5. Greek, "To whom not even for an hour did we yield by
subjection." ALFORD renders the Greek
article, "with THE subjection required of
us." The sense rather is, We would willingly have yielded for
love [BENGEL] (if no principle was at
issue), but not in the way of subjection, where "the truth of
the Gospel"
(Ga 2:14;
Col 1:5)
was at stake (namely, the fundamental truth of justification by faith
only, without the works of the law, contrasted with another Gospel,
Ga 1:6).
Truth precise, unaccommodating, abandons nothing that belongs to
itself, admits nothing that is inconsistent with it [BENGEL].
might continue with you--Gentiles. We defended for your sakes your
true faith and liberties, which you are now renouncing.
JFB.
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