20, 21. Moreover the law--"The law, however." The Jew might say, If
the whole purposes of God towards men center in Adam and Christ, where
does "the law" come in, and what was the use of it? Answer: It
entered--But the word expresses an important idea besides "entering."
It signifies, "entered incidentally," or "parenthetically." (In
Ga 2:4
the same word is rendered, "came in privily.") The meaning is,
that the promulgation of the law at Sinai was no primary or essential
feature of the divine plan, but it was "added"
(Ga 3:19)
for a subordinate purpose--the more fully to reveal the evil occasioned
by Adam, and the need and glory of the remedy by Christ.
that the offence might abound--or, "be multiplied." But what offense?
Throughout all this section "the offense" (four times repeated besides
here) has one definite meaning, namely, "the one first offense of Adam";
and this, in our judgment, is its meaning here also: "All our
multitudinous breaches of the law are nothing but
that one first offense, lodged mysteriously in the bosom of every
child of Adam as an offending principal, and multiplying itself
into myriads of particular offenses in the life of each." What was one
act of disobedience in the head has been converted into a vital and
virulent principle of disobedience in all the members of the human
family, whose every act of wilful rebellion proclaims itself the child
of the original transgression.
But where sin abounded--or, "was multiplied."
grace did much more abound--rather, "did exceedingly abound," or
"superabound." The comparison here is between the multiplication of one
offense into countless transgressions, and such an overflow of grace as
more than meets that appalling case.
JFB.
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