Righteousness through Grace, not Law
- You foolish Galatians! Who bewitched you [not to be persuaded of the truth], before whose eyes Jesus the Anointed was publicly portrayed as having been crucified.
- I only want to learn this from you: did you receive the Spirit by works of the law or by hearing with faith?
- Are you foolish this way? Having begun by the Spirit are you now perfecting yourselves by the flesh?
- Did you suffer so many things pointlessly? (If it really even was pointlessly.)
- Therefore, the One abundantly supplying the Spirit to you and working miracles among you, does He do it by works of the law or by hearing with faith?
- Just as “Abraham believed God and it was credited to him as righteousness.”
- Therefore, know that the men of faith; these are sons of Abraham.
- And having foreseen that God makes the gentiles righteous by faith, the scripture preached the gospel to Abraham beforehand, saying that: “In you, all the nations will be blessed.”
- So then, the men of faith are blessed with Abraham, the man of faith.
- For as many as are of the works of the law, they are under a curse. For it is *written: “Cursed is everyone who doesn’t continue keeping all things which have been written in the book of the law, to do them.”
- And that no one is made righteous before God by the law is obvious because “The righteous will live by faith.”
- And the law isn’t from faith, but: “The man who does them will live by them.”
- The Anointed purchased us from the curse of the law by having become a curse for us, because it is *written: “Cursed is every man hanging on a tree.”
- So in Jesus the Anointed, the blessing of Abraham might be in the gentiles so we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith.
- Brothers, let me now speak in the way of man: even when a mere man has ratified a covenant, no one annuls it or makes an addition.
- And the promises were spoken to Abraham and to his seed. It doesn’t say “and to the seeds” like they were many; but “and to your seed” like there is one, who is the Anointed.
- And I say this: the covenant has been ratified beforehand by God. The law which has come into being 430 years later doesn’t annul it, for it to abolish the promise.
- For if the inheritance is from the law, it’s no longer from a promise. But God has graced it to Abraham through a promise.
Why the Law came
- Then why the law? Because of deliberate sins it was put into place, having been carefully arranged through angels in the hand of a mediator, until the seed might come to whom the promise has been made.
- (Now, a mediator isn’t for one man only, but God is one.)
- Then is the law opposed to the promises of God? May it never be! For if a law able to give life was given, then righteousness would truly be from the law.
- But the scripture imprisoned all things under sin, so the promise from faith in Jesus the Anointed might be given to the men believing.
- And before the faith came, we were being guarded under the law, being imprisoned until the faith about to be revealed came.
- So the law has become a strict schoolmaster for us, leading into the Anointed so we might be made righteous by faith.
- But faith having come, we’re no longer under a strict schoolmaster.
- For you are all sons of God through faith in Jesus the Anointed.
- For as many of you as were baptized into the Anointed, you clothed yourselves with the Anointed.
- There isn’t Jew nor Greek, there isn’t slave nor free, there isn’t male and female, for all of you are one in Jesus the Anointed.
- And if you are the Anointed’s, then you are Abraham’s seed and heirs according to the promise.