
Scripture Reference: Galatians 3:25-4:7
There was a series on British television called Heir Hunters that was all about teams who set out to trace individuals who have been named as beneficiaries in someone’s will, but are unaware of it. The key moment in each episode is when the camera zooms in on the face of the person who has just been told, “You are an heir to a small (or sometimes a large) fortune!” In many ways this illustrates what Paul is doing with the Galatians in his letter to them. Having spent so much time challenging them and arguing against the false teachings they had embraced, he now says, “Therefore you are no longer a slave but a son, and if a son, then an heir of God through Christ” (Galatians 4:7).
The whole passage straddles two chapters, but is a veritable treasure trove of some of the richest insights into what it means to be a Christian. For these Galatian Christians who had been duped into believing a distorted understanding of the gospel, what Paul says in these verses is a world away from the teaching by the false teachers attempting to mislead them. More than that, it represents a totally different kind of experience from that which they had found by trying to live by a message that was far removed from what Paul had preached to them when they first came to faith. As Paul pressed home the implications of what he has been saying in his letter so far, it was as though these Galatians were discovering the liberating power of the gospel all over again.
The fact that the apostle has been using the language of “growing up” and “coming of age” throughout this section, although in the larger sense of God’s unfolding purpose in redemption, it would surely not have been lost on his readers. They had effectively regressed spiritually into a second childhood under the damaging teachings they had embraced. We can assume that is why we see Paul make the choice of using second person plural pronouns throughout this section, thus directly applying what was now true in principle regarding salvation to them in person. Since God was no longer treating them like children in this new gospel epoch, they should stop acting like children in what they chose to believe and how they were behaving. As we delve into the detail of what Paul says here, we not only understand more fully what he means by this, but also the grounds on which he is able to say these things.
To Be Continued


























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