RealityCheck

If you look past the shadows and gaze on Truth, you will discover reality - the world as it really is...

Monday, February 05, 2007

Galatians 3 and the Promised Gospel

One of the texts that we briefly looked at yesterday was Galatians 3:8-29. It was too large of a text to focus on since the sermon text was elsewhere, and I "promised" to post a short article about it in case anyone wanted to pursue the line of thought further. So, here are some brief thoughts about Galatians 3 in relationship to the concept of the gospel as a promise. I will leave the comments in this brief form to pique your interest, if anyone desires to discuss it in more detail, post your questions/comments and we can begin a dialog.


The gospel is a promise. Note Romans 1:1-2, “the gospel…which was promised…” And again in Galatians 3:8, “The Scripture…preached the gospel beforehand to Abraham, saying, ‘All the nations will be blessed in you.’” It says that the gospel was preached, and then it quotes a promise.

There are several big ideas in Galatians 3, but here are the big three as I see them: promise, blessing/curse, and covenant. In verses 15-18 the idea of covenant and promise are used almost interchangeably, which makes sense given God’s faithfulness to His covenants. Thus, the covenant with Abraham is a promise. In this chapter we see that the promise (the gospel) is this – all nations are blessed through Abraham if the share in His faith. What is this blessing? It is the promise of justification by faith, that is, the promise that those who trust God’s promise in Christ receive righteousness. The law does not make us righteous. In fact, we are cursed by the law. But because Jesus became the curse for us, we can have the blessing rather than the curse.

There is of course more that could be said if we were to unpack Galatians 3 in detail, but study the text and see if these things are not true: the gospel is a promise (as already noted above), the promise of the gospel is rooted in the work of Christ (verses 10-14), our inheritance with Abraham (our blessing) requires that we belong to Christ and is based solely on God’s promise, not on the law (vv.18, 29).

If the gospel is a promise, that means that we ought to think of it not merely as a message to be heard but also a promise/covenant to be believed. This should help us realize the role that our own works play - none at all! Let us hear the gospel message, recognize it as a promise, and receive it by faith! Christ became the curse for us - do you believe this? If so, then make Christ alone your only refuge from the curse of the law - believe the promise and stop pretending that you are able to gain by effort what God promises by grace.

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