24. "So that the law hath been (that is, hath
turned out to be) our schoolmaster
(or "tutor," literally, "pedagogue": this term, among the Greeks, meant
a faithful servant entrusted with the care of the boy from childhood to
puberty, to keep him from evil, physical and moral, and accompany him
to his amusements and studies) to guide us unto Christ," with whom we
are no longer "shut up" in bondage, but are freemen. "Children"
(literally, infants) need such tutoring
(Ga 4:3).
might be--rather, "that we may be justified by faith"; which we
could not be till Christ, the object of faith, had come. Meanwhile the
law, by outwardly checking the sinful propensity which was constantly
giving fresh proof of its refractoriness--as thus the consciousness of
the power of the sinful principle became more vivid, and hence the sense
of need both of forgiveness of sin and freedom from its bondage was
awakened--the law became a "schoolmaster to guide us unto Christ"
[NEANDER]. The moral law shows us what we ought to do, and so we
learn our inability to do it. In the ceremonial law we seek, by
animal sacrifices, to answer for our not having done it, but find dead
victims no satisfaction for the sins of living men, and that outward
purifying will not cleanse the soul; and that therefore we need an
infinitely better Sacrifice, the antitype of all the legal sacrifices.
Thus delivered up to the judicial law, we see how awful is the doom
we deserve: thus the law at last leads us to Christ, with whom we find
righteousness and peace. "Sin, sin! is the word heard again and
again in the Old Testament. Had it not there for centuries rung in the
ear, and fastened on the conscience, the joyful sound, "grace for
grace," would not have been the watchword of the New Testament. This was
the end of the whole system of sacrifices" [THOLUCK].
JFB.
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