11. Translate, "If I am still preaching (as I did before conversion)
circumcision, why am I still persecuted?" The Judaizing troubler of the
Galatians had said, "Paul himself preaches circumcision," as is shown by
his having circumcised Timothy
(Ac 16:3;
compare also
Ac 20:6; 21:24).
Paul replies by anticipation of their objection, As regards myself, the
fact that I am still persecuted by the Jews shows plainly that I do
not preach circumcision; for it is just because I preach Christ
crucified, and not the Mosaic law, as the sole ground of justification,
that they persecute me. If for conciliation he lived as a Jew among the
Jews, it was in accordance with his principle enunciated
(1Co 7:18, 20; 9:20).
Circumcision, or uncircumcision, are things indifferent in themselves:
their lawfulness or unlawfulness depends on the animus of him
who uses them. The Gentile Galatians' animus in circumcision could only
be their supposition that it influenced favorably their standing before
God. Paul's living as a Gentile among Gentiles, plainly showed that, if
he lived as a Jew among Jews, it was not that he thought it meritorious
before God, but as a matter indifferent, wherein he might lawfully
conform as a Jew by birth to those with whom he was, in order to
put no needless stumbling-block to the Gospel in the way of his
countrymen.
then--Presuming that I did so, "then," in that case, "the offense of
(stumbling-block,
1Co 1:23
occasioned to the Jews by) the cross has become done away." Thus the
Jews' accusation against Stephen was not that he preached Christ
crucified, but that "he spake blasphemous words against this holy place
and the law." They would, in some measure, have borne the
former, if he had mixed with it justification in part by circumcision
and the law, and if he had, through the medium of Christianity, brought
converts to Judaism. But if justification in any degree depended on
legal ordinances, Christ's crucifixion in that degree was unnecessary,
and could profit nothing
(Ga 5:2, 4).
Worldly Wiseman, of the town of Carnal Policy, turns Christian out of
the narrow way of the Cross, to the house of Legality. But the way to
it was up a mountain, which, as Christian advanced, threatened to fall
on him and crush him, amidst flashes of lightning from the mountain
[BUNYAN, Pilgrim's Progress]
(Heb 12:18-21).
JFB.
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