7 .
I could with (ηθελον). Imperfect active, I was wishing like Agrippa's use of εβουλομην in Ac 25:22 , "I was just wishing. I was longing to be present with you just now (αρτ)." To change my voice (αλλαξα την φωνην μου). Paul could put his heart into his voice. The pen stands between them. He knew the power of his voice on their hearts. He had tried it before.
I am perplexed (απορουμα). I am at a loss and know not what to do. Απορεω is from α privative and πορος, way. I am lost at this distance from you. About you (εν υμιν). In your cases. For this use of εν see 2Co 7:16 ; Ga 1:24 .
That desire to be under the law (ο υπο νομον θελοντες εινα). "Under law" (no article), as in 3:23 ; 4:4 , legalistic system. Paul views them as on the point of surrender to legalism, as "wanting" (θελοντες) to do it ( 1:6 ; 3:3 ; 4:11 , 17 ). Paul makes direct reference to these so disposed to "hear the law." He makes a surprising turn, but a legitimate one for the legalists by an allegorical use of Scripture.
By the handmaid (εκ της παιδισκης). From Ge 16:1 . Feminine diminutive of παις, boy or slave. Common word for damsel which came to be used for female slave or maidservant ( Lu 12:45 ) or doorkeeper like Mt 26:29 . So in the papyri.
Is born (γεγεννητα). Perfect passive indicative of γενναω, stand on record so. Through promise (δι' επαγγελιας). In addition to being "after the flesh" (κατα σαρκα).
Which things contain an allegory (ατινα εστιν αλληγορουμενα). Literally, "Which things are allegorized" (periphrastic present passive indicative of αλληγορεω). Late word (Strabo, Plutarch, Philo, Josephus, ecclesiastical writers), only here in N. T. The ancient writers used αινιττομα to speak in riddles. It is compounded of αλλο, another, and αγορευω, to speak, and so means speaking something else than what the language means, what Philo, the past-master in the use of allegory, calls the deeper spiritual sense.
Paul does not deny the actual historical narrative, but he simply uses it in an allegorical sense to illustrate his point for the benefit of his readers who are tempted to go under the burden of the law. He puts a secondary meaning on the narrative just as he uses τυπικως in 1Co 10:11 of the narrative. We need not press unduly the difference between allegory and type, for each is used in a variety of ways.
The allegory in one sense is a speaking parable like Bunyan's Pilgrim's Progress , the Prodigal Son in Lu 15 , the Good Shepherd in Joh 10 . But allegory was also used by Philo and by Paul here for a secret meaning not obvious at first, one not in the mind of the writer, like our illustration which throws light on the point. Paul was familiar with this rabbinical method of exegesis (Rabbi Akiba, for instance, who found a mystical sense in every hook and crook of the Hebrew letters) and makes skilful use of that knowledge here.
Christian preachers in Alexandria early fell victims to Philo's allegorical method and carried it to excess without regard to the plain sense of the narrative. That startling style of preaching survives yet to the discredit of sound preaching. Please observe that Paul says here that he is using allegory, not ordinary interpretation. It is not necessary to say that Paul intended his readers to believe that this allegory was designed by the narrative.
He illustrates his point by it. For these are (αυτα γαρ εισιν). Allegorically interpreted, he means. From Mount Sinai (απο ορους Σινα). Spoken from Mount Sinai. Bearing (γεννωσα). Present active participle of γενναω, to beget of the male ( Mt 1:1-16 ), more rarely as here to bear of the female ( Lu 1:13 , 57 ). Which is Hagar (ητις εστιν Hαγαρ). Allegorically interpreted.
This Hagar (το Hαγαρ). Neuter article and so referring to the word Hagar (not to the woman, η Hagar) as applied to the mountain. There is great variety in the MSS. here. The Arabians are descendants of Abraham and Hagar (her name meaning wanderer or fugitive). Answereth to (συντοιχε). Late word in Polybius for keeping step in line (military term) and in papyri in figurative sense as here.
Lightfoot refers to the Pythagorean parallels of opposing principles (συνστοιχια) as shown here by Paul (Hagar and Sarah, Ishmael and Isaac, the old covenant and the new covenant, the earthly Jerusalem and the heavenly Jerusalem). That is true, and there is a correlative correspondence as the line is carried on.
The Jerusalem that is above (η ανω Ιερουσαλημ). Paul uses the rabbinical idea that the heavenly Jerusalem corresponds to the one here to illustrate his point without endorsing their ideas. See also Re 21:2 . He uses the city of Jerusalem to represent the whole Jewish race (Vincent).
Which is our mother (ητις εστιν μητηρ ημων). The mother of us Christians, apply the allegory of Hagar and Sarah to us. The Jerusalem above is the picture of the Kingdom of God. Paul illustrates the allegory by quoting Isa 54:1 , a song of triumph looking for deliverance from a foreign yoke. Rejoice (ευφρανθητ). First aorist passive imperative of ευφραινω. Break forth (ρηξον).
First aorist active imperative of ρηγνυμ, to rend, to burst asunder. Supply ευφροσυνην (joy) as in Isa 49:13 . The desolate (της ερημου). The prophet refers to Sarah's prolonged barrenness and Paul uses this fact as a figure for the progress and glory of Christianity (the new Jerusalem of freedom) in contrast with the old Jerusalem of bondage (the current Judaism).
His thought has moved rapidly, but he does not lose his line.
Now we (ημεις δε). Some MSS. have υμεις δε (now ye). In either case Paul means that Christians (Jews and Gentiles) are children of the promise as Isaac was (κατα Ισαακ, after the manner of Isaac).
Persecuted (εδιωκεν). Imperfect active of διωκω, to pursue, to persecute. Ge 21:9 has in Hebrew "laughing," but the LXX has "mocking." The Jewish tradition represents Ishmael as shooting arrows at Isaac. So now (ουτος κα νυν) the Jews were persecuting Paul and all Christians ( 1Th 2:15 f. ).
Cast out (εκβαλε). Second aorist active imperative of εκβαλλω. Quotation from Ge 21:10 (Sarah to Abraham) and confirmed in 21:12 by God's command to Abraham. Paul gives allegorical warning thus to the persecuting Jews and Judaizers. Shall not inherit (ου μη κληρονομησε). Strong negative (ου μη and future indicative). "The law and the gospel cannot co-exist. The law must disappear before the gospel" (Lightfoot). See 3:18 , 29 for the word "inherit."
But of the freewoman (αλλα της ελευθερας). We are children of Abraham by faith ( 3:7 ).