Commentaries on the Epistles of Paul to the Galatians and Ephesians by John Calvin - Galatians 3
Listen now
Description
Calvin examines Paul's rebuke of the Galatians for their susceptibility to deception, equating their rejection of Christ to madness. Calvin interprets Paul’s anger as stemming from the Galatians' grievous error, given their prior clear perception of the gospel. Calvin emphasizes that Paul’s powerful and impactful teaching, made real by the Holy Spirit, was fundamental for true gospel ministry, varying it with the physical images that emerged when spiritual fervor declined. Besides, Calvin investigates Paul’s reasoning that the Galatians received the Holy Spirit through faith, not by the law, underscoring their spiritual blessings stemming from faith. He supports this with references to Peter and Paul’s debates on Gentile inclusion. Calvin notes that "faith" symbolizes the gospel, emphasizing God’s free grace in Christ. He warns that turning to new teachings risks losing spiritual gifts and blessings. Additionally, focusing on justification, Calvin uses Abraham as an example to explain righteousness through faith. He explains that Abraham’s belief in God’s promise was counted as righteousness, meaning righteousness is imputed by God through faith, not works. This reliance on Christ forms the crux of justification by faith. Also, Calvin tackles the contradiction between relying on the law for salvation and the grace extended through faith. He contends that the law demands perfect obedience, which no human can achieve, uncovering the need of grace and faith in Christ. Moreover, Calvin explains the theological merit of Christ’s crucifixion, emphasizing that Christ took on the curse of the law to redeem humanity, achieving prophecy and highlighting the profundity of the cross. Furthermore, Calvin discusses the inclusion of Gentiles in God’s covenant, emphasizing that faith in Christ, not law adherence, brings individuals into Abraham’s blessing. He addresses the relationship between the law and promise, stating the law discloses sin and the need for Christ, supplying as a temporary guide until faith is revealed. Lastly, Calvin highlights the privilege of being baptized and united with Christ, eclipsing all distinctions and uniting all believers as God’s children through faith. This core emphasizes the gospel’s metamorphic strength, outstriping human distinctions and promoting weighty faith. This summary is made by Eleven Labs AI audio generated platform: elevenlabs.io/?from=partnerhall9106 Reformed Theologian GPT: https://chat.openai.com/g/g-XXwzX1gnv-reformed-theologian If you want to support this podcast's operational cost, you can do so here: venmo.com/u/edisonwu --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/edison-wu/support
More Episodes
Augustine gives a weighty theological inquiry of the Psalm's themes, underlining the accomplishment and perfection of the law through Jesus Christ. He interprets the statement "Christ is the end of the law for righteousness to everyone that believes" not as the termination of the law but as its...
Published 09/24/24
Moo affirms its unequivocal authorship by the Apostle Paul, supported by explicit personal references and Paul's own defense of his independent apostleship. Paul establishes himself in the opening verse and, throughout the letter, furnishes autobiographical details that substantiate his...
Published 09/23/24
Published 09/23/24