13. Abrupt exclamation, as he breaks away impatiently from those
who would involve us again in the curse of the law, by seeking
justification in it, to "Christ," who "has redeemed us from its
curse." The "us" refers primarily to the Jews, to whom the law
principally appertained, in contrast to "the Gentiles"
(Ga 3:14;
compare
Ga 4:3, 4).
But it is not restricted solely to the Jews, as ALFORD thinks; for these are the representative people of
the world at large, and their "law" is the embodiment of what God
requires of the whole world. The curse of its non-fulfilment affects
the Gentiles through the Jews; for the law represents that
righteousness which God requires of all, and which, since the Jews
failed to fulfil, the Gentiles are equally unable to fulfil.
Ga 3:10,
"As many as are of the works of the law, are under the curse," refers
plainly, not to the Jews only, but to all, even Gentiles (as the
Galatians), who seek justification by the law. The Jews' law represents
the universal law which condemned the Gentiles, though with less clear
consciousness on their part
(Ro 2:1-29).
The revelation of God's "wrath" by the law of conscience, in some
degree prepared the Gentiles for appreciating redemption through Christ
when revealed. The curse had to be removed from off the heathen, too,
as well as the Jews, in order that the blessing, through Abraham, might
flow to them. Accordingly, the "we," in "that we might receive
the promise of the Spirit," plainly refers to both Jews and Gentiles.
redeemed us--bought us off from our former bondage
(Ga 4:5),
and "from the curse" under which all lie who trust to the law and the
works of the law for justification. The Gentile Galatians, by putting
themselves under the law, were involving themselves in the curse from
which Christ has redeemed the Jews primarily, and through them the
Gentiles. The ransom price He paid was His own precious blood
(1Pe 1:18, 19;
compare
Mt 20:28;
Ac 20:28;
1Co 6:20; 7:23;
1Ti 2:6;
2Pe 2:1;
Re 5:9).
being made--Greek, "having become."
a curse for us--Having become what we were, in our behalf, "a
curse," that we might cease to be a curse. Not merely accursed (in
the concrete), but a curse in the abstract,
bearing the universal curse of the whole human race. So
2Co 5:21,
"Sin for us," not sinful, but bearing the whole sin of our race,
regarded as one vast aggregate of sin. See Note there. "Anathema"
means "set apart to God," to His glory, but to the person's own
destruction. "Curse," an execration.
written--
(De 21:23).
Christ's bearing the particular curse of hanging on the tree, is
a sample of the "general" curse which He representatively bore. Not
that the Jews put to death malefactors by hanging; but after
having put them to death otherwise, in order to brand them with
peculiar ignominy, they hung the bodies on a tree, and such
malefactors were accursed by the law (compare
Ac 5:30; 10:39).
God's providence ordered it so that to fulfil the prophecy of the curse
and other prophecies, Jesus should be crucified, and so hang on
the tree, though that death was not a Jewish mode of execution. The
Jews accordingly, in contempt, call Him Tolvi, "the
hanged one," and Christians, "worshippers of the hanged one";
and make it their great objection that He died the accursed death
[TRYPHO, in Justin Martyr, p. 249]
(1Pe 2:24).
Hung between heaven and earth as though unworthy of either!
JFB.
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