Galatians 6:11-18
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| title = "Galatians 6:11–18" | ||||
| date = "2023-08-24" | ||||
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| 
 | ||||
| ### [Read the passage.](https://biblia.com/bible/esv/Galatians6.11-18) | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| In a at least one of Paul's letters, the secretary who took Paul's dictation | ||||
| inserted himself into the letter to send his own greetings to the church. More | ||||
| often, though, we see evidence that Paul pens his own conclusions to the | ||||
| letters. To the Galatians, he tells us that we could see the large letters that | ||||
| he wrote, if we had his original manuscript. (Now I wonder if any scribe tried | ||||
| to capture this style when they copied the manuscript.) I can think of a couple | ||||
| of good reasons why he would do this. In chapter 4, he mentioned that the | ||||
| Galatians would have given him their eyes if they could, which implies that | ||||
| there was something wrong with his own eyes. Perhaps his eyesight was poor or | ||||
| became so, and the Galatians could see these large letters and know for sure he | ||||
| wrote them. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Another possibility is that Paul really wants to draw attention to what he's | ||||
| about to say. In the very next sentence he exposes the true motivations of the | ||||
| ones trying to force the Galatians to become Jews. During the middle of the | ||||
| first century, there was a movement of extreme Jewish nationalism. It's | ||||
| adherents chafed mightily under Roman rule and were concerned about the | ||||
| Hellenization encroaching on their way of life. They rebelled and agitated | ||||
| enough that Rome eventually sent an army that sacked Jerusalem and completely | ||||
| destroyed the temple in <span style="font-variant-caps: | ||||
| small-caps">a.d.</style> 70. Before then, these nationalists would be opposed | ||||
| to the church welcoming Gentiles into its number, so Paul says the Judaizer | ||||
| party is trying to make the Gentile believers into Jews in order to appease the | ||||
| nationalists. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Paul reiterates that circumcision in itself does not affect one's status. Even | ||||
| those who trust in it can not keep the whole law. Instead, what counts is what | ||||
| Christ has done on the cross and what He works through us because of that. | ||||
| Nothing else matters in this world or the next, so let us make much of Him. | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| * * * | ||||
| 
 | ||||
| Your grace is more amazing than we can comprehend, and we are able to worship | ||||
| You because of it. | ||||
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