17. this I say--"this is what I mean," by what I said in
Ga 3:15.
continued . . . of God--"ratified by God"
(Ga 3:15).
in Christ--rather, "unto Christ" (compare
Ga 3:16).
However, Vulgate and the old Italian versions translate as
English Version. But the oldest manuscripts omit the words
altogether.
the law which was--Greek, "which came into existence four hundred
thirty years after"
(Ex 12:40, 41).
He does not, as in the case of "the covenant," add "enacted by
God"
(Joh 1:17).
The dispensation of "the promise" began with the call of Abraham from
Ur into Canaan, and ended on the last night of his grandson Jacob's
sojourn in Canaan, the land of promise. The dispensation of the
law, which engenders bondage, was beginning to draw on from the time of
his entrance into Egypt, the land of bondage. It was to Christ in him,
as in his grandfather Abraham, and his father Isaac, not to him or them
as persons, the promise was spoken. On the day following the last
repetition of the promise orally
(Ge 46:1-6),
at Beer-sheba, Israel passed into Egypt. It is from the end, not from
the beginning of the dispensation of promise, that the interval of four
hundred thirty years between it and the law is to be counted. At
Beer-sheba, after the covenant with Abimelech, Abraham called on the
everlasting God, and the well was confirmed to him and his seed as an
everlasting possession. Here God appeared to Isaac. Here Jacob
received the promise of the blessing, for which God had called Abraham
out of Ur, repeated for the last time, on the last night of his sojourn
in the land of promise.
cannot--Greek, "doth not disannul."
make . . . of none effect--The promise would become
so, if the power of conferring the inheritance be transferred from it
to the law
(Ro 4:14).
JFB.
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